Ukraine’s supporters in the West are close to allowing Kiev use foreign-made weapons to hit targets deep inside Russia, Vladimir Zelensky’s chief of staff has claimed.
The issue was discussed between Kiev and its backers at the NATO summit in Washington earlier this week, Andrey Yermak said on Friday during a Ukrainian ‘Telemarathon’ – a round-the-clock multi-channel broadcast.
“It’s true that different member-states of the alliance have different stances regarding attacks on Russian territory” with Western arms, he said.
However, the chief of staff stressed that for Kiev “it is absolutely impossible to successfully wage this war if the enemy [Moscow] uses all its options and is not faced with any restrictions. It seems to me that most countries understand this.”
“I think we will get the result that we need. I think that the partners are close to resolving this issue. And I think we will get a solution” regarding long-range strikes inside Russia, Yermak said.
Ukraine already has approval from several Western states to hit “legitimate” targets in Russia with weapons supplied by them, as well as a concession from the US to strike beyond Russia’s border near the city of Kharkov. Kiev has been pushing for months for the strike range to be extended, despite Russia warning that it would be a major escalation. According to Moscow, such attacks would constitute the direct participation of Washington and its allies in the conflict, as Kiev’s forces are unable to fire sophisticated foreign systems without constant technical support.
Speaking at a press conference at the NATO summit on Thursday, Zelensky expressed his frustration over the inability of the West to agree on the “crazy question” of strikes deep inside Russia. “If we want to win, if we want to prevail, if we want to save our country and to defend it, we need to lift all the limitations,” he insisted.
However, during the same event, US President Joe Biden reaffirmed the limits on how Ukraine can use American-supplied arms. “We have allowed Zelensky to use American weapons in the near border regions of Russia. If he had the opportunity to strike Moscow, strike the Kremlin, would that make sense? No, it wouldn’t,” he said.
Last month, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin warned that Moscow could supply weapons to other countries, including North Korea, in response to the West providing long-range systems to Kiev.