The US has said it will provide Ukraine with American-made antipersonnel mines to help it fend off Russia’s advances. This as officials in Kyiv dismissed warnings of a major Russian missile strike, blaming a psychological warfare operation carried out by Moscow.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said that Kyiv would be provided with ‘non-persistent’ mines that don’t pose a long-term threat to civilians.
Ukrainian officials have argued that using more land mines could help it stop Russia’s human wave attacks in the east of the country, where much of the civilian population has already been evacuated.
Over 160 countries, including Ukraine, have signed up to a 1997 treaty banning the weapons. Land mines are criticised as indiscriminate, with the potential to pose a threat to civilians long after any conflict has ended.
The US, Russia, China, and other countries however have never agreed to a ban.
Russia has deployed anti-tank and antipersonnel mines extensively in the Ukrainian territory it has seized.
DW talks to Domitilla Sagramoso from King’s College London on what the US-supplied landmines offer Ukraine, and former UK Defence Attaché John Foreman discusses Russia’s latest threats following Kyiv’s use of ATACMS rockets on Russian soil.
00:00 Ukraine dismisses Russian attack threat
00:35 US to give Ukraine antipersonnel landmines
01:14 Domitilla Sagramoso from King’s College London on what mines offer Ukraine
06:17 Former UK Defence Attaché John Foreman discusses Russia’s latest threats
#ukraine #russiaukrainewar #russia
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