An arms package that includes cluster munitions fired by 155 mm Howitzer cannons is expected to be announced as soon as Friday, according to three US officials who spoke on condition of anonymity. One of the officials said the measure has been under serious consideration for at least a week.
Ukrainian soldiers prepare 155mm artillery shells on the battlefield. Photo: AFP
The White House said sending cluster bombs to Ukraine was “under active consideration” but made no announcement. President Joe Biden will attend next week’s NATO summit in Lithuania to discuss the war in Ukraine.
Human Rights Watch called on Russia and Ukraine to stop using cluster bombs and urged the United States not to supply them. The group said both Russian and Ukrainian forces have used the weapons, killing Ukrainian civilians.
Banned by more than 120 countries, these bombs typically unleash large numbers of smaller bomblets that can kill indiscriminately over a wide area, threatening civilians. Unexploded bombs pose a danger for years after conflicts end.
A 2009 law banned the export of certain types of US cluster munitions. However, President Joe Biden could waive the bans on these bombs, as his predecessor Donald Trump did in January 2021 to allow the export of cluster munition technology to South Korea.
Ukraine has called on members of the US Congress to pressure the Biden administration to approve the delivery of cluster bombs known as Dual-Purpose Improvised Conventional Munitions (DPICM).
A Pentagon spokesman said the Biden administration is considering sending DPICMs to Ukraine, but only those with a failure rate of less than 2.35%. The US military believes cluster munitions would be useful for Ukraine, but they have not yet been approved for Kiev because of various restrictions and concerns.
Also in the new aid package, expected to be worth $800 million, Ukraine will receive ammunition for the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) and ground vehicles such as Bradley fighting vehicles and Stryker armored personnel carriers.
This will be the 42nd US aid package approved for Ukraine since the conflict with Russia in February 2022, worth more than $40 billion. Ukraine is also asking the West to send advanced fighter jets, including F-16s, as it launches a counter-offensive.
NATO members Denmark and the Netherlands are leading a coalition of Western countries to train pilots and support staff, maintain aircraft and eventually supply F-16s to Ukraine.
Bui Huy (according to Reuters, AFP, CNA)
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