Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will soon be crossing another hot ticket item off his weapons wishlist.

After months of refusal, the US has made a sharp reversal on its stance to allow the supply of advanced Western fighter jets to Kyiv.

At the Group of Seven (G7) summit in Japan over the weekend, President Joe Biden endorsed training programs for the sophisticated F-16s and said he would not stand in the way of allies transferring the US-made jets to Ukraine. 

Several NATO countries had voiced support for sending their supplies of F-16s into the conflict, but it required US government permission.

Details on how many of the fourth-generation jets would be sent, and who would provide them, will be made in the coming months while training is underway, Mr Biden said. 

The use of air power has been largely untapped throughout the conflict, with both sides struggling to gain superiority over the skies. 

The destructive power and global availability of the F-16s is expected to help break the land warfare slog and shift the balance Ukraine’s way.

But, given their complexity, defence experts say that is unlikely to happen anytime soon. 

Protesters gathered outside Joe Biden’s hotel in Poland in February as the US President was coming under increased pressure to send the jets. ()

“It’s a game changer in many respects,” retired Air Marshal, Geoff Brown, told the ABC. 

“But it’s just not that easy to implement.”

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