Niles Williamson
The head of the United States Army Europe, Lieutenant General Ben
Hodges, announced on Wednesday that a contingent of US soldiers will be
dispatched to Ukraine in the spring to undertake the training of four
companies of the National Guard of Ukraine (NGU). The exact number of
American soldiers who will be stationed at the Yavoriv Training Area
outside the western city of Lvov has yet to be determined.
The
highly provocative move, which follows the positioning of US and NATO
forces in Poland and the Baltic states and escalating threats of a
military confrontation with Russia, came as the Kiev government steps up
its war against pro-Russian separatists in the Ukraine’s eastern
Donbass region.
Lt. Gen. Hodges made his announcement on his first
visit to Kiev where he met with the commander of the Ukrainian Armed
Forces Lt. Gen. Anatoliy Pushnyakov and the acting commander of the NGU
Lt. Gen. Oleksandr Kryvyenko. Hodges told reporters after the meeting he
was “impressed by the readiness of both military and civil leadership
to change and reform.”
Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. Vanessa Hillman told Defense News
the training mission was part of a State Department effort “to assist
Ukraine in strengthening its law enforcement capabilities, conduct
internal defense, and maintain rule of law.” The Obama administration
has so far committed $19 million from the Global Security Contingency
Fund to help build up and train the NGU.
Disbanded in 2000, the
National Guard was reestablished in March of last year in the aftermath
of the US and EU-supported and fascist-backed coup that ousted
democratically elected President Victor Yanukovych. The new National
Guard is being developed as a light infantry, rapid response force aimed
at assisting the suppression of the anti-Kiev, Pro-Russian separatists
in the eastern Donbass region.
In addition to the deployment of
advisers, the US has also been supplying Ukraine with heavy military
equipment necessary to fight the separatists. On Monday, the US Embassy
in Kiev announced the delivery of an armored Kozak mine-resistant
personnel carrier to the State Border Guard Service (SBGS).
The
US also recently delivered 35 smaller armored trucks as well as personal
protective gear for use by the SBGS along the eastern border with
Russia and against separatist held areas. SBGS spokesman Andriy
Demchenko told the Southeast European Times the armored
vehicles will "depart to the eastern border area for patrolling between
checkpoints. Armored vehicles are not required for peaceful areas, we
need it [in the east] to increase the efficiency of border monitoring
and to protect the State Border Guard Service staff."
In a
confrontational move at the end of last year, US President Barack Obama
signed into law the Ukraine Freedom Support Act. The bill, which passed
unanimously in both houses of Congress, authorizes the president to
deliver a cache of over $350 million in military equipment to the Kiev
regime over the next three years. This potential aid includes anti-tank
and anti-armor weaponry, grenade launchers, mortars, machine guns and
surveillance drones.
The intensification of US support for the
Kiev regime and its operation against pro-Russia separatists comes as
intense fighting and shelling has erupted in the east, particularly in
and around the city of Donetsk.
While fighting continued over the
strategically and symbolically important Donetsk International Airport,
Ukrainian officials acknowledged control over the main terminal had been
ceded to the separatists. Despite admitting this loss Ukraine’s
National Security and Defense Council spokesman Col. Andriy Lysenko
insisted that Ukrainian armed forces remained in control of the airport
runway and control tower.
At least nine civilians were reported
killed and another 20 injured Thursday morning when mortar shells struck
a public transit stop, destroying a trolley bus and a nearby car. Both
sides blamed the other for the deadly attack. Representative of the
Donetsk People’s Republic accused a covert unit backed by the regime in
Kiev, which, they said, had set up inside the city and fired the mortar
from the back of a pickup truck.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov released a statement denouncing the attack as a “crime against
humanity… aimed at disruption of efforts to regulate the Ukrainian
crisis peacefully.”
Meanwhile at Unity Day Rally in Kiev, Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk blamed Russia for the bus attack, stating,
“Today Russian terrorists again committed a terrible act against
humanity. Russia bears responsibility for this.”
Speaking to
reporters on Thursday Ukrainian military spokesman Vladyslav Seleznyov
stated that six soldiers had been killed and another 16 taken captive
before they decided to pull back. Other social media reports indicate
that at least 37 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in the fighting.
Social
media posts by George Tuka, head of the nationalist volunteer aid group
People’s Home Front, stated that a number of soldiers were killed when a
portion of the terminal’s second floor ceiling collapsed in on them.
After months of fighting, the main airport terminal has been laid waste
by bombardment from mortar shells and Grad rockets.
On Wednesday,
Dymtro Yarosh, head of the fascist Right Sector organization and a
member of the Ukrainian parliament, was wounded by shrapnel from a grad
rocket in the course of fighting near the airport. Yarosh was leading a
volunteer battalion formed by Right Sector, which has been at the
forefront of military operations against pro-Russian separatists in the
Donbass region.
Fighting also flared up this week near the eastern
city of Luhansk. The Ukrainian military claimed that Check Point 31 on
the border with Russia came under attack on Wednesday by highly trained
Russian soldiers who routed the troops and subsequently took over the
post.
In a speech given Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko made the
unsubstantiated claim that 9,000 Russian soldiers were currently
fighting with the separatists in the east and appealed for more military
aid from Europe and the United States. Jens Stoltenberg, the
secretary-general of NATO, refused to confirm the presence of Russian
troops in Ukraine insisting instead that there had been “an increase in
Russian equipment inside eastern Ukraine.” As it has in the past, Russia
denied the accusations that its soldiers are fighting in eastern
Ukraine.
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