"We have received more training requests as Ukraine continues to
mobilize, in particular for basic training which is mainly being
done by Britain," Lieutenant-General Andreas Marlow, head of the
EU's special training command near Berlin, said in an interview
on Thursday.
This would likely affect collective training - involving entire
companies or battalions - so far carried out in Germany and
which follows basic training, he said.
Ukraine has been under pressure to call up more troops as the
27-month-old war grinds on and fewer volunteers sign up.
Kiev aims to handle more of the training itself to simplify
logistics and allow troops to be available on the battlefield at
shorter notice, he said. Spain conducts some training for
Ukrainian troops, as does Poland.
Marlow's Special Training Command (STC) is part of a European
Union military mission set up in 2022 to train some 60,000
Ukrainian troops in various skills by mid-November 2024 to help
Kyiv combat Russia's invasion.
In Germany, instructors from 14 nations have been teaching
troops to operate tanks or air defense systems such as Patriot
and IRIS-T, while snipers, engineers, paramedics and drone
operators learn their trades and IT experts are taught how to
fend off hackers.
INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDED
Marlow said he did not expect such specialist training to shift
to Ukraine as it required weapons and certain infrastructure,
such as simulators, to be in place.
Kyiv hoped to move collective training back home partly because
teaching operational doctrine was more easily done by
Ukrainians, and to speed up deployment of fresh troops, he said.
"Kyiv would have ready-to-use troops far more quickly available
than if they attend training in Germany or Spain," he said.
There was less need during emergencies to rush out soldiers who
completed basic training, where recruits learn how to handle an
assault rifle or administer first aid, Marlow said, "because
they are not yet fully ready for action anyway."
Basic training in Germany normally takes three months, but has
been condensed for Ukrainians to six weeks because of the war.
Kyiv's bid to move training back to Ukraine could spur
discussions among NATO allies, such as France and Lithuania, to
send military trainers there.
(Reporting by Sabine Siebold; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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