By Charlotte Lawson
Thursday, January 12, 2023
Two months have passed since Ukrainian forces liberated
Kherson, a regional capital in the south and the last major territorial loss
for Russian forces in Ukraine. While combat remains fierce, Ukrainian forces
have been unable to make similar advances—a dynamic largely dependent on which
armaments NATO allies are willing to send Kyiv.
Last week, the U.S., Germany, and France announced plans
to transfer armored fighting vehicles to the Ukrainian military. Washington
approved the shipment of 50 Bradley infantry fighting vehicles, known as “tank-killers”
for their ability to strike tanks from more than two miles away. But like the
German-made Marders Berlin pledged, Bradleys can only do so much.
“Infantry fighting vehicles operate in teams with tanks,”
said Sławomir Dębski, director of the Polish Institute of International
Affairs. “We have just agreed to send the first part of this team. For optimal
usage of these vehicles, we need to supplement them with tanks.”
To that end, Dębski said, German-made Leopard 2 tanks are
the obvious choice to upgrade Ukraine’s arsenal of Soviet-era tanks.
Polish President Andrzej Duda agrees. He announced Wednesday
Poland plans to provide Ukraine with a “company” of its own Leopards in concert
with other NATO members, though a German spokesman told Reuters Wednesday that
it wasn’t aware of such a request. (There are an estimated
2,000 Leopards in arsenals across Europe, though shipping them to
Ukraine requires German approval, and Chancellor Olaf Scholz, a consistent
opponent of providing more advanced weaponry to Kyiv, has said allies should
coordinate weapons deliveries.)
U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Laura K.
Cooper said at a press
briefing last week that NATO is now “positioning Ukraine to be able to
move forward and retake territory.” Significant tank deliveries would confirm
that’s more than just rhetoric.
Other nations are weighing the option, which could put
Germany in the familiar position of playing catch up on support for Ukraine.
The United Kingdom is reportedly
planning to send Kyiv its Challenger 2 tanks ahead of a possible
Ukrainian counteroffensive in the spring.
The Ukrainian military has also requested access to the
Pentagon’s supply of U.S.-made M1 Abrams—a highly mobile, well-protected, and
deadly variety of battle tank. But the Abrams also comes with its own set of
logistical challenges.
“With every different donation of equipment comes
different requirements for training and maintenance, and when you start adding
up all of these different systems, that really does become kind of a logistical
burden,” Eric Edelman, former U.S. ambassador to Turkey and Finland and under
secretary of defense for policy, said in an interview. “The problem with the
Abrams is that it is very heavy, so it takes a lot of fuel to operate, and it
is very hard to maintain.”
The Pentagon is likely watching and waiting to see how
successfully Ukrainian forces are able to integrate the Bradleys, but if past
operations using Western weapons are any indication they’re likely to catch on
quickly.
Since November, Russian forces have launched deadly
artillery bombardments and dug their heels into positions in the southern
Zaporizhzhia oblast and eastern Luhansk oblast. Meanwhile, fighting to take the
strategic city of Bakhmut in Donetsk rages on, with Russian mercenaries
claiming to have captured the nearby town of Soledar on Tuesday and Ukrainian
troops denying the claim. Visitors to the eastern frontline have compared the
scene—with its trenches, shell holes, and corpses—to the First World War.
Ukrainian officials have predicted that Russian President
Vladimir Putin will call up another 500,000 conscripts this Saturday. A
possible new drive to seize Ukrainian territory could come from the south,
east, or north, by way of Belarus, where the Russians have reportedly
planned joint military exercises with Belarusian troops later this
month.
Ukrainian forces, meanwhile, have targeted Russian
logistical hubs, making it harder to support such massive troop deployments,
Edelman said. “Then the question will be whether they can use these armored
personnel carriers and tanks to figure out where the weakest points are to
break through and then surround or envelop these Russian forces.”
Pairing personnel carriers like Bradleys with battle
tanks—either new Western tanks or ones currently in Kyiv’s arsenal—could help
its infantry quickly exploit any weaknesses in Russian lines.
But armored fighting vehicles are just one component of a
broader strategic equation, with Ukrainians pressing for additional arms like
the long-range Army Tactical Missile System, or ATACMS, which the Biden
administration had previously refused to supply for fear of escalation with
Moscow.
“We are entering a decisive phase,” Ukrainian Foreign
Minister Dmytro Kuleba wrote
on Facebook last week. “There can be only one goal: the victory of
Ukraine.”
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