The US is reportedly trying to provide S-300 air defense systems to Kiev after an arrangement with Polish planes has stalled
The US State Department has been seeking American allies who have Soviet S-300 air defense systems as it explores various options of supplying Ukraine with heavier arms, CNN reported on Tuesday. Last week, a plan to deliver MiG-29 fighter jets from Poland to Ukraine stalled after Washington refused to act as an intermediary in the process.
The White House has been increasingly pressured by Congress, which demands Washington supply Kiev with heavier weapons amid the ongoing Russian military action in Ukraine, CNN reported, citing some unnamed sources.
“The State Department has been working to identify which countries currently have the Soviet-made S-300 air defense systems and is examining how they could be transferred to Ukraine,” the media outlet reported.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly called on western nations to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine or provide Ukraine with military aircraft and air defense systems as the conflict unfolds.
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A Republican Senate aide told CNN the lawmakers should “urge” the White House to identify “allies and partners” not just in Europe but “around the globe” that could hand over their “S-300 or other advanced air defense systems” to Ukraine in exchange for the US “backfilling” their own capabilities.
Washington initially struggled with the idea of the need to backfill some other nations’ defense capabilities in exchange for military aid to Ukraine. However, according to CNN, that is not an issue now, as Congress passed a $1.5 trillion spending bill last week. The bill specifically included $13 billion aimed for a “response” to Russia’s actions in Ukraine.