Frustrated lawmakers blast stalled transfer of
European aircraft to Ukraine
By Joe Gould
Mar 10, 08:09 PM
Chairman Bob Menendez, D-N.J., left, and Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, are seated during a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations to examine U.S.-Russia policy with testimony from Victoria Nuland, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)
WASHINGTON ― Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle
grilled Biden administration officials Thursday over the Pentagon’s rejection of Poland’s surprise
plan give the United States its MiG-29 fighter jets for use by Ukraine to repel
Russia’s mightier forces.
The hearing, in front of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, let lawmakers vent their anger that Ukraine’s
pleas for the aircraft to combat Russia were going
unmet. U.S. defense officials have called a potential three-way deal untenable
and suggested Ukraine would benefit most from more of the U.S.-supplied weapons
it uses effectively every day, including anti-aircraft Stinger and anti-tank
Javelin missiles.
“The Ukrainians are getting bombarded, and they do
not have ― at least as their country’s leaders suggest and assert ― the
wherewithal to compete in the sky,” said Sen. Robert
Menendez, D-N.J., the chair of the panel.
“I understand why NATO and the United States are
not engaged in a no-fly-zone ― that it has potential direct conflict with
Russia ― but I don’t understand why we are not working expeditiously to
facilitate planes to Ukraine.”
The Senate’s Republican caucus is unanimously in
favor of giving jets to Ukraine, said the panel’s ranking member, Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho. He was among
lawmakers who criticized the administration as moving too slowly and for
second-guessing Ukraine about its own needs.
“We need to help these people, and not tomorrow
but today,” Risch said. “This stuff needs to start moving. So I don’t know what
juice you have up there to push this thing along, but I’m telling you this is
an embarrassment to be here, and be in a position where we can give them
something to defend themselves with, and not being able to do it.”
Washington has been looking at a proposal under
which Poland would supply Ukraine with its 28 Soviet-era MiG-29s and in turn
receive American F-16s to make up for their loss. But the Pentagon ruled out
the move, saying that in the face of Russian anti-aircraft systems, it wouldn’t
make Ukraine’s forces more effective and that Russia could view the move as
escalatory, prompting it to retaliate.
The hearing came a day after Gen. Tod D. Wolters,
head of U.S. European Command, released a statement calling the prospect of
adding jets to Ukraine’s military, “high-risk and low gain,” adding that they
would not “appreciably increase the effectiveness” of Ukraine’s air force.
Russia has declared that supporting Ukraine’s air
force would be tantamount to joining the war, and could spur retaliation.
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