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US ships artillery to Ukraine to destroy Russian firepower

WASHINGTON, April 26 โ€” The push by the United States to send artillery to Ukraine aims to degrade Russian forces โ€” not only on the immediate battlefield but over the longer term, according to US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and military experts.

The United States, France, Czech Republic and other allies are sending scores of the long-range howitzers to help Ukraine blunt Russiaโ€™s mounting offensive in the eastern Donbas region.

Backed by better air defence, attack drones and Western intelligence, the allies hope that Kyiv will be able to destroy a large amount of Russiaโ€™s firepower in the looming showdown.

After returning from Kyiv, where he met Ukraine defence chiefs and President Volodymyr Zelensky, Austin told journalists in Poland early yesterday that Washingtonโ€™s hopes are larger than that.

Russia โ€œhas already lost a lot of military capability, and a lot of its troops, quite frankly. And we want to see them not have the capability to very quickly reproduce that capability,โ€ Austin said.

โ€œWe want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it canโ€™t do the kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine.โ€

โ€˜War of attritionโ€™

That is a shift from Washingtonโ€™s initial approach, when they simply hoped to help prevent Moscowโ€™s seizure of the Ukrainian capital and the overthrow of Zelenskyโ€™s government.

In fact, aided by anti-aircraft and anti-armor missiles supplied by the United States and European allies, Ukrainian troops forced the Russian military to withdraw from northern Ukraine within six weeks of the February 24 invasion.

But Moscow now controls significant swathes of eastern and southern Ukraine, apparently aiming to expand to the centre of the country by sending in more troops and equipment.

Their plan, experts believe, is to use long-range shelling to drive back most of Ukraineโ€™s forces and only then send in ground troops and tanks to secure the land.

Ukraineโ€™s best option is to fight back with superior artillery โ€” backed by protection from air assaults โ€” to destroy Russian firepower, according to Mike Jacobson, a US civilian expert in field artillery.

Jacobson predicted that this would lead to a โ€œwar of attritionโ€ in which Ukraine, with ally-supplied equipment with longer ranges and more accurate targeting, could stop the Russians cold.

โ€œI believe that superior artillery will decrease the Russiansโ€™ ability to sustain this fight,โ€ Jacobson told AFP.

Phillips Oโ€™Brien, a University of St. Andrews professor of strategic studies who posts daily analyses of the war on Twitter, wrote that the coming artillery fight will resemble World War I, each side trying to wear the other down with grueling shelling.

The Russian army โ€œis considerably smaller and suffered major equipment losses. Ukrainian army is smaller, but about to be much better armed,โ€ he said.

โ€œRussia needs to change that dynamic or it loses the attrition war.โ€

Rapid deployment

The US and allies are moving fast with the supplies to take advantage of the slow regrouping of Russian forces after their setback in northern Ukraine.

Already at least 18 of the 90 towed artillery pieces Washington promised in the past two weeks have been delivered to Ukrainian forces, and more are being rushed in early this week, according to a Pentagon official.

Washington is also supplying nearly 200,000 rounds of howitzer ammunition, and is arranging for ammunition supplies for the Russian-made artillery that Ukraine forces currently operate.

Some 50 Ukraine troops have already been trained to use the US howitzers, and more are being trained this week.

Meanwhile France is sending its ultra-advanced Caesar mobile howitzer, and the Czech Republic is delivering its older self-propelled howitzers.

Canada too is sending howitzers and advanced, guided โ€œExcaliburโ€ shells that can travel more than 40 kilometres and deliver munitions precisely on target.

โ€œThe fight theyโ€™re in in the Donbas is going to be heavily reliant on what we call long-range fires, artillery particularly,โ€ a senior US defence official said.

โ€œThatโ€™s why weโ€™re focusing them on getting them artillery as well as tactical UAVs,โ€ the official said.

That was a reference to allies supplying โ€œsuicide drones,โ€ bomb-armed unmanned aerial vehicles that can be directed for hours to search out and then explode themselves on Russian targets.

But no one is saying such a strategy will allow Ukraine to fully drive out the Russians.

If Kyiv does prevail in the artillery showdown, it will โ€œeventually force them (Russia) to either escalate or negotiate realistically,โ€ said Jacobson.

โ€œRussia will be frustrated but not defeated.โ€ โ€” AFP

Srinagar News

Srinagar News is one of the oldest newspaper in kashmir it was founded by Late Mehraj-ud-Din Wani Sahab in 1975.

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