The US military’s chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, will visit the Grafenwöhr training area in southern Germany on Monday to observe a program that trains Ukrainian forces.
The US military started giving hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers new combined arms training in Germany on Sunday to aid the troops in defending their homeland against Russian invasion, the top US military official said. Milley added the goal was to get some 500 troops combat-ready within five-to-eight weeks.
Milley told reporters traveling with him that the training was vital in aiding Ukraine’s forces to recapture territory seized by Russia in past months, the Associated Press reported.
“This support is really important for Ukraine to be able to defend itself,” Milley said. “And we’re hoping to be able to pull this together here in short order.”
He said he hoped the newly trained troops would be able to use freshly delivered Western weaponry and equipment before rainy weather sets in during the spring.
A full set of weapons and equipment is being provided to the Ukrainian soldiers in Germany.
The combined arms training provided in Germany will give participants the ability to launch offensives against the invading Russian forces and counter their attacks.
Among other things, the training aims to improve the movement and coordination of large units of ground forces backed by artillery and armor.
The training will culminate in a complex combat exercise involving an entire battalion and a headquarters unit.
The US has already trained more than 3,100 Ukrainian troops on how to use and maintain certain weapons and other equipment, including howitzers, armored vehicles and the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, known as HIMARS.
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Here are other updates concerning the war in Ukraine on Monday January 16:
Russian President Vladimir Putin slammed growing Western arms supplies to Ukraine during a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday, the Kremlin said.
According to a readout of the call, Putin accused Ukraine of “intensifying hostilities” with the “support of Western sponsors who are ramping up the supplies of weapons and military equipment.”
The call comes two days after a Russian rocket barrage struck an apartment building in the city of Dnipro, killing at least 40 people, according to Ukrainian authorities.
Erdogan’s office said that the Turkish president has renewed his offer to help mediate an end to the conflict.
“During the call, President Erdogan reiterated that Turkey is ready to undertake the task of facilitating and mediating for the establishment of a lasting peace between Russia and Ukraine,” Erdogan’s office said.
The Kremlin said Putin and Erdogan also discussed a possible exchange of Russian and Ukrainian prisoners of war, including wounded soldiers. It added the export of Ukrainian grain from Black Sea ports and ways to unblock fertilizer and food exports from Russia were also discussed.
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German foreign minister discusses Russia at the Hague
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock is visiting The Hague in the Netherlands to discuss options for bringing Russian President Vladimir Putin to justice for his illegal war on Ukraine.
Baerbock plans to meet with the president of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Piotr Hofmanski, and chief prosecutor Karim Khan.
Khan is already investigating the situation in Ukraine to assess whether war crimes or genocide are being committed there. However, the court cannot take action in the matter, among other things because Russia is not a state party to the institution.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has instead called for a special tribunal at the UN General Assembly in September.
British Foreign Minister James Cleverly said the Russian government has sanctioned him.
“Good,” he wrote on Twitter. “If this is the price for supporting Ukrainian freedom, then I’m happy to be sanctioned.”
Russia and Belarus began joint miiltary drills on Monday, heightening concern in Kyiv and the West that a new Russian offensive may be launched with support from its ally.
Belarus has maintained that the air drills, scheduled to take place from January 16 to February 1, are purely defensive in character.
Ukraine has issued continual warnings that more attacks may come from Belarusian territory.
Russia used its neighbor Belarus as one starting point for its attempted invasion of Ukraine last February.
Belarus has held a number of military drills since the invasion began, both alone and with Russia.
There have also been unofficial reports of military equipment and fighters arriving in Belarus since the start of the year.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has used a keynote speech in Germany to call on Berlin to end its reluctance to deliver heavy weaponry, such as battle tanks, to Ukraine.
At a ceremony marking former Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble’s 50 years in parliament, Morawiecki called “for decisive actions by the German government, for all sorts of weapons to be delivered. The battle for freedom and our future is raging as we speak.”
“Tanks must not be left in storehouses, but placed in their hands,” he told the mostly conservative lawmakers attending the event.
Berlin is coming under pressure, notably from Poland, to send battle tanks to Ukraine to help defend against the Russian invasion. The UK’s pledge over the weekend to send 14 of its Challenger 2 tanks to aid Kyiv’s troops has increased that pressure.
Earlier, Morawiecki said he would continue pressing his demands for further World War II reparations from Germany, after his ruling Law and Justice party (PiS) in October made a formal demand for €1.3 trillion (about $1.4 trillion) in compensation for harm inflicted on Poland during the war.
Germany has rejected the demand, saying the issue has been settled.
Finland’s defense minister, Mikko Savola, has meanwhile said that its position on sending German-made Leopard tanks to Ukraine depends on Germany’s decision, adding that such deliveries would require a permit from Berlin.
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A cargo ship carrying 13,000 metric tons (14,330 US tons) of peas from Ukraine has run aground in the Bosporus Strait, the waterway between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.
The strait was temporarily closed after the Palau-flagged freighter MKK-1 stranded near Umuryeri, Turkish coastal authorities announced on Twitter on Monday. Media reports said it was refloated with the help of Turkish tugboats a few hours later.
The ship was sailing under the terms of an internationally brokered grain deal between Russia and Ukraine amid Moscow’s invasion of its neighbor.
The death toll from a Russian rocket strike on a residential building in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro has risen to at least 35, with two children among the dead, the regional governor said on Monday.
“As of now, the enemy attack took the lives of 35 residents of the building, including two children. Thirty-nine people were saved, 75 were injured,” Valentyn Reznichenko said on social media.
He said the fates of a further 35 residents of the building remained unclear, with rescue efforts continuing nearly 40 hours after the attack.
An earlier toll from rescuers had stood at 30.
The European Union has strongly condemned the strike, with a foreign affairs spokesperson saying that Russia was continuing “to show its inhuman face” and making indiscriminate use of “brutal missile terror.”
Sweden, which holds the EU presidency, described the strike as a “war crime,” with Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson saying all “intentional attacks against civilians” came into that category.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday also slammed the Russian people’s “cowardly silence” over the attack. He said Ukraine had otherwise received messages of sympathy from around the world over “this terror.”
Moscow has denied attacking the building. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the “situation” in Dnipro was the result of Ukrainian countermissiles and air defense.
Germany’s Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht has resigned after weeks of public questioning of her competence that reached a peak following what was seen by many as a tone-deaf New Year’s Eve message touching on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Lambrecht was slammed not only for her comments in that Instagram video, in which she said — speaking against a background of exploding fireworks — that the war had given her “a lot of special impressions,” but also for her management of German arms deliveries to Ukraine.
Berlin has faced frequent criticism from several quarters that it has been slow to provide weaponry to Ukrainian forces as they defend their country against Moscow’s troops.
Ukraine is expecting to receive the first €3 billion ($3.25 billion) instalment from an €18 billion financial assistance package from the European Union this week, Ukraine’s prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said on Monday.
“Ukraine and the EU have just signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the provision of 18 billion (euros) in macro-financial assistance,” Shmyhal wrote on Twitter.
The EU reached an agreement to provide the financing to Ukraine at a summit last month. The package aims to aid the country to maintain economic stability amid fallout from the Russian invasion, now in its 11th month.
tj/ar (dpa, AP, AFP, Reuters)
Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/ukraine-updates-us-trains-ukrainian-forces-in-germany/a-64401767?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf