RUSSIA’S
WAR ON UKRAINE
White House weighs three-way deal to get fighter
jets to Ukraine
Poland wants to donate its old MiGs to Ukraine. But
there’s a catch — it needs U.S. jets.
By
ALEXANDER WARD and PAUL MCLEARY
03/05/2022
07:01 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/05/white-house-deal-fighter-jets-ukraine-00014424
The U.S.
remains in discussions with Poland to potentially backfill their fleet of
fighter planes if Warsaw decides to transfer its used MiG-29s to Ukraine, four
U.S. officials tell POLITICO.
The ongoing
talks, as President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pleads with Congress for help,
underscore the frantic push to find weapons to equip Ukrainian forces as they
continue to fight off the massive Russian invasion.
As Poland
weighed sending its warplanes to Ukraine last week, Warsaw asked the White
House if the Biden administration could guarantee it would provide them with
U.S.-made fighter jets to fill the gap. The White House said it would look into
the matter. The Biden administration didn’t oppose the Polish government giving
Kyiv the MiGs, which could potentially escalate tensions between NATO and
Moscow. Poland, for now, has held on to its fighter jets.
Discussions
between Warsaw and Washington are still underway, though authorization for new,
replacement fighter jets to Poland could take a long time.
“We are
working with the Poles on this issue and consulting with the rest of our NATO
allies,” a White House spokesperson told POLITICO. “We are also working on the
capabilities we could provide to backfill Poland if it decided to transfer
planes to Ukraine.”
Several
Eastern European countries like Poland, Bulgaria and Slovakia retain dozens of
Russian-made aircraft in their inventories and have been hesitant to give up
those planes without guarantees from the U.S. that they could replace them.
Poland has
been modernizing its aircraft fleet since 2006, when it first started flying
F-16s, and in 2020 signed a $4.6 billion deal for 32 F-35s, the first of which
will arrive in 2024, making those older Russian-made planes expendable.
The issue
of sending aircraft into the fight is more complex than the effort underway by
over two dozen European countries to send anti-armor and anti-air defensive
weapons to Ukraine. A steady stream of U.S. and British military planes have
been landing in Poland in recent days filled with those missiles, along with
other munitions, rations, and small arms and ammunition.
Over the
past several weeks the U.S. has sent 12,000 troops to Europe to backstop
nervous allies along NATO’s Eastern front, the majority of which went to Poland
to join the 4,000 U.S. troops already stationed there. The troops are
conducting training missions with the Polish military, and could be called on
to assist with a humanitarian emergency if the flood of war refugees overwhelms
Polish and E.U. authorities.
The White
House has “in no way opposed Poland transferring planes to Ukraine,” the
spokesperson added, pointing out how difficult an operation it would be to get
the planes into Ukraine. Russian officials have pledged to attack any convoys
carrying weapons entering the country.
The issue
of transferring American F-16s to Poland is a complex one, given the sensitive
avionics on American planes that may not always be legal to transfer overseas.
After
Zelenskyy’s impassioned Zoom call with senators on Saturday, during which he
urged the U.S. to send planes, drones and Stinger missiles to Ukraine and
impose oil sanctions on Russia, Sens. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Jeanne Shaheen
(D-N.H.) sent a letter to President Joe Biden throwing their full support
behind backfilling Poland with F-16s if they were to hand over their Russian
planes, saying they would work to ensure there was funding to finance the
transfer.
The
on-again, off-again effort to get MiGs into Ukraine started last weekend, when
European Union security chief Josep Borrell made the startling announcement
that several countries would soon ship fighter jets to the border for transfer
to Ukraine’s armed forces.
Ukrainian
officials told POLITICO at the time that several of their pilots had already
arrived in Poland for the handoff, but the deal stalled out. Bulgaria and
Slovakia also rejected the idea, and the Ukrainian pilots left empty-handed.
The U.S.
has already shipped $240 million of the $350 million in military assistance
Biden approved recently, with the rest expected to arrive in the coming days.
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