CNN reported March 6 [1] Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley visited a week before an undisclosed airfield near the Ukraine border that has become a hub for shipping weapons. The airport's location remains a secret to protect the shipments of weapons, including anti-armor missiles, into Ukraine. Although the report didn’t name the location, the air strip was likely in Poland along Ukraine’s border.
The Russian military had not targeted these shipments once
they entered Ukraine, a U.S. official told CNN, but there was some concern
Russia could begin targeting the deliveries as its assault advances.
Today, for the first time since its military offensive began
two weeks ago, Russia hit
military targets [2] in western Ukraine. The airstrikes at Lutsk and Ivano-Frankivsk
targeted two military airports used for carrying weapons shipment to Kyiv and
eastern Ukraine, leaving two Ukrainian servicemen dead and six people wounded
at Lutsk.
In an interview with
CBC News [3] on March 8, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg warned that
a Russian attack on the supply lines of allied nations supporting Ukraine with
arms and munitions would be a dangerous escalation of the war raging in Eastern
Europe. “Russia is the aggressor and Ukraine is defending itself. If there is
any attack against any NATO country, NATO territory, that will trigger Article
5.”
Article 5 is the self-defense clause in NATO's founding
treaty which states that an attack on one member is an attack on all 30 member
nations. “I'm absolutely convinced President Putin knows this and we are
removing any room for miscalculation, misunderstanding about our commitment to
defend every inch of NATO territory,” Stoltenberg said.
NATO chief said there's a clear distinction between
supply lines within Ukraine and those operating outside its borders. “There is
a war going on in Ukraine and, of course, supply lines inside Ukraine can be
attacked,” he said. “An attack on NATO territory, on NATO forces, NATO
capabilities, that would be an attack on NATO.”
Besides deploying 15,000 additional troops in Eastern Europe
last month, total number of US troops in Europe is now expected to reach 100,000.
“We have 130 jets at high alert. Over 200 ships from the high north to the
Mediterranean, and thousands of additional troops in the region,” NATO Secretary
General Jens Stoltenberg
told CNN [4].
A spokesman for US European Command told CNN the United
States was sending two Patriot missile batteries to Poland, and was also
considering deploying THAAD air defense system, a more advanced system
equivalent in capabilities to Russia’s S-400 air defense system.
Besides providing 2,000 surface-to-air missiles and 17,000
anti-armor munitions, including Javelins and NLAW, to Ukraine’s security forces
and allied militias, British Defense Minister Ben
Wallace said [5] that the UK was considering sending the laser-guided
Starstreak shoulder-fired anti-aircraft system, a significant upgrade from the
Stinger missiles sent by the US, Germany and other allies. The weapon has a
range of over four miles and can take down fighter planes more effectively than
the Stinger.
The United States and its allies have reportedly
infused [6] over $3 billion in arms into Ukraine since the 2014 Euromaidan
coup, and committed to send over $850 million more in military aid late last
month. The Biden administration has already delivered about $240 million of its
promised $350 million in additional military equipment to Ukraine, with the
rest expected to arrive in the coming days or weeks at the latest.
In addition, the European Union promised to commit nearly
500 million euros for its own military aid package. During his first year in
office, the Biden administration provided
$650 million [7] military aid to Ukraine.
The Politico
reported [8] on March 9 that the Congress’ proposed $1.5 trillion package
to fund the federal government through September would boost national defense
coffers to $782 billion, about a 6 percent increase. On top of the hefty budget
increase, the package was set to deliver nearly $14 billion in emergency
funding to help Ukraine, nearly twice the assistance package initially
proposed, including $3 billion for US forces and $3.5 billion for military
equipment to Ukraine, plus more than $4 billion for US humanitarian efforts.
