DoD IG: American Weapons in Ukraine Funneled to Arms Traffickers, Criminals
by Kyle
Anzalone | Jul 23, 2023
The Pentagon
inspector general found the
arms Washington sent to Kiev did not undergo the required inspections. A report
from the inspector general found weapons the US sent to Ukraine in the hands of
criminals and on the black market.
The Arms
Control Act requires the White House to establish an inspection system for
weapons the US sells or gifts to third countries. The law mandates the
monitoring continues to the end-use of the weapon. In Ukraine, the embassy in
Kiev has been assigned responsibility for monitoring the weapons
transfers.
The
Department of Defense inspector general report on American weapons transfers to
Ukraine from February to September of last year found that legally required
monitoring was not taking place. “The DoD is unable to conduct [End Use
Monitoring] in Ukraine because completing [End Use Monitoring] in accordance
with DoD policy requires in-person access to the defense equipment provided,”
it said. “Intelligence methods provide some accountability for observable
platforms, such as missiles and helicopters, but smaller items, such as night
vision devices, have limited accountability.”
“The DoD OIG
found deficiencies in the DoD’s transfer of military equipment to the
Government of Ukraine requiring [End Use Monitoring], including Javelin
missiles, Javelin Command Launch Units, and night vision devices; and in
Ukraine’s security and accountability of US.-provided military equipment
requiring [End Use Monitoring],” the report added.
In a section
of the report that is heavily redacted, the inspector general listed some cases
of American weapons not making it to their intended recipient. The cases that
remained unredacted in the report include: a Moscow-influenced criminal
organization that procured grande launchers and machine guns, a pro-Kev militia
that tried to sell dozens of rifles on the black market, and a group of arms
traffickers who were selling weapons and ammunition stolen from the front
lines.
In response
to questions about the report, a State Department spokesperson
admitted that American weapons were being used for illicit purposes in
Ukraine. Despite these issues, the spokesperson emphasized that Washington felt
the weapons transfers were too important.
“The US
government remains keenly aware of the risk of possible illicit diversion and
is proactively taking steps to mitigate this risk in close cooperation with the
government of Ukraine.” The spokesperson continued, “We are realistic that we
are sending weapons to help Ukraine defend itself in an active conflict, and
there is a risk these weapons could be captured if territory changes hands –
which happens in any war.”
Earlier this
month, the White House came out against a provision in the Pentagon funding
bill that would create a special inspector general for the Ukraine aid. The
inspector general for the Afghan War, John Sopko, has warned that
without sufficient oversight of the weapons and money sent to Kiev, Ukraine
will face many of the same problems as the Afghan government.
The demand
to create an office to oversee the more than $100 billion in aid Congress has
authorized sending to Ukraine has been attacked as Russian propaganda. Rep.
Adam Smith (D-WA), the head of the House Armed Services Committee, said
in December that calls for more oversight of the billions of dollars
the US is spending on Ukraine are “part of Russian propaganda.”
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