Exclusive-U.S. considers HAWK air defense
equipment for Ukraine, say U.S. officials
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[October 25, 2022]
By Mike Stone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United States is
considering sending older HAWK air defense equipment from storage to
Ukraine to help it defend against Russian drone and cruise missile
attacks, two U.S. officials told Reuters. |
Romanian Army soldiers deploy a HAWK PIP III
R ground-to-air missile launch pad during a joint military exercise with
the US Army that aimed to test the interoperability of U.S. and Romanian
armed forces in the event of a missile attack, near Corbu village in
Constanta county, Romania, November 8, 2016. Inquam Photos/Ovidiu Micsik/via
REUTERS |
The HAWK interceptor missiles would be an upgrade to the Stinger
missile systems - a smaller, shorter range air defense system - that
the United States has already sent to blunt Russia's invasion.
The Biden administration would use the Presidential Drawdown
Authority (PDA) to transfer the HAWK equipment which is based on
Vietnam-era technology, but has been upgraded several times. The PDA
allows the United States to transfer defense articles and services
from stocks quickly without congressional approval in response to an
emergency.
Reuters was unable to determine how many HAWK systems and missiles
the United States has available to transfer. The White House
declined to comment.
The HAWK system is the predecessor to PATRIOT missile defense system
made by Raytheon Technologies which remains off the table for
Ukraine, U.S. officials have told Reuters.
U.S. President Joe Biden pledged to Ukraine President Volodomyr
Zelenskiy that Washington would provide Ukraine with advanced air
systems after a devastating missile barrage from Russia earlier this
month.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said that Spain intends
to send four HAWK launchers.
The United States would likely initially send interceptor missiles
for the HAWK system to Ukraine because it was unclear if enough U.S.
launchers were in good repair, one U.S. official told Reuters. The
U.S. systems have been in storage for decades.
A PDA is being considered for later this week, U.S. officials have
said. One U.S. official said it would likely be about half the size
of the recent security assistance packages which have been around
$700 million.
It was not immediately clear if HAWK interceptor missiles would be
included, but U.S. officials have previously cautioned that size and
composition of military aid packages can change rapidly.
Since the Feb. 24 Russian invasion of neighboring Ukraine, which
Moscow calls a "special military operation", the United States has
sent around $17.6 billion worth of security assistance to Kyiv.
(Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington with additional reporting by
Gerry Doyle in SingaporeEditing by Shri Navaratnam)
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