20/02/24View in Browser

How much can one really give Ukraine?

By Aurélie Pugnet | @PugnetAurelie

In a bold move, Danish Prime Minister Mette Fredriksen told the Munich Security Conference her country would donate its entire stock of artillery to Ukraine, emptying its stockpile as a consequence.

Such a commitment will for sure be of great help to the ammunition-deprived Ukrainian armed forces. They recently retreated from the city of Adviivka and must now ration their stocks to manage with the limited supplies coming from Europe as they wait for the Americans to unlock another military aid package.

No one can deny it’s a great morale booster to know that one of your allies is ready to do so much.

But what the Danish prime minister forgot to say is when the artillery will reach Ukraine and how much ammunition it has in stock to deliver (information likely to remain secret for national security reasons).

As NATO and EU officials say, there is an important gap between the pledges and the deliveries. 

The uncertainty is so high that the EU’s External Action Service refuses to calculate member states’ contributions to the European peace facility based on their pledges alone. 

Since open information is rare on this sensitive topic, it is impossible to know exactly what and how much has reached Kyiv.

Now, let’s imagine that the Danes are emptying their stockpiles and sending them to Ukraine as we speak.

That would leave Denmark somewhat defenceless, jeopardising its defence readiness – an odd thing to imagine for a NATO country with a war raging in its neighbourhood.

Copenhagen would be entirely dependent on other nations for its artillery needs if it were attacked before it managed to restock its warehouses.

Continue reading...
Photo of the day

Pro-Assange campaigners protest outside Royal Courts of Justice before an extradition appeal hearing for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in London, Britain, 20 February 2024. Julian Assange is facing his final extradition hearing at the High Court on 20 to 21 February. Assange is facing 175 years in a US prison if the hearing goes against him. EPA-EFE/TOLGA AKMEN


 
Would you like to sponsor The Brief? Contact us
With election season upon us, we invite you to the heart of European democracy with our new EU Elections Decoded Newsletter and Euractiv's EU Elections Whatsapp channel. Get a front-row seat to breaking news, expert analysis and exclusive insights to understand the ins and outs of the EU election campaign. Subscribe now!
The Roundup

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson will travel to Budapest on Friday to meet his Hungarian counterpart Viktor Orbán before Hungary’s parliament takes a long-delayed vote on Sweden’s bid for NATO membership next Monday.

France’s conservative party Les Républicains (LR, EPP) will not support Ursula von der Leyen’s bid to get a second term as European Commission president, François Xavier-Bellamy, head of the LR list for the EU elections, told France Inter radio on Tuesday.

European Union legislators reached a political agreement in the early hours of Tuesday on a proposal to set up the world’s first registry for certified carbon dioxide removals obtained from eco-farming practices and industrial processes.

Before officially joining the French far-right party Rassemblement National (RN), former Frontex head Fabrice Leggeri had been in contact with the right-wing Les Républicains (LR) party “for several months”, a person close to the delegation in the EU Parliament has said.

Public procurement in schools and making companies pay for the ‘hidden costs’ of conventional products are needed to balance the discrepancy between the increase in organically farmed land with the decrease in organic food sales, the deputy director of EU organic farming organisation IFOAM told Euractiv.

The European Youth Forum’s campaign to lower the voting age to 16 was a key part of festivities in Ghent this weekend, celebrating its year-long reign as the European Youth Capital, which coincides with the year of the European elections.

For transport-related policy news, don’t miss this week’s Transport Brief: Sounds pretty technical.

Look out for…

  • Commissioner Nicolas Schmit gives keynote speech at official opening of Skills Summit 2024 on Wednesday.
  • Enlargement Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi receives Moldovan Deputy PM Cristina Gherasimov on Wednesday.
  • Informal meeting of economic and financial affairs ministers on Thursday-Saturday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
Website
LinkedIn
Spotify
YouTube
Copyright © 2024 Euractiv Media BV, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to receive email newsletters from Euractiv.

Our mailing address is:
Euractiv Media BV
Karel de Grotelaan 1 bus 1
Brussel 1041
Belgium

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from ALL emails from us.