Since Russia has opted to commit war crimes by repeatedly bombing civilian infrastructure with the goal of inflicting mass civilian causalities, the western world has responded by opting to give Ukraine even more advanced military kit.
The U.S., as usual, is leading the way, supplying a Patriot Missile Defense battery and JDAMs.
SENIOR MILITARY OFFICIAL: All right, well, thanks very much for joining us. Today’s background briefers will include (inaudible) and me, (inaudible). For attribution, please refer to (inaudible) as “a senior defense official” and to me as “a senior military official.”
And with that, I will turn it over to our senior defense official for some opening remarks, and then we’ll be happy to take your questions.
SENIOR DEFENSE OFFICIAL: Good afternoon, everyone. I’d like to start by just recognizing where we are in this war. We’re in over 300 days after Russia launched this war to try to stamp out Ukraine’s existence as a free nation. And at this moment, we are welcoming President Zelenskyy to Washington, D.C., a sign of Ukraine’s determination, its spirit, its resolve, and an opportunity for us to be able to reinforce our support for Ukraine during President Zelenskyy’s visit.
So you will hear more from the White House later this afternoon about President Zelenskyy’s visit. In the meantime, what I wanted to do is give you some important details about our new security assistance commitments that President Biden announced today, totaling $1.85 billion.
Now, these — these commitments come in two parts, and we’re announcing both of these together. First, we have a presidential drawdown package that’s valued at $1 billion. This is the 28th such drawdown of equipment from DOD inventories for Ukraine since August of 2021. And then the second is an additional $850 million in commitments under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative.
So first, let me talk about the presidential drawdown package, and this package includes for the first time a Patriot air defense battery and munitions. This is another signal of our long-term commitment to Ukraine’s security. As you know, Patriot is one of the world’s most advanced air defense systems, and it will give Ukraine a critical long-range capability to defend its airspace. It is capable of intercepting cruise missiles, ballistic missiles and aircraft.
It’s important to put the Patriot battery in context. For air defense, there is no “silver bullet.” Our goal is to help Ukraine strengthen a layered, integrated approach to air defense. That will include Ukraine’s own legacy capabilities, as well as NATO-standard systems. Patriot will complement a range of medium- and short-range air defense capabilities that we’ve provided and that allies have provided in prior donation packages, and for us, that includes NASAMS and Avenger systems. Patriot does require training, and we expect it will take several months to ensure Ukrainian forces have the training they need to employ it successfully.
Now, in addition to Patriot, this drawdown package includes several other highlights. First, it includes an additional 500 precision-guided 155-millimeter artillery rounds, and it includes several different mortar systems and rounds for those systems. Second, it includes precision aerial munitions, and then third, it includes additional MRAP vehicles and Humvees, and I think important to note, this is 38 MRAP vehicles, but we’ve provided 440 to date, and it’s 120 Humvees, but this comes on top of 1,200 Humvees that we’ve provided to date.
Now for the second part of today’s announcement, the $850 million under USAI, I just want to remind that this is an authority under which we procure capabilities from industry, rather than drawing them down from U.S. stocks. So USAI capabilities typically take longer to deliver. Now under USA — AI, we are committing to provide a range of different non — what we call nonstandard ammunitions. This is what we formerly called Soviet-type ammunition. It includes 152-millimeter artillery rounds, 122-millimeter artillery rounds, and these will be able to help the Ukrainians bring more of its legacy systems, its legacy howitzers back into the fight in greater numbers. We also plan to — to provide 122-millimeter Grad rockets, and this is to support Ukraine’s Grad rocket artillery capability, as well as tank ammunition to help Ukraine sustain operations with its existing tanks. Another capability we’re providing via USAI are satellite communication terminals and services. This will add resilience to Ukraine’s communications infrastructure. And then as always, we have funding from (sic) training, for maintenance and for sustainment in support of the equipment we and our partners have provided.
