Last month, President Joe Biden quietly authorized Kyiv to
launch U.S.-supplied weapons at military targets inside Russia.
But officials said at the time that Biden's decision applied
only to targets inside Russia near the border with Ukraine's
eastern Kharkiv region.
Pentagon spokesperson Air Force Major General Patrick Ryder told
reporters that while there had been no change in policy,
Ukraine's use of weapons against Russian troops was not limited
to near Kharkiv on the Russian side.
"The ability to be able to fire back when fired upon is really
what this policy is focused on... as we see Russian forces
firing across the border, the ability for Ukraine to fire back
at those ground forces using U.S.-provided munitions," Ryder
said.
"It's self-defense and so it makes sense for them to be able to
do that," he added.
Ryder's remarks echo comments made by Biden's national security
adviser earlier this week.
"This is not about geography. It's about common sense," White
House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told PBS. "If
Russia is attacking or about to attack from its territory into
Ukraine, it only makes sense to allow Ukraine to hit back
against the forces that are hitting it from across the border."
Sullivan added that Ukraine could also use air-defense systems
to fire at Russian planes flying in Russian airspace, if they
are about to fire into Ukrainian airspace.
The front lines in Ukraine have barely moved since the end of
2022, despite tens of thousands of dead on both sides in
relentless trench warfare, the bloodiest fighting in Europe
since World War Two.
After initial Ukrainian successes that saw Kyiv repel an assault
on the capital and recapture territory in the war's first year,
a major Ukrainian counter-offensive using donated Western tanks
fizzled last year. Russian forces still hold a fifth of Ukraine
and are again advancing, albeit slowly. No peace talks have been
held for more than two years.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Rod Nickel)
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