The
United States, Germany and several other European countries are
lining up to send Kyiv dozens of advanced combat tanks over the
next few months to help boost Ukraine's military capacity as the
war approaches the 12-month mark.
The decision has been criticised by the Kremlin as a dangerous
escalation, and spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the tanks would
"burn" on the frontlines.
Now a Russian company - Fores, a Urals-based firm which makes
proppants for the energy industry - is offering cash payments to
Russian servicemen who "capture or destroy" German-made Leopard
2 or U.S.-made Abrams tanks.
The company said it will pay five million roubles to the first
Russian soldier to destroy one of the tanks, and 500,000 roubles
($7,200) for all subsequent attacks.
Echoing language used by Russian officials and pro-war state TV
hosts, Fores said NATO was pumping Ukraine with an "unlimited"
amount of arms and escalating the conflict. It also said it
would pay a 15-million rouble ($215,000) bounty on Western-made
fighter jets, should they ever be delivered to Ukraine.
The tanks have not yet been dispatched to Kyiv, and it could
take several months before the bulk of the promised deliveries
are sent.
Since the start of the conflict, Russia's defence ministry has
claimed to have destroyed hundreds of pieces of Western
weaponry.
Kyiv has previously dismissed those statements, highlighting for
instance that Russia has claimed to have destroyed more
U.S.-made HIMARS rocket launcher pads than were ever delivered
to the country.
Previous deliveries of advanced Western arms, particularly
HIMARS, have been credited with turning the tide of the 11-month
war, helping Kyiv to secure a series of surprise victories and
pushing back Russian forces from territory captured at the start
of the invasion.
($1 - 69.57 roubles)
(Reporting by Jake Cordell; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
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