April 21, 2023
2 mins read

UK govt admits ‘no magic wand’ can defeat Russia

He was speaking at a news conference of British and Australian foreign and defence ministers following a meeting on trade and security…reports Asian Lite News

British defence minister Ben Wallace said there was “no magic wand” that could help Ukraine in its fight against Russia, when asked on Thursday about the possibility of supplying British fighter jets to be used by Ukrainian forces.

Wallace did not rule out the possibility of sending jets but said fighter aircraft were not what Ukraine needed right now and that there were practical issues to consider, such as the many months it would take to train Ukrainian forces to use them.

“There is no magic wand in this horrendous conflict,” Wallace told reporters at Portsmouth in southern England, home to a naval base.

He was speaking at a news conference of British and Australian foreign and defence ministers following a meeting on trade and security.

After Ukraine last month secured a hard-won commitment from Western states to provide battle tanks, attention has now shifted to whether Britain, the United States and other allies will consider Kyiv’s requests for fighter aircraft.

The United States has ruled out sending jets.

Wallace’s reply was not as clear cut, but he said what Ukraine currently needed now was for ground forces to be strengthened, likening the Russian tactics to human wave attacks from World War I, when densely concentrated infantry overran defending forces.

“What the Ukrainians need is the ability to form military formations on the ground in order to use combined arms manoeuvre to push back Russian forces,” he said.

“Because that is how you defeat the human wave attacks that the Russians are currently having to resort to … they’re resorting to First World War-level type of attacks, with subsequent casualties to match.”

Earlier on Thursday, Sunak’s spokesman said the quickest a pilot could learn to fly a British fighter jet was 35 months.

“Even if tomorrow morning we announce that we were going to put them in fast jets, that would take months,” Wallace said.

On Wednesday, Wallace said Britain had not made a “solid decision” not to send its fighter jets to Ukraine but does not think it is the right approach at the moment.

ALSO READ-Russia, EU concern over illegal immigration from Pakistan

Previous Story

Safran’s chief discusses tech partnership with PM Modi

Next Story

CGI Dubai comes to the aid of Indian woman in distress

Latest from -Top News

WUC Intensifies Global Call for Uyghur Justice

WUC delegation undertook a week-long advocacy tour in Germany, where it met with Turkish NGOs and community leaders….reports Asian Lite News The World Uyghur Congress (WUC) has published its monthly brief, strengthening

India Urges Bangladesh to Act on Minority Attacks

MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal urged the Yunus government to probe extremist attacks on minorities….reports Asian Lite News India on Friday criticised recent comments by Bangladesh’s Home Advisor Jahangir Alam Chowdhury, asserting that

Jaffar Express Targeted Yet Again

blast happened at a distance of one kilometre from the Sultan Kot railway station….reports Asian Lite News At least seven injured as blast hits Quetta-bound Jaffar Express in Sindh’s Shikarpur district. Shikarpur

India to Join G20 Energy Talks in South Africa

The meeting is being hosted under South Africa’s G20 Presidency in the country’s KwaZulu Natal province…reports Asian Lite News Union Power Minister Manohar Lal will represent India at the G20 Energy Transitions
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Modi Secures Release of Indians in Ukraine Conflict

Nearly two dozen Indians are believed to have been forced

King Charles’ school remembers him

Charles, the first U.K. monarch to be educated outside the