Ukraine urges allies to provide precision rocket systems to counter Russian offensive

Ukraine urges allies to provide precision rocket systems to counter Russian offensive
Ukraine's defence minister has urged western countries to provide Kyiv with more M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems to slow down Russia's advance into Ukraine.
2 min read
The Himars missile systems have "significantly slowed down the Russian advance," according to Kyiv's defence minister [Getty]

Ukraine's defence minister asked Western nations on Tuesday to scale up drastically its supply of precision rocket systems, calling them a "game-changer" that could allow a counteroffensive against Russian invaders.

The United States since mid-June has delivered eight units of the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or Himars, which can precisely strike targets within 80 kilometers (50 miles) using the ammunition that has been provided, with plans for four more.

"These systems allowed us to destroy approximately 30 command stations and ammunition storages," Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksiy Reznikov told the Atlantic Council.

"This has significantly slowed down the Russian advance and dramatically decreased the intensity of their artillery shelling. So it's working. We are grateful to our partners," he said in a virtual appearance at the Washington think tank.

But he said that far more systems were needed, likening Ukraine's border with Russia to the distance from Barcelona to Warsaw.

"The shield of Europe in Ukraine has the same distance - 2,500 kilometres of aggressive frontline with the enemy. For an effective counter-offensive, we would need at least 100, I think," he said of the Himars systems.

"That could be a game-changer on the battlefield in that case."

He renewed a call for longer-range rockets - 100 to 150 kilometers (60-90 miles) - to cut off Russian units from their support.

"We don't need the strategy of the meat-grinder," he said.

President Joe Biden's administration has refused to send longer-range ammunition, fearing that Ukraine would strike targets inside Russian territory and potentially expand the war to a direct clash with the West.

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