Jeg regner med at det er i overenstemmelse med NATOs vurderinger og policy. (Red.)
US troops to train
Ukrainian forces on howitzers in coming days
BY
CAITLIN
DOORNBOS
• STARS
AND STRIPES • APRIL 18, 2022
A Marine with Echo Battery, 2d Battalion, 10th Marine Regiment, 2d Marine Division, carries 155mm artillery shells during Exercise Rolling Thunder 22-2 at Fort Bragg, N.C., March 30, 2022. (Ryan Ramsammy/U.S. Marine Corps)
WASHINGTON
— American troops will train Ukrainian forces in the coming days on how to
operate U.S. howitzers as the Pentagon sends them 18 of the cannons as part
of the latest $800 million in military
aid, a senior U.S. defense official said Monday.
The
training, which will occur outside Ukraine, will teach Ukrainian forces to
operate the 155mm howitzers. They will then return to the fight and train other
Ukrainians to use the American cannons, the official said. The aid package
includes 40,000 artillery rounds.
“We
have made some progress in terms of setting up some training for Ukrainians,”
the official told reporters at the Pentagon. “These are train-the-trainer
[sessions], so training trainers outside of Ukraine in coming days on the
howitzers, specifically.”
The
U.S. does not expect it to take long to complete the instruction, Chief
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said Friday.
“It's
not going to be exorbitant. It won't take a long time. It won't require a large
pool of trainees,” he said. “We don't believe that it's going to be an onerous
task, or lengthy in time or in resources.”
Ukraine
already uses howitzers, such as the Soviet-era 152mm mSATA-B and 122mm D-30,
but their troops will still need instruction on the American cannon, whose
“basic outlines” are “not unlike other artillery,” Kirby said Monday.
“This
particular system is new to the Ukrainians … [but] they understand how to use
artillery and we don’t believe it will take very long or require much detailed
training to get them up to speed on American howitzers,” Kirby told reporters
at the Pentagon.
Defense
officials have not said which of two U.S. howitzer models — the older M198
system or its replacement, the M777 — is being used by the Ukrainians. With
respective ranges of 14 and 18 miles, according to the Army Acquisition Support
Center, they are most comparable to the Msta-B, which can fire artillery as far
as 15 miles away.
The
howitzers announced Wednesday in the latest $800 million military aid package
are the first the U.S. has sent Ukraine since Russia invaded the country on
Feb. 24. Other countries, such as Estonia, have also recently sent howitzers to
Ukraine.
The
U.S. is sending the cannons as Russia prepares to launch a renewed assault on
the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine. The land there is flat, rolling plains
and conducive to using long-range fires, Kirby said.
"The
terrain lends itself to the use of artillery, and we know that the Russians
also believe the same thing because we're seeing them move artillery units into
the Donbas, as well," he said. "So, we want to give the Ukrainians
every bit of advantage that we can. They specifically asked for artillery
support."
The
U.S. on Sunday sent the first four planes carrying military equipment from the
most recent security assistance package and plans to make another delivery
within the next 24 hours, said the official who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
The
official did not detail what kinds of equipment were delivered in those
flights. Aside from the howitzers, the package also includes 300 Switchblade
tactical drones, 11 Mi-17 helicopters, 200 M113 armored personnel carriers and
other weapons and military equipment, according to the Pentagon.
The
defense official did not say where the training would take place but said U.S.
European Command is working on it. There are more than 100,000 U.S. troops in
Europe, roughly 15,000 of whom are deployed to NATO countries that border
Ukraine, such as Poland, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia.
Most
of that 15,000 — about 8,750 — are in Poland, where U.S. troops have previously
advised Ukrainians on U.S.-donated systems, such as Javelin missiles, as they
transferred the weapons to Ukrainian hands, defense officials said last month.
“There's
some liaising going on, but we wouldn't call it classic training,” a senior
U.S. defense official said of the prior advising March 31.
The
U.S. also recently trained Ukrainian troops in the United States on Switchblade
drones. Those troops, who were already in the U.S. for military education prior
to the start of the war, have since returned to Ukraine to share the
Switchblade training with other troops.
U.S.
troops might be called upon in the future to train Ukrainians on other weapons
in the $800 million package, the official said.
"We're
exploring other options for other systems as well, and even if there needs to
be additional training for the howitzers, we're certainly looking at that, as
well,” the official said. “There’s a range of options that are still being
explored."
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