Mark Galeotti Mark Galeotti

Tank warfare: why the West is worried about arming Ukraine

(Photo: Getty)

Ukraine’s top soldier, General Valery Zaluzhny, has said that if he is to launch a successful counter-offensive, the West will have to provide him with another 300 tanks. This is, of course, a negotiating position. President Volodymyr Zelensky’s government has been very effective in managing western allies: cajoling, demanding and guilting them into providing more than they intended. He’s actually going to be getting more tanks, if not 300, now that Berlin has been browbeaten into lifting its objections. Might Germany’s initial reluctance suggest a changing perception of the war? It has certainly revealed the limited nature of the European powers’ arsenals.

The war’s next stage is likely to be a hard-fought struggle of attrition

Nato countries have already been supplying tanks. In April last year, the Czechs led the way by sending modernised Soviet-era T-72s, followed by most of the other former Warsaw Pact nations. This made sense, as Ukrainian tank and maintenance crews were already familiar with these models.

Mark Galeotti
Written by
Mark Galeotti

Mark Galeotti heads the consultancy Mayak Intelligence and is honorary professor at the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies and the author of some 30 books on Russia. His latest, Forged in War: a military history of Russia from its beginnings to today, is out now.

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