Accessibility links

Breaking News

Pentagon Denies Helping Ukraine Target Russian Generals 


This video grab taken from a handout footage released by the Russian Defence Ministry on April 23, 2022, shows Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Major General Igor Konashenkov holding a briefing.
This video grab taken from a handout footage released by the Russian Defence Ministry on April 23, 2022, shows Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Major General Igor Konashenkov holding a briefing.

The U.S. Defense Department denied Thursday that it provided intelligence on the locations of Russian generals on the battlefield so that Ukraine forces could kill them.

Reacting to an explosive report by The New York Times on U.S. support for the Ukraine military, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said it was true that the United States supplies Kyiv's forces with military intelligence "to help Ukrainians defend their country."

"We do not provide intelligence on the location of senior military leaders on the battlefield or participate in the targeting decisions of the Ukrainian military," Kirby said.

The Times reported late Wednesday that intelligence provided by the United States has helped the Ukrainian military target and kill several Russian generals since Moscow's invasion.

Citing anonymous senior U.S. officials, the newspaper said about a dozen Russian generals have been killed by Ukrainian forces and that many had been targeted with the help of U.S. intelligence.

Ukraine has been particularly successful in attacking Russian command positions, and, according to reports, came close last week to striking a location near the front lines in the Donbas region where Russia's top general, Valery Gerasimov, was believed to be visiting troops.

Ukraine forces may have shelled the location just a few hours after Gerasimov had left, the unconfirmed reports said.

The Times said the United States had provided details on the Russian military's mobile headquarters, which frequently change location.

It reported that Ukrainian forces used that information in tandem with their own to conduct attacks on senior Russian officers.

Kirby said Ukraine makes its own decisions on whether to target a Russian leader or not.

"Ukraine combines information that we and other partners provide with the intelligence that they themselves are gathering on the battlefield," he said. "Then they make their own decisions, and they take their own actions."

The White House National Security Council slammed the Times report as irresponsible.

"The United States provides battlefield intelligence to help the Ukrainians defend their country," NSC spokesperson Adrienne Watson said. "We do not provide intelligence with the intent to kill Russian generals."

Washington is supplying billions of dollars' worth of military equipment and munitions to Ukraine and is training its forces on how to use them.

It is also providing Kyiv with information garnered from satellites, electronic surveillance operations and other sources of intelligence.

But the White House and the Pentagon have sought to limit knowledge of the full extent of the U.S. assistance, hoping to avoid provoking Russia into a broader conflict beyond Ukraine's borders.

Even so, Washington's support for Ukraine has only grown and become more forthright, since the Russians invaded on February 24.

At the beginning the U.S. said it wanted only to help Ukraine survive.

But now Washington says its goal in the war is to debilitate Russia for the long term.

"We want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it can't do the kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine," U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said after a visit to Kyiv in late April.

XS
SM
MD
LG