In an explosive scoop, the Sunday
Times reported [9] on March 4 that defense contractors were recruiting
former military veterans for covert operations in Ukraine for a whopping $2,000
a day: “The job is not without risk but, at almost $60,000 a month, the pay is
good. Applicants must have at least five years of military experience in
eastern Europe, be skilled in reconnaissance, be able to conduct rescue
operations with little to no support and know their way around Soviet-era
weaponry.”
Russian
media alleged [10] last week that the United States security agencies had
launched a large-scale recruitment program to send private military contractors
to Ukraine, including professional mercenaries of Academi, formerly Blackwater,
Cubic, and Dyn Corporation.
Russia’s Defense Ministry’s spokesman Igor Konashenkov
warned that foreign mercenaries in Ukraine would not be considered prisoners of
war if detained in line with international humanitarian law, rather they could
expect criminal prosecution at best.
In fact, private military contractors in close co-ordination
and consultation with covert operators from CIA and Western intelligence
agencies are not only training Ukraine’s conscript forces in the use of caches
of MANPADS and anti-armor munitions provided by the US, Germany and rest of
European nations as a military assistance to Ukraine but are also directing the
whole defense strategy of Ukraine by taking active part in combat operations in
some of the most hard fought battles against Russia’s security forces north of
Kyiv and at Kharkiv and Donbas.
In order to create an “international legion” comprising
foreign mercenaries, Kyiv lifted visa requirements for anyone willing to fight.
“Every friend of Ukraine who wants to join Ukraine in defending the country,
please come over,” Ukrainian President Zelensky pleaded at a recent press
conference, adding “We will give you weapons.”
Ukraine has already declared martial law and a general
mobilization of its populace. Those policies include conscription for men aged
18-60 and the confiscation of civilian vehicles and structures, while Ukrainian
convicts with military experience are being released from prison to back up the
war effort.
In a show of solidarity with Ukraine, several European
nations recently announced they would not only not criminalize but rather expedite
citizens joining the NATO’s war effort in Ukraine.
United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she
supported individuals from the UK who might want to go to Ukraine to join an
international force to fight. She told
the BBC [11] it was up to people to make their own decisions, but argued it
was a battle for democracy. She said Ukrainians were fighting for freedom, “not
just for Ukraine but for the whole of Europe.”
Favoring providing lethal weapons only instead of British
mercenaries to Ukraine’s proxy war, Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said Ukraine
would instead be supported to “fight every street with every piece of equipment
we can get to them.”
Buzzfeed
News revealed [12] on Feb. 27 thousands of foreign fighters had flocked to
Ukraine since Russia’s war against the country began in 2014. While most of
them had been Russians and citizens of other former Soviet republics, hundreds
had come from the European Union.
“This is the beginning of a war against Europe, against
European structures, against democracy, against basic human rights, against a
global order of law, rules, and peaceful coexistence,” Ukrainian President
Zelensky said in a statement announcing a decree on the creation of a foreign
legion. “Anyone who wants to join the defense of Ukraine, Europe, and the world
can come and fight side by side with the Ukrainians against the Russian war
criminals.”
The news of an official foreign unit was met with excitement
by members of the Georgia National Legion, an English-speaking force of
volunteers with Western military experience who train Ukrainian troops and sometimes
deploy to the front line with the country’s marines. “This is what we have
waited for. It’s very good,” Levan Pipia, a legion soldier and Georgian army
veteran of the 2008 war with Russia, told BuzzFeed New.
In an exclusive
report [13] on March 8, Reuters noted although the US and UK governments
had nominally discouraged citizens from travelling to Ukraine to combat Russian
forces, others, such as Canada or Germany, had cleared the way for citizens to
get involved.
Despite formal directive by the UK government urging
citizens against traveling to Ukraine, Reuters spilled the beans that among
those who had arrived to fight for Ukraine were dozens of former soldiers from
the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, according to an ex-soldier from
the regiment. Hundreds more would soon follow, he said.
