EU struggles to supply and ship the ammunition it promised to Ukraine

BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union nations acknowledged on Tuesday that they threat failing to offer Ukraine with the ammunition they pledged to assist Kyiv stave off the Russian invasion and win again its territory.

Early this yr, EU leaders promised to offer 1 million rounds of ammunition to Ukraine‘s front line by spring next year in what would have amounted to a serious ramp-up of production. But the 27-nation bloc, for over half a century steeped in a “peace, not war” message and sheltering under a U.S. military umbrella, is finding it tough to come up with the goods.

“The 1 million will not be reached, you have to assume that,” said German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, ahead of a meeting of EU defense and foreign affairs ministers in Brussels.



Estonia’s protection minister, Hanno Pevkur, mentioned it was essential to ramp up provide of the ammunition.

“Look at Russia. They are producing today more than ever. They are getting shells from North Korea. Europe cannot say that … ‘Russia and North Korea can deliver and we cannot,’” he mentioned.

Some 300,000 rounds have been delivered from current shares within the EU up to now. With the remaining turning into more and more elusive to supply earlier than spring, Latvian Defense Minister Andris Spruds insisted the unique goal shouldn’t be taken too actually.

“Well, of course, 1 million rounds are symbolic. I think aspiration and ambition is important,” he mentioned.

On the battlefield, although, the presence of ammunition is the one factor that counts.

In Ukraine‘s war with Russia, 155mm artillery rounds play a pivotal role. The daily consumption of 6,000 to 7,000 shells highlights its strategic importance. Acquiring 1 million such shells could secure stability for Ukraine for at least half a year, providing a substantial advantage in sustained operations and flexibility on the battlefield, observers said.

EU Commissioner Thierry Breton insisted the industry production target of 1 million rounds could be met by industry. “But it is now upon member states to place their orders.”

However, member states put the blame on producers.

“We have all signed contracts. We’ve executed joint procurement. So business now has to ship. It has to step up its sport to supply extra,” mentioned Dutch protection Minister Kajsa Ollongren.

Breton acknowledged that the EU‘s over-reliance on so-called smooth energy and a long time of sinking budgets in lots of European nations had left the bloc uncovered.

“As you well know, it is history, certainly the peace dividend. It is true that we dropped a bit, even significantly, our production capacity, but the industrial base is still there” to ramp up manufacturing anew, he mentioned.

One technique to get extra ammunition, mentioned EU overseas affairs chief Josep Borrell, was to redirect present EU exports and prioritize Ukraine.

“About 40% of the production is being exported to third countries,” he mentioned. “So maybe what we have to do is to try to shift this production to the priority one, which is the Ukrainians.”

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Illia Novikov contributed from Kyiv, Ukraine.

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