France
ramps up war support for Ukraine, rebuilds armories
ASSOCIATED
PRESS • October 16, 2022
A French artillery piece Caesar is photographed at
the Eurosatory land and airland defense and security trade fair on June 13,
2022 in Villepinte, north of Paris. (Jeffrey Schaeffer/AP)
PARIS — France on Sunday pledged air defense
systems to protect Ukrainian cities against drone strikes, as well as an
expanded training program for Ukrainian soldiers, as it seeks to puncture
perceptions that French President Emmanuel Macron's government has lagged in
supporting Ukraine militarily against the Russian invasion.
Up to 2,000 Ukrainian soldiers will be embedded
with military units in France, rotating through for several weeks of combat
training, more specialized training in logistics and other needs, and training
on equipment being supplied by France, Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu, said
in an interview published in Le Parisien.
"We are noting the fact that the war, alas,
will last," the newspaper quoted the minister as saying. "A new
generation of soldiers must also be trained, to last the distance."
France had previously trained Ukrainian artillery
troops to use Caesar self-propelled howitzers it has supplied.
The expanded training that France is now offering
is "a very important step," the minister said. "We are changing
the scale."
The minister said Crotale air defense missile
batteries that France is preparing to send to Ukraine "will be
particularly useful in the fight against drones and against aerial
bombardments."
France has 12 of the batteries, the minister said.
He didn't specify how many of them will go to Ukraine but said "it will be
significant to enable them to defend their skies."
The aim is for Ukraine to be able to deploy them
within two months, which includes the training time for Ukrainians to use them,
the minister said.
France has supplied 18 Caesar artillery pieces and
is in discussions to furnish six more. Lecornu said France is also studying a
Ukrainian request for rocket-launched ground-strike weaponry.
France also has set up a fund of $97 million
"which the Ukrainians can use to buy what they want, on condition that the
supplier is French," the minster said.
Among recipients of the first Ukrainian orders
using the fund is a French firm that will supply pontoon bridges, he said.
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