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Russia says US 'adding fuel to fire' by sending longer-range rockets

Bangladesh News Desk

Published:02 Jun 2022, 09:55 AM

Russia says US 'adding fuel to fire' by sending longer-range rockets


Russia has accused the US of seeking to prolong the war in Ukraine after President Biden said he would supply Kyiv with new long-range missiles. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the US was "intentionally adding fuel to the fire" with the deliveries.


"Such supplies do not contribute to the Ukrainian leadership's willingness to resume peace negotiations," he added. Separately, the German government has promised to send an air defence system to Ukraine.


Chancellor Olaf Scholz told MPs that the IRIS-T system was the most modern Germany possessed and would enable Ukraine to defend an entire city against Russian air attacks.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov hit out against the deliveries and said Mr Biden's announcement increased the risk of a "third country" being dragged into the conflict.


The long-range missiles are to help Ukrainian troops strike enemy forces more precisely from a longer distance.


The US had previously been unwilling to provide the weapons out of fear they could be used against targets in Russia, but the US says Kyiv has given assurances that this will not happen.


On Wednesday, Mr Biden said the lethal aid would strengthen Kyiv's negotiating position against Russia and make a diplomatic solution more likely.


A senior US official said the new weapons package would include four M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS).


"These are precision guided systems with extended range. And so for high value targets that that allow them to keep some of the pressure off of Ukrainian forces on the front, we think these systems will be very useful," Undersecretary for Defense Dr Colin H Kahl said.


The systems can launch multiple precision-guided missiles at targets as far as 70km (45 miles) away - far further than the artillery that Ukraine currently has. They are also believed to be more accurate than their Russian equivalents.



White House officials agreed to provide the rockets, they said, only after gaining assurances from President Volodomyr Zelensky that the weapons would not be used to attack targets inside Russia.


"We are not going to send to Ukraine rocket systems that can strike into Russia," Mr Biden wrote on Wednesday. Mr Zelensky confirmed this in an interview for US network Newsmax.


"We're not interested in what is happening in Russia," he said. "We're only interested in our own territory in Ukraine." But Mr Peskov said Moscow did not trust Mr Zelensky's remarks.


"In order to have trust, we need to have experience of Kyiv fulfilling its promises, but there is none," he said, quoted by Ria news agency.


Addressing the US announcement, he said: "We believe the US is directly and intentionally adding fuel to the fire... The US is obviously holding the line that it will fight Russia to the last Ukrainian."



The latest rockets will be the centrepiece of a $700m (£556m) support package for Ukraine that will be formally unveiled later on Wednesday, White House officials said.


Helicopters, anti-tank weapons, tactical vehicles and spare parts are to be included in what will be the 11th package of military aid approved by the US for Ukraine since the invasion began in February.