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- Nov 16, 2023

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What every realist expected is happening, EU won't meet the target for promised shells by March 2024.Growing worries that the EU will fall short of its pledge to supply a million artillery shells to Ukraine by March is forcing France to do an about-face on its earlier insistence that the ammunition should only be sourced in Europe.
However, before resorting to foreign suppliers, the EU needs to actually miss the March target, a senior French diplomat told POLITICO.
“As long as we haven't come to that conclusion, we won't do it [buy abroad], but if we have to adjust, we'll adjust," they said.
That’s a significant shift from France’s traditional position of encouraging national governments to buy European arms and ammunition.
The need to send vast amounts of ammunition to Ukraine is putting a huge strain on European stockpiles and shell production — designed for war plans that didn't take into account the massive artillery battles that are a hallmark of combat in Ukraine.
Earlier this year, Brussels came up with a plan to boost ammunition shipments to Ukraine by sending shells from existing stockpiles and reimbursing countries from the EU’s European Peace Facility, as well as a €1 billion plan for the joint procurement of ammunition by the European Defence Agency.
However, the shell effort ran into domestic concerns, as Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, together with Germany and France, wouldn't agree to include ammunition produced outside the EU.
Now, calls for Europe to look abroad for shells to deliver to Kyiv are growing louder.
“We have advocated for a long time that if there is not enough ammunition, or there is not enough equipment in the EU, then let's buy it somewhere else and give it to Ukraine,” Latvian President Edgars Rinkēvičs told POLITICO earlier this month.
An EU diplomat from a third country — granted, like others in this piece, anonymity to speak freely — underlined that the priority is ensuring Ukraine has enough shells to fend off Russian attacks, not to protect European industries.
Of course it's the Baltic Chihuahuas advocating someone else to procure the munitions since they produce jack shit themselves. Where would they even purchase some shells? No Western country produces in quantity anymore. South Korea's stores got already bought and Israel is off the table.
Oh and my earlier post showed Krauts promising 20k more shells than previously promised, even though they won't even fill the original promise.