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Cracks in West support for Ukraine emerge

Cracks in West support for Ukraine emerge

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who hopes to outlast allied backing for Kyiv, will be ready to capitalise if he sees Ukraine is running low on air defence or other weapons

Published Date – 06:29 PM, Sat – 23 September 23


Cracks in West support for Ukraine emerge



Warsaw: Once rock-solid, the support that Ukraine got from its biggest backers for its fight against Russia is showing cracks. Political posturing in Poland and Slovakia, where a trade dispute with Ukraine has stirred tensions, and Republican reticence in the US about Washington’s big spending to prop up Ukraine’s military have raised new uncertainties about the West’s commitment to its efforts to expel Russian invaders more than 18 months into the war.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who hopes to outlast allied backing for Kyiv, will be ready to capitalise if he sees Ukraine is running low on air defence or other weapons. The West has long been shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine against Russia. But between Ukraine’s impassioned, unending pleas for help and huge handouts from its backers, signs of discord have emerged.

In July, Britain’s Defence Minister said Ukraine should show “gratitude” to the West after Kyiv renewed its vocal — but unsuccessful — push to join NATO. This week, a new bout surfaced after Ukraine filed a complaint at the World Trade Organisation against three neighbours and European union members — Hungary, Poland and Slovakia — for banning imports of Ukrainian farm products, a key export for the war-weary country’s battered economy.

The three bristled at the move, with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki shooting back that his country is “no longer transferring any weapons to Ukraine because we are now arming ourselves with the most modern weapons”.

Some EU officials have warned that Putin is revelling at the new show of Western discord at a time when Ukrainian troops are making slow gains in their counteroffensive against Russian forces, who still control a vast swath of eastern and southern Ukraine. Still, from Washington to Warsaw, where the military cost and capabilities of helping Ukraine are at issue, officials are playing down any talk of a rift. “I don’t believe that one political dispute will lead to a breakdown,” Polish President Andrzej Duda said, adding that his Prime Minister was only referring to newly ordered weapons that wouldn’t ever go to Ukraine anyway.

Jake Sullivan, the Biden administration’s national security adviser, said on Thursday he believed that “Poland will continue to be a supporter of Ukraine”. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in a brief visit to Washington this week, sought to shore up US support for his country, which has factored into the political campaign ahead of next year’s presidential election.

Former President Donald Trump and leading GOP rival Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida say they want the US to stop sending weapons to Ukraine. Sen Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, after meeting with Zelenskyy on Thursday, acknowledged that “people are talking about how much money” is being spent. But, he added, “We’re investing in democracy.” Other GOP presidential hopefuls like former Vice President Mike Pence, former South Carolina Gov Nikki Haley and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie support Ukraine.

Politics over the issue is also playing out in Eastern Europe. Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, a big backer of Ukraine”s fight against Russia, appealed on the X platform, formerly known as Twitter, for his counterparts in Ukraine and Poland “to resolve current differences,” and said his country was ready to “facilitate” dialogue between them.

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