Ukraine’s prime minister urges US to send F-15 or
F-16 fighter jets during Pentagon meeting
By
DOUG G. WARE
STARS AND STRIPES • April
12, 2023
Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin
III, right, speaks with Ukraine Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal during a bilateral
exchange meeting at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., April 12, 2023. (Jack
Sanders/Department of Defense)
WASHINGTON —
Ukraine Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal urged the United States on Wednesday to
begin sending fighter jets that can help drive Russian forces out of the
country, especially if Moscow begins to employ high-end fighters and bombers.
Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin welcomed Shmyhal to the Pentagon Wednesday and the two discussed
Ukraine’s immediate military needs amid preparations for increased Russian
attacks now that the weather is warming.
“Russia’s cruel
war of choice has killed thousands of Ukrainians, both troops and innocent
civilians,” Austin said during the meeting at the Pentagon. “I’m confident we
will meet Ukraine’s defense needs through this spring and beyond. And as
[President Joe Biden] has repeatedly made clear, we will stand by Ukraine for
as long as it takes.”
U.S. and other
Western leaders have been giving tens of billions in security aid to Ukraine
since the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, 2022. Those packages have included a
wide array of weapons and equipment, including sophisticated M1 Abrams battle
tanks, Patriot missile systems, Bradley Fighting Vehicles, armored personnel
carriers, rocket launchers, guns and millions of rounds of ammunition.
One thing the U.S.
has not committed to sending are fighter jets of any kind, despite repeated
requests from Kyiv.
“In modern
warfare, air superiority is crucial," Shmyhal said. "That’s why
Ukraine is initiating the building of a new, so-called ‘fighter jet coalition.’
And we are inviting the United States to become its most important
participant.”
“America can once
again demonstrate its leadership by providing Ukraine with F-15 or F-16
aircraft,” he added.
The F-15 Eagle has
been in service with the Air Force for almost a half-century and the F-16
Fighting Falcon has been in Air Force and Navy fleets for more than four
decades. But for months, Biden and U.S. military leaders have said American
fighter jets are not top priorities for Ukraine, partly because the country
already has its own fleet of Russian-made fighter jets Ukrainian pilots are far
more familiar with. Ukraine is a former Soviet republic.
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