“Make everything possible”: Ukraine gets howitzers, but no tanks

“make everything possible”
Ukraine gets howitzers but no tanks

Ukraine continues to push for arms deliveries from Germany. Chancellor Scholz and Defense Minister Lambrecht want to provide further support, but do not promise any Western-style battle tanks. There are other heavy war machines for that.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht no longer want to hand over Western-style main battle tanks to Ukraine – despite increasingly loud demands, including from their own coalition. “We will not go it alone in everything we do,” said Scholz on Deutschlandfunk. The SPD politician emphasized the support already provided. It was precisely the weapons that Germany had made available that “made the difference and also made the current successes that Ukraine has achieved possible,” said Scholz. That’s why it “makes sense that we continue there”.

Lambrecht also reiterated German support for Ukraine. “We make everything possible that we can: We deliver weapons from the stocks of the Bundeswehr, from industry and via the ring exchange,” said the SPD politician to the newspapers of the Funke media group.

Regarding Ukraine’s demands to also deliver Western-style main battle tanks such as the Leopard 2, Lambrecht said: “We don’t want a German going it alone and we will always make such decisions in consultation with our partners.” So far, no other country has delivered western-style armored personnel carriers or main battle tanks. It is important that the Ukrainian troops can “fight quickly and without long training” with the delivered equipment. “That’s why we’re exchanging rings with the Czech Republic, Slovakia and now also with Greece.”

Order from Krauss-Maffei Wegmann

Meanwhile, it became known on Saturday that the federal government of Ukraine approved the purchase of German-made howitzers. A government spokesman said: “We can confirm that a license has been granted to export 18 RCH-155 howitzers.” The “Welt am Sonntag” had previously reported on it, citing documents available to it. Accordingly, it is about a planned order from Kiev with the armaments group Krauss-Maffei Wegmann (KMW) worth 216 million euros. However, the howitzers could be delivered in two and a half years at the earliest.

Asked whether she or the chancellor feared that Russia, under its President Vladimir Putin, might attack Germany, Lambrecht said fear was not good advice. “Neither Olaf Scholz nor I are afraid. It’s about prudence.” Lambrecht defended the Inspector General of the German Armed Forces, Eberhard Zorn, against criticism of his analysis of the situation in Ukraine. Ukraine’s achievements are very impressive and encouraging, she said. “But the Russian troops are far from being beaten back.” She shares this assessment of the Inspector General.

A few days ago, Zorn had doubted that the Ukrainians really had the strength for a counteroffensive. “They need a superiority of at least 3 to 1,” he said. He had also expressed fears that Russia could open a second front. “Kaliningrad, the Baltic Sea, the Finnish border, Georgia, Moldova … there are many possibilities. Putin would have the skills,” Zorn said.

When asked if she agreed, Lambrecht said: “I agree that Putin is unpredictable.” Putin attacked his neighbors and questioned the territorial integrity of other states. In addition, one had to experience that “terrible violations of human rights were committed”. “Against this background, I do not rule out that Putin will take other steps.” There are currently no concrete signs of this, “but he has already gone down a path that we could not have imagined either.”

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