Here’s a more detailed breakdown in convenient Tweet form:
Big capabilities in this PDA:
-One Patriot battery and munitions;
-HIMARS ammo
-500 precision-guided 155mm artillery rounds;
-10 120mm mortar systems and 10,000 120mm mortar rounds;
-10 82mm mortar systems;
-10 60mm mortar systems;
-37 Cougar MRAPs
-120 HMMWVs
(1/2)— Lara Seligman (@laraseligman) December 21, 2022
In USAI package:
-45,000 152mm artillery rounds;
-20,000 122mm artillery rounds;
-50,000 122mm GRAD rockets;
-100,000 rounds of 125mm tank ammunition;
-SATCOM terminals and services;
-Funding for training, maintenance, and sustainment.— Lara Seligman (@laraseligman) December 21, 2022
Europe is supplying other weapons, but is unable to keep up with the furious rate of munition use.
Ukraine’s military fortunes also depend on European countries, such as Germany, that let their defense industry atrophy in peacetime and are struggling to catch up as they focus on securing energy supplies.
Ukraine’s battle against the Russian invasion is consuming ammunition at rates unseen since World War II. Kyiv’s forces have been firing around 6,000 artillery shells a day and are now running out of antiaircraft missiles amid a relentless aerial onslaught by Russia, according to experts and intelligence officials. At the height of the fighting in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas area, Russia was using more ammunition in two days than the entire stock of the British military, according to the Royal United Services Institute, a British think tank.
No country in NATO other than the U.S. has either a sufficient stock of weapons to fight a major artillery war or the industrial capacity to create such reserves, said Nico Lange, a former top official at the German Defense Ministry. This means that NATO wouldn’t be able to defend its territory against major adversaries if it were to be attacked now, he said.
“Governments have been slashing contracts for decades, so companies shed production lines and employees,” said Mr. Lange, a senior fellow with the Munich Security Conference, a global security forum.
The current shortage of shells and missiles is largely due to a shift in the military doctrines of NATO allies in recent decades: Instead of planning for World War II-style ground battles, they focused on targeted, asymmetric warfare against unsophisticated opponents, said Morten Brandtzæg, chief executive of Nammo AS, one of the world’s largest arms manufacturers.
“We need orders of magnitude more industrial capacity,” said Mr. Brandtzæg, whose company is co-owned by the governments of Norway and Finland.
Ukraine uses up to 40,000 artillery shells of the NATO caliber 155mm each month, while the entire annual production of such projectiles in Europe is around 300,000, according to Michal Strnad, owner of Czechoslovak Group AS, a Czech company that produces around 30% of Europe’s output of such munitions.
“European production capacity is grossly inadequate,” Mr. Strnad said. Even if the war were to stop overnight, Europe would need up to 15 years to resupply its stocks at current production rates, he said.
As always, there are rumors that Russia has had to buy artillery shells from north Korea and, as always, these rumors should be treated with several grains of salt. Russia used up huge amounts of its smart munitions early, but early predictions that Russia would quickly run out its own dumb artillery shells have thus far proven to be premature.
The Patriot system may prove to be more symbolic than really useful, if only because Russias has already used up sop much of its medium range missile stocks. JDAMs, on the other hand, could prove to be very effective at targeting Russian military assets.
In any case, it’s now clear that a war Russia thought would be “three days to take Kiev” will now drag on as a war of attrition for a year or more, and a goodly portion of the western world has signed up to supply Ukraine with munitions for as long as it takes.
Tags: army, artillery, JDAM, Military, Patriot Missiles, Russia, Russo-Ukrainian War, Ukraine
More munitions that won’t be available for us to use when we go to war. Between what Biden is giving Ukraine and what he left the Taliban our war stocks must be getting low!
Since a lot of this will, as usual, end up sold to China for them to reverse engineer, is there anything in there that will come back to bite us?
