Germany ‘to send company of tanks to Ukraine’ after pressure from allies

Germany has bowed to international pressure and agreed to send battle tanks to Ukraine, reports say.

While there has been no official confirmation from Berlin so far, officials in Kyiv swiftly hailed what they said was a potential gamechanger on the battlefield.

“A few hundred tanks for our tank crews - the best tank crews in the world,” Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s administration, wrote on Telegram. “This is what is going to become a real punching fist of democracy against the autocracy from the bog.”

A company of Germany’s Leopard 2 tanks are reportedly headed to Ukraine (Bundeswehr-Fotos)
A company of Germany’s Leopard 2 tanks are reportedly headed to Ukraine (Bundeswehr-Fotos)

Ukraine and many of Germany’s Nato partners have been pleading for a decision on whether Berlin would permit them to re-export German-made Leopard 2 tanks to help Kyiv as the battlefield begins to thaw.

After a summit at the Ramstein airbase failed to break the deadlock last week, Poland upped the ante on Tuesday by issuing Germany with a formal request to allow Warsaw to send tanks, while Nato seceretary-general sat down for talks with Germany’s new defence minister Boris Pistorius.

Just hours later, Der Spiegel reported that German chancellor Olaf Scholz had finally decided to allow allies such as Poland to send tanks – and that Berlin would do so too.

The German government has so far declined to comment, however, and one US official told the Associated Press that Germany could wait to announce its decision alongside Washington, where president Joe Biden is claimed to also be poised to approve M1 Abrams tanks for Ukraine.

Such a move would mark a major reversal in policy for both nations – and a significant victory for Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky as he seeks to bolster his countries defences against Russia’s invading army.

German soldiers stand at a Leopard tank at the army base Field Marshal Rommel Barracks in Augustdorf, (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
German soldiers stand at a Leopard tank at the army base Field Marshal Rommel Barracks in Augustdorf, (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)

However, it could take months for tanks to reach Ukraine even if an announcement is made this week, which officials claimed could be as soon as Wednesday.

While the discussion currently centres on at least one company of Leopard 2 tanks already in Bundeswehr stocks, in the longer-term more tanks could be restored to be fit for use, Spiegel reported.

Officials in Washington suggested that details there are still being worked out, with one reported as saying that Abrams tanks could be bought under its upcoming $850m Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative package – which also includes a Patriot missile defence system.

Ukraine’s President Zelensky has called for a boost in military hardware from the West (AP2011)
Ukraine’s President Zelensky has called for a boost in military hardware from the West (AP2011)

Mr Scholz has been wary of moves which could spur Russia to escalate the war, or which could ampflify the risk of Nato being drawn into the conflict.

Speaking at last week’s summit, where officials from more than 50 nations failed to reach an agreement on the Leopard tanks, his new defence secretary said: “We just have a responsibility for our population in Germany and in Europe and we have to balance all the pros and contras before we decide things like that.”

It had been suggested that Berlin’s reticence to approving Leopards could fade were Washington to also agree to send its Abrams tanks, which are seen as less suitable for Ukraine due to its heavy fuel consumption and difficulty to maintain.

Following his meeting with Mr Pistorius in Berlin on Tuesday, Nato’s Mr Stoltenberg said he was “confident we will have a solution soon” on the issue of battle tanks, adding: “At this pivotal moment in the war, we must provide heavier and more advanced systems to Ukraine, and we must do it faster.”

Various threats emanated from Russia last week as Western officials mulled sending more powerful weapons to Ukraine.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov insisted that Western tanks would not change the course of the conflict – but warned that Nato would regret its “delusion” that Ukraine could win on the battlefield and threatened such deliveries “will add problems for ... the Ukrainian people.”

Warning of “a growing indirect and sometimes direct involvement of Nato countries”, Mr Peskov claimed the belief that Ukraine can win was a “dramatic delusion of the Western community that will more than once be cause for regret”.

In more direct threats from other close allies of president Vladimir Putin, his ex-prime minister Dmitry Medvedev warned that Moscow’s defeat in Ukraine “may trigger a nuclear war”, while Duma speaker Vyacheslav Volodin claimed that Western weapons deliveries “will lead to a global catastrophe”.

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