Often referred to as the Paras, the regiment has in recent
years served in Afghanistan and Iraq. “They’re all highly trained, and have
seen active service on numerous occasions,” the ex-soldier from the regiment
said. The Ukraine crisis will give them purpose, camaraderie and “a chance to do
what they're good at: fight.”
With a vast mobilization of Ukrainian men underway, the
country has plenty of volunteer fighters. But there is a shortage of
specialists who know how to use Javelin and NLAW anti-tank missiles, which
professional soldiers train for months to use properly.
Anthony Capone, a wealthy healthcare entrepreneur in New
York City, said he was providing funding for hundreds of ex-soldiers and
paramedics who wanted to go to Ukraine. Capone added he was only funding
ex-soldiers whose military credentials he could verify, or paramedics who
currently worked in an emergency trauma setting. About 60% of those who had
been in touch were American and 30% European.
Despite the recruitment of mercenaries and flushing the
country with lethal weapons, regular warfare in Ukraine is already over even
before it began when the mouthpiece of NATO’s imperial interventions abroad,
the corporate media, is publicly acknowledging that the impending fall of Kyiv
in the face of Russian blitz is a forgone conclusion and that Volodymyr Zelensky
would soon form a government-in-exile, which would lead guerrilla warfare from
safe havens in Poland.
The Washington
Post reported [14] on March 5: “The possible Russian takeover of Kyiv has
prompted a flurry of planning at the State Department, Pentagon and other U.S.
agencies in the event that the Zelensky government has to flee the capital or
the country itself.
“‘We’re doing contingency planning now for every
possibility,’ including a scenario in which Zelensky establishes a
government-in-exile in Poland, said a U.S. administration official.
“Zelensky, who has called himself Russia’s target No. 1,
remains in Kyiv and has assured his citizens he’s not leaving. He has had
discussions with U.S. officials about whether he should move west to a safer
position in the city of Lviv, closer to the Polish border. Zelensky’s security
detail has plans ready to swiftly relocate him and members of his cabinet, a
senior Ukrainian official said. ‘So far, he has refused to go.’
“During an official visit, a Ukrainian special operations
commander told Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.), Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) and
other lawmakers that they were shifting training and planning to focus on
maintaining an armed opposition, relying on insurgent-like tactics.
“As the Russian military struggles with logistical
challenges — including fuel and food shortages — Waltz anticipates that the
Ukrainians will repeatedly strike Russian supply lines. To do that, they need a
steady supply of weapons and the ability to set improvised explosive devices,
he said. ‘Those supply lines are going to be very, very vulnerable, and that’s
where you really literally starve the Russian army.’”
Clearly, planning and preparations are well underway to lure
Russia into NATO’s “bear trap project,” a term borrowed from the Soviet-Afghan
War of the eighties when Western powers used Pakistan’s security forces and
generous funding from the oil-rich Gulf States for providing guerrilla warfare
training and lethal weaponry to Afghan jihadists to mount a war of attrition
and “bleed the security forces” of former Soviet Union in the protracted
irregular warfare.
Citations:
[1] Mark
Milley visited an undisclosed airfield near the Ukraine border:
[2] Russian
forces target airports in western Ukraine:
[3] NATO
chief warns Russia away from attacking supply lines:
[4] Pentagon
shores up its NATO defenses in Europe:
[5] How
Biden scuttled Polish aircraft deal:
[6] US
provided over $3 billion in arms to Ukraine since the 2014:
[7] Biden
provided $650 million military aid to Ukraine in 2021:
[8] $14
billion military and humanitarian assistance for Ukraine:
[9] Western
mercenaries offered $2,000 a day to fight Putin:
[10] Mercenaries
of Academi, Cubic, and Dyn Corporation fighting in Ukraine:
[11] Liz
Truss said she supported individuals who might want to go to Ukraine:
[12] Thousands
of foreign fighters have flocked to Ukraine:
[13] Ukraine
offers purpose and camaraderie to mercenaries:
[14] U.S. prepares for a Ukrainian government-in-exile and a long insurgency:
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