“sold to China for them to reverse engineer”? Truth be told, Communist China is way ahead on the process of getting our R+D secrets than waiting on some Ukrainians. Decades ago our services R+D lab directors admitted CCP penetration was “total”.
https://www.newsweek.com/penetration-total-163758
And what they can’t get directly our ‘special friend’ Israel continues to sell to them.
https://nexttobagend.blogspot.com/2020/08/with-friends-like-these.html
As to the latter, apparent we never learn.
https://www.fdd.org/analysis/2022/12/20/us-israel-working-group-gets-busy/
There’s a reason the Battle of Midway is so closely studied by the PLAN. And it’s not about Zeros vs Wildcats. It’s how critical, strategic intelligence was applied to change the future of a war in the Pacific.
If only we had an agency in the US more interested in CCP spys than righteously angry moms at school board meetings.
Meh. Most of the stuff being sent to Ukraine was very likely to have been going out of its freshness date, anyway.
Personally, I’m ambivalent as to the whole thing, but I do have to appreciate that the Russians are displaying their usual level of competence (low) and corruption (incredibly high). I don’t foresee them coming out of this with anything you could even remotely term a real set of “victory conditions”. They’re very likely to wind up turning Ukraine into their version of Vietnam.
As a little hint of perspective… Russian casualties are nearing the 100,000 mark for KIA. God alone knows what the rate of wounded is, or how many of those wounded are going to be fit for combat any time soon. The amount of machinery and munitions they’ve blown on this is mind-boggling, and they’ve got very little to show for it. In return, far from having weakened NATO and pushed it back, they’ve gotten Sweden and Finland converted from neutrals to NATO members, and that’s not insignificant.
The Russians have been assholes since the Tsars ran the place; for all intents and purposes, it was the Russian intel organizations that ginned up WWI via playing games in the Balkans and supporting the Black Hand in Serbia. Tsar Nicky and his family paid the karmic price, for that one… Then, you look at the Communist years, and what they did after? I’m not feeling the least little bit bad that we’re gutting them on the cheap in Ukraine. They utterly deserve it, having played the nasty little games they did in Iraq and Syria. I still want to know what the f*ck the Russian embassy was doing with those convoys they were escorting north, into Syria, back in 2002-03. We should have said “Screw diplomatic immunity… You’re in a war zone with the enemy…” and taken that set of convoys down, searched them, then put all that crap they were trying to hide out on display for the world.
The Russians have been playing spoiler with us since day one, and I’ve got zero sympathy for them. Watching their entirely unprofessional and completely uncivilized behavior in combat in Ukraine, I’ve got even less sympathy, and I think that the best thing that could happen for the rest of the human race would be if they kill themselves off the way they’re doing, but in greater numbers. Their documented behavior in Bucha is beyond the pale; even the left-wing rags like the NYT are unable to deny their behavior or put a positive light on it. And, the main perpetrator was an “elite” VDV paratrooper outfit, one that showed itself to be no more than heavily armed thugs out to murder civilians and loot.
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Well will you look at that. Decades of footing Europe’s defense destroyed its munitions industries and left them vulnerable to a weak, corrupt and incompetent Russia. Yet Germany can still play footsie with Putin while we tote that barge one more time. Uncle Sam’s ass, meet teeth.
Trump tried to tell them that they needed to pony up with they had promised in the way of defense spending, that they needed to stop relying on uncle sucker to cover for them. For this he was branded “anti-NATO“.
Anyone here have any reliable info as to whether and to what extent U.S. troops are being sent to Ukraine to train operators for, and/or operate themselves, any of the weapons or systems the U.S. is providing? I have seen several postings on other sites by people (anonymous, of course) claiming to have direct or indirect knowledge of such deployments. While I do worry about the expense of all of our aid, especially when the Feds are so totally failing to put any resources toward securing our southern border, I share Kirk’s view of the Russians and hope they eventually get their rear ends handed to them. That said, I sure as heck don’t want to see any American boots on the ground in Ukraine.