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$1 billion US military aid for Ukraine not properly tracked – Pentagon

Nearly 40,000 pieces of highly sensitive military equipment sent to Ukraine were poorly tracked, a new report concludes$1 billion US military aid for Ukraine not properly tracked – Pentagon

$1 billion US military aid for Ukraine not properly tracked – Pentagon

FILE PHOTO: Ukrainian servicemen load a truck with the FGM-148 Javelin, American man-portable anti-tank missile provided by US to Ukraine as part of a military support. ©  Sergei SUPINSKY / AFP

More than $1 billion worth of sophisticated weaponry sent to Ukraine by the US was poorly tracked, a new report by the Pentagon’s inspector general states. A redacted version of the report was made public on Thursday, a day after the document was submitted to the US Congress.

The probe explored the implementation of the so-called enhanced end-use monitoring (EEUM) procedures by the Pentagon. The EEUM applies to a limited number of highly sensitive and sophisticated equipment and weaponry, such as shoulder-mounted missile systems, kamikaze drones, night-vision devices, and other hardware.

The US and its “partner nations” have supplied Ukraine with an estimated $1.699 billion worth of EEUM-designated hardware, according to the report. Despite the effort of the Pentagon and the Ukrainian military to conduct required inventories of said equipment, “Significant personnel limitations and accountability challenges remain.” A reported 59% of the total value, just over 1$ billion, remains improperly tracked as of June 2, 2023, the document reads.

Lack of proper accountability “may increase the risk of theft and diversion” of the sophisticated EEUM-designated equipment, the report notes. Thus far, the inspector general was not actually tasked with finding out whether the untracked hardware actually ended up stolen. 

“It was beyond the scope of our evaluation to determine whether there has been a diversion of such assistance,” the report reads.

The Pentagon inspector general “now has personnel stationed in Ukraine” and continues to investigate “allegations of criminal conduct with regard to US security assistance to Ukraine.”

Claims of misuse and theft of military hardware, lavishly poured into Ukraine by the collective West, emerged early into the conflict between Moscow and Kiev, which broke out back in February 2022. 

For instance, sophisticated weapons supplied to the country, such as the US-made ‘Switchblade’ kamikaze drones or NLAW shoulder-fired anti-tank missile launchers, have been reported readily available for purchase on the Darknet.

Weaponry destined for Ukraine has also reportedly surfaced during conflicts around the globe, including the ongoing escalation in the Middle East between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

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