Ukraine’s counteroffensive
‘slow’ and ‘steady’ but not a failure, Milley says
By
DOUG G. WARE
STARS AND STRIPES • July
18, 2023
Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, speaks Tuesday, July 18, 2023, during a news conference with
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at the Pentagon. (Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)
WASHINGTON — Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Tuesday rejected the notion that Ukraine’s
counteroffensive against Russia’s invading forces is failing and insisted the
attack is making slow progress.
“That’s the difference between war on paper and
real war. These are real people in real machines out there really clearing real
minefields and really dying,” Milley said about the Ukraine counteroffensive.
“It’s far from a failure.”
Ukraine’s military is a few weeks into the
counteroffensive and top Pentagon leaders have said progress is coming slowly
due partly to complex minefields Ukrainian troops are finding along the battle
lines.
“They are slowly and deliberately and steadily
working their way through all these minefields,” Milley said during a joint
Pentagon briefing with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. “It’s a very difficult
fight.”
The two leaders spoke after a meeting of the
Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a collection of leaders from more than 50 countries
who meet periodically to determine what equipment Ukraine needs to beat back
Russian troops.
The meeting Tuesday was the group’s 14th, and it
came less than two weeks after the Pentagon announced another
round of military aid to Ukraine worth as much as $800 million. For the first time, the
package included cluster munitions to aid the Ukrainian counteroffensive.
Cluster munitions are particularly effective against targets such as ground
troops, artillery and truck convoys but they’re banned in more than 100 countries
because they have a high “dud rate” and can later be dangerous to civilians.
Ukraine launched its counteroffensive in early
June in several key areas under Russian control, such as the Donetsk and
Zaporizhzhia regions and Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014. Austin and
Milley said Russian troops are being worn down by the counteroffensive and
their morale is low.
“They have suffered a lot of casualties, the
Russians,” Milley said. “The Russian situation is not very good.”
The two U.S. defense leaders said Ukrainian troops
will get a boost in the coming months as more U.S. weapons and equipment become
available, such as nearly three dozen M1 Abrams tanks, which are being built
and could arrive in Ukraine by early next year.
“Those kinds of things help provide the capability
that Ukraine’s going to need in the future,” Austin said.
Ukraine is also expected to get an upgrade in air
power with U.S.-made F-16s. Denmark and the Netherlands are leading an
11-nation coalition to train Ukrainian pilots on the fighter jet, and Austin
said those countries reported progress at Tuesday’s meeting in finalizing the
plan. Danish officials said at the NATO summit in Lithuania last week that
training will begin in August in Denmark and Romania. No country has yet
committed to send F-16s to Ukraine and Milley said getting enough of them into
the battle will take time.
“Ten F-16s [cost] $2 billion, [and] the Russians
have hundreds of fourth- and fifth-generation airframes.
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