F-16s will 'eventually' be sent to Ukraine, former U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff chair says - Action News
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F-16s will 'eventually' be sent to Ukraine, former U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff chair says

Mike Mullen, a retired admiral who served as chair of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff, says he expects Western countries will eventually send fighter jets to Ukraine.

Canadians are training Ukrainian soldiers on Leopard 2 tanks in Poland

Fighter jets for Ukraine likely coming soon: retired U.S. admiral

1 year ago
Duration 1:50
Retired admiral Mike Mullen, the former chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, says he thinks its likely only a matter of time before the West supplies fighter jets to Ukraine to help the country defend its airspace.

A former top soldier in the United States says he expects that Western countries will eventually furnish Ukraine with fighter jets, fulfilling one of the embattled country's most urgentrequests.

"I think the F-16s will be provided, it's hard to know exactly when but I think they're coming," said Mike Mullen, a retired admiral and former chairof the U.S.Joint Chiefs of Staff, in an interview airing Sunday on Rosemary Barton Live.

Mullen told guest host David Common that shipments of fighter jets to Ukraine could make a "significant difference" on the battlefield, and that Ukraine's top area of vulnerability was air defence. In recent days Russia has renewed a barrage of missile attacks against Ukrainian cities.

The attacks have "one goal in mind, to destroy life and leave nothing of humanity," said Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyythis week.

WATCH | Former chairof U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staffdiscusses aid to Ukraine:

Will the West provide its F-16 jets to Ukraine?

1 year ago
Duration 8:59
Rosemary Barton Live speaks with retired admiral Mike Mullen, former chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, about the latest on the war in Ukraine, when Ukraine might be provided with the fighter jets President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been pushing for, and how this artillery boost might play out on the battlefield.

Two Ukrainian pilots are currently in the United States training on F-16 flight simulators, U.S. media reported last week.

Mullen gave credit to American leadership and other countries in the West for bolstering Ukraine's ground-based defences, with artillery and new tanks including the Leopard 2 main battle tanks provided by Canada. He said Ukraine had the potential to have a "devastating effect on any kind of ground attack that the Russians bring forward."

The war in Ukrainehas been stuck in a grinding stalemate over the winter, but Western countries are working to once more fortify Ukraine with weapons and munitions ahead of an expected Russian offensive in the spring.

Twenty-five Canadian soldiers are currently in western Poland training Ukrainian soldiers to use the advanced tanks, as part ofOperation UNIFIER, Canada's mission to train Ukrainian military members. That mission is part of the broader Canadian effort to support Ukraine, which includes over $1 billion in military aid.

A fighter jet is parked on an airport tarmac.
A Danish Royal Air Force F-16 fighter jet stand at the Siauliai airbase in Lithuania, on Jan. 27, 2022. The former chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff says he expects the West will eventually supply fighter jets to Ukraine. (Lithuanian Ministry of National Defense via AP)

Lt.-Col. Chris Boileau, the current task force commander of Operation UNIFIER, said in an interview Sunday onRosemary Barton Livethat the first cadre of Ukrainian soldiers had just graduated from the training and returned to the front lines.

Leopards 'night and day' with Ukrainian tanks

Boileau noted that the biggest challenge in training the Ukrainian tankers was the difference between older Soviet technology and the newer Leopard 2s.

"Top speed, their firepower, armour package and overall capabilities are, to put it mildly, night and day," Boileau told Common.

"So being able to take an even experienced tanker and then move them into more complex and in-depth technology is a challenge," he said.

Boileau noted that Operation UNIFIER had increased in size dramatically since his time in command, with the training force doubled in roughly the past six months. He also said that the "education has been occurring in both ways" as Canadians imparted some skills in urban warfare, but also learned from the experience of their Ukrainian counterparts.

For example, Boileau said, Canadians were hearing about what it was like to operate with a "pervasive drone threat," something with which Canada does not have experience.

WATCH | Operation UNIFIER task force commander on training Ukrainians:

Canadian Forces trains Ukrainian soldiers on Leopard 2 tanks ahead of counteroffensive

1 year ago
Duration 9:25
Rosemary Barton Live speaks with Lt.-Col. Chris Boileau, task force commander of Operation Unifier, about the Canadian Armed Forces training Ukrainian troops in Poland to operate Leopard 2 tanks in preparation for a spring counteroffensive.

Efforts to maintain pro-Ukraine unity

There are some concerns that resolve in Western countries may be weakening, with elements of some opposition parties, including Republican representatives in the United States, calling for an end to aid to Ukraine.

U.S. President Joe Biden recently travelled to Ukraine and Poland to reaffirm his administration's support, andEuropean Commission President Ursula von der Leyentooka similar tour of North America this week, including an address toParliament in theHouse of Commons.

In Canada, Green co-leaderJonathan Pedneaultwalked back some recent comments around the idea that Ukraine might use weapons from the West to push beyond its own borders.

Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said his party was supportive of helping end Russia's invasion, though he noted Canada needed to get "results for our money."

"The problem with this government is not that they don't spend enough, it's that they don't achieve enough results for the spending they do. They spend too much money on back office bureaucracy and not enough on frontline military equipment."

With files from David Common and Arielle Piat-Sauv