This Seems to Be Why Brown Placed their Top Security Official on Administrative...
These Street Preachers Shared the Gospel – Now They Might Face Charges
Another Government Shutdown Might Be on the Horizon
You're Not Going to Like How Your Government Spent Your Money This Year
D.C. Police Officer Hospitalized After Being Struck by Motorist on I-695
How Activists and Dark Money Are Pushing to Criminalize Climate Change
A Student Was Killed During Class — Now the School District Is Hiding...
Good Riddance: This Radical Leftist Democrat Just Announced She's Leaving X
Eric Swalwell Just United the Internet in Hating His Post About Sasse's Cancer...
Justice Is No Longer Blind: Here's Why a Canadian Court Gave a Man...
New York Parents Warn Electric School Buses Are Leaving Their Kids Out in...
Trump's Most Important Achievement
US Sanctions Five European's Behind the 'Global Censorship-Industrial Complex'
Harris Suggests Mocking Her Laugh Is Sexist, As She Gives Young Women Dating...
Worcester Man Indicted for Allegedly Stealing $137K in COVID Rental Aid Using Stolen...
Tipsheet
Premium

There's a Big Problem with Sending Weapons to Ukraine

AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd

In helping Ukraine defend itself in its war with Russia, the United States has been generous, to say the least. According to the Defense Department's latest figures, the Biden administration has given $3.8 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since the start of the invasion on Feb. 24. This includes 25,000 antiaircraft weapons, 60,000 anti-tank weapons, counter-artillery radars, jamming equipment, ammunition, small arms, body armor, and more. 

All this assistance has come at a cost—and not just a financial one.  

Concerns are mounting that U.S. stockpiles are being depleted in the process. 

When asked whether the Biden administration is doing enough to help Ukraine, Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI) said no, and then evaluated their efforts

"Well, the short answer is no, but I think their efforts can fall into categories of good, bad, and ugly. On the good, I think Secretary Austin made the right call in going to Kyiv, talking directly with Zelensky, and really for the first time talking as if he believes the Ukrainians can win," he said. "I think that is the right signal to send to our allies. It's also right to send the signal that we want Russia to be permanently hobbled by this misadventure of unprovoked aggression. So that's good." 

The bad part, Gallagher argued, is that Biden keeps announcing what the U.S. won't do. 

"And putting arbitrary limits on our assistance, I think, undermines our effort," he said. 

The worst part of all, however, is the stockpile problem. 

"The real ugly is that we are running low in terms of our stockpiles," Gallagher cautioned. "We just burned through seven years' worth of Javelins, and that's not only important as we continue to try and help the Ukrainians win in Ukraine, that's important as we try to simultaneously defend Taiwan from aggression from the Chinese Communist Party. They're going to need access to some of these same weapons systems, and we simply don't have the stockpiles at present in order to backfill what we've spent in Ukraine." 

Equally concerning is that "pandemic-driven shortages of computer chips, rocket motors, propellant and labor" are making replenishing that supply difficult. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos