Heavy
weapons such as tanks and anti-aircraft batteries, although insufficient, can
provoke Moskow.
After
weeks of charging for heavy weapons to face a new phase of Russian occupation
of its territory, Ukraine began to receive part of what was promised by NATO,
the western military alliance. Supply that is not enough to change the dynamics
of force between Ukraine and Russia, but that can be understood as a
provocation by the Kremlin.
On April
8, there will be episodes that April will bring anti-aircraft distance systems,
armored vehicles, artillery pieces, rocket launchers and even tanks from at
least its neighbors.
This
donation, ironically, of war material from the former USSR that would have been
passed on to the Warsaw Pact countries with the aim of protecting the borders
of the largest country in the world, and can be considered as a legacy of the
end of the Cold War.
The prime
minister of Slovakia, Eduard Heger, said that his country donated the
Russian-made S-300 anti-aircraft systems to the neighboring country. “It does
not mean that the Slovak Republic is taking part in the conflict,” he said. In 1989,
at the breakup of the USSR, the then ally Czechoslovakia received from Moscow
an S-300 regiment in its PMU export version, with four launchers. When the
Czech and Slovak republics split in 1993, the latter inherited the system.
|
Patriot |
Obsolete
model, can hit aircraft up to 90 km. The Russians operate versions that can
shoot down targets up to 400 km, but in the context of the destruction of the
six batteries that the Ukrainians had until the beginning of the war is better
than nothing. NATO, of which Slovakia is a part, will install American Patriot
systems to fill the country's lack of air defense.
The
Reuters news agency reported, without naming the source of the information,
that the Czech Republic has shipped at least five T-72 tanks, five BMP-1
infantry tanks, heavy mortars and multiple rocket launchers in recent weeks to
Ukraine. The
country operates 30 older versions of the Soviet T-72 and had 89 in stock.
Ukraine ended up being used as a dumping ground for antiquated ordnance.
None of
this will change the course of the war, of course, given the widespread
destruction of armored vehicles on both sides, but it does show some commitment
from the West that could generate noise in the Kremlin, which until now had
more or less turned a blind eye to the most lethal small arms sent to Kiev.
On April
7, NATO Secretary General Jeans Stoltenberg said generically that alliance
members were supplying heavy material to the Ukrainians, following complaints
from the Kiev government.
The fear
expressed by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba concerns the expected
Russian offensive to capture the rest of the historic Donbass region in the
east of the country. Currently, the separatists who have dominated the
easternmost part of the territory since 2014 have expanded their control with
Russian support to almost all of Lugansk province and perhaps 60% of Donetsk.
In the latter, in the Ukrainian part, is the city of Kramatorsk, target of the
controversial attack on a train station on April 8.
Since its
initial offensive was faltered by planning errors and Ukrainian resistance,
Moscow has altered plans and withdrew the bulk of its forces from the
northeastern region of the country around Kiev. He announced that he would
focus, in the new phase of the war, on control of the Donbass – in fact, the
alleged motive for the occupation. (See Maffei's Blog. The War of the Great Arrows on Russia's strategy).
Since
early April, Ukraine has been asking for heavier equipment, as the battle in
Donbass will require the use of mechanized forces, in addition to the
predictable air support that the Russians will use – hence the need for the
S-300 and shorter-range systems such as the Strela that the Czechs also
donated, according to Reuters.
Kuleba
drew this when speaking to Stoltenberg and other ministers from NATO countries.
The point so far is that the West has limited itself to providing effective
portable anti-tank and anti-aircraft systems, which have worked very well to
hold off Russian tank advances in ambush.
But a
concentrated action, with artillery barrages, air support, and intrusion of
tanks and infantry must find something similar in front of it. Unless the
amounts of material are much higher than the reported ones, which is possible,
Ukraine will have a big problem in Donbass.
The point
is that NATO fears offending Russia, whose President Vladimir Putin has
suggested he would use nuclear weapons to deal with anyone trying to get
involved in the conflict.
Therefore,
the Polish suggestion to send Mig-29 fighter jets to the neighbor was vetoed by
the US, the leaders of the alliance, as well as the request for the Westerners
to try to implement a no-fly zone over Ukraine – which could amount to the
declaration of the Third World War.
(Text adapted from Igor Gielow, Folha de São Paulo,
available at: https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/mundo/2022/04/otan-comeca-a-doar-armas-pesadas-para
-ukraine-face-the-russians.shtml).
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