US announces $138mn in emergency sale of Hawk missile for Ukraine
The US announced the move Tuesday saying that Ukraine has an urgent need for the maintenance support to keep the missile system running.
AP
Washington, 10 April
The State
Department has greenlighted an emergency $138 million in foreign military sales
for Ukraine to provide critical repairs and spare parts for Kyiv's Hawk missile
systems.
The US announced the move Tuesday
saying that Ukraine has an urgent need for the maintenance support to keep the
missile system running.
The announcement follows a similar,
small-sized round of $300 million in munitions support the Pentagon announced
last month after it was able to convert contract savings to be able to offset
the cost of providing the aid. Both the State and Defense Departments have been
looking for ways to continue to get Ukraine support while a $60 billion Ukraine
aid package remains stalled in Congress.
The HAWK is a medium range
surface-to-air missile system that provides air defence, which is one of
Ukraine's top security needs.
“Ukraine has an urgent need to
increase its capabilities to defend against Russian missile strikes and the
aerial capabilities of Russian forces,” the State Department said in a memo
outlining the sale. “Maintaining and sustaining the HAWK Weapon System will
enhance Ukraine's ability to defend its people and protect critical national
infrastructure.”
During a Capitol Hill hearing
Tuesday, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said without the support — the US risks
that Ukraine will fall to Russia.
“Ukraine matters, and the outcome
of the conflict in Ukraine will have global implications for our national
security as well,” Austin said.
If Kyiv falls, it could imperil
Ukraine's Baltic NATO member neighbours and potentially drag US troops into a
prolonged European war.
The work on the Hawk systems will
be performed by contractors from Massachusetts-based RTX Corporation, formerly
known as Raytheon and Huntsville, Alabama-based PROJECTXYZ. The State
Department said the parts needed to repair the systems will come from US Army
stock, third-country donations, commercial off-the-shelf components and new
production.
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