HomeNewsOpinionUkraine War: Missile-use limits in Kyiv will mean more refugees in Germany

Ukraine War: Missile-use limits in Kyiv will mean more refugees in Germany

Germany and the US must allow Kyiv to use its most effective weapons against Russian long-range strikes

August 28, 2024 / 15:09 IST
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The UK and France already say they want to grant Kyiv permission to use their cruise missiles against targets in Russia. (File)

The moment it became clear Hezbollah would be starting a large-scale drone and missile attack last week, Israel fired a pre-emptive strike that targeted dozens of launch sites within Lebanon. This was, to use sophisticated military parlance, a no-brainer, reducing stress on the air-defense systems that the attack was designed to overwhelm. To the best of our knowledge, it also worked.

As controversial as the war in Gaza has become, this clear-cut act of Israeli self-defense against purely military assets in Lebanon was not. Even so, it’s something that Ukraine isn’t being allowed to do against Russia with the most effective weapons in its arsenal.

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There are many reasons, from moral to strategic, for lifting restrictions on Ukraine’s use of allied long-range strike capacity on Russian soil. But the most compelling for Germany and the US — Kyiv’s most important, and cautious, arms suppliers — is that they can’t afford not to.

Between Sunday and Monday, Russia fired about 300 heavy drones and cruise, ballistic and hypersonic missiles at Ukraine, targeting its energy infrastructure. This, unlike Hezbollah’s effort, was not a one-off retaliation. It was part of a pre-winter strategy, and the rolling blackouts that ensued suggest the tactic is likely to succeed, so long as Ukraine’s forces are hamstrung.