Ukraine war briefing: Europe to take charge of military aid as Trump era looms
A new Nato mission located in Wiesbaden will take over the coordination of western military aid for Ukraine in January, Germany’s defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said on Monday. The setting up of NSATU – Nato Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine – has been months in the planning and is widely seen as an effort to safeguard the aid mechanism against interference by Donald Trump. Europeans will step up military support for Ukraine, Pistorius pledged, after talks in Berlin with his British, French, Italian and Polish counterparts. “Our target must be to enable Ukraine to act out of a position of strength,” Pistorius said after hosting a meeting of the five leading nations in European defence.
The Polish defence minister, Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, echoed Pistorius’s pledge of more aid for Kyiv. “We are obliged today to say it clearly: Europe must increase its efforts when it comes to helping Ukraine but above all … when it comes to its own security. Without higher spending, without awareness in every European society of the times we are living in, everything is nothing.”
Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, was under a sustained Russian drone attack early on Tuesday morning, said its mayor, Vitali Klitschko. “Air defence forces are operating in different areas of the city. [Drones] are entering the capital from different directions.” What sounded like air defence systems in operation could be heard, Reuters said.
A Russian strike on Kharkiv on Monday left 23 people wounded and about 40 buildings damaged, said the city mayor, Igor Terekhov. In the southern port city of Odesa, authorities said a Russian attack damaged infrastructure and wounded 11 people.
The fatal crash of a DHL cargo plane as it approached Vilnius airport in Lithuania could have been sabotage or an accident, Germany’s foreign minister said. A crew member was killed and three others injured when the plane crashed into a house, Deborah Cole reports from Berlin. Germany is already investigating several fires caused by incendiary devices hidden inside parcels at DHL warehouses earlier this year. The crashed plane had taken off from Leipzig, Germany, where an incendiary device hidden in a DHL package caught fire in July as part of a suspected Russian sabotage plot against flights. Of the Vilnius crash, the German foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, said: “We must now seriously ask ourselves whether this was an accident or whether it was another hybrid incident.”
The EU is proposing to sanction several Chinese firms it claims helped Russian companies develop attack drones that were deployed against Ukraine, Bloomberg News reported on Monday. The European Commission was also looking to impose restrictions on additional Russian oil tankers to curb Russia’s ability to circumvent existing restrictions, the report said, citing documents seen by Bloomberg.