Ukraineâs defence minister, Rustem Umerov, said his country is âlosing territoryâ in its grinding war with Russia because â50%â of weapons promised by western partners fail to reach Kyiv on time.
Speaking a day after the second anniversary of Moscowâs full-scale invasion, Umerov said his troops had built new fortifications and âthousands of strongholdsâ. But he said delays in the supply of western equipment were leading to setbacks and deaths on the battlefield.
âWe have a plan. We are working to the plan. We are doing everything possible and impossible. But without timely supply [of western arms] itâs hard for us,â he conceded.
According to Umerov, Russia has spent $150bn (£119m) in its all-out attack on Ukraine, amounting to 15% of its entire GDP. With House Republicans in Washington blocking a US military aid package, Ukraineâs armed forces are running out of air defence missiles and artillery shells.
F-16 jets promised by an international coalition including Netherlands, Norway and Belgium have yet to arrive. They are expected some time this spring. Umerov said history showed that it was impossible for any country to win a war without âair superiorityâ.
Despite these disadvantages, Ukraine had won back the Black Sea, he said, using drones to sink Russian warships. It had also clawed back territory in the north-east and south of the country, he said â a reference to the 2022 liberation of Kharkiv oblast and the city of Kherson.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is expected to set out his vision of how Ukraine can beat Russia at a press conference later on Sunday. He will address the media against a gloomier backdrop, at home and abroad, and after the recent loss to Russia of the eastern frontline city of Avdiivka.
A Muslim and Crimean Tatar, Umerov has been in post since September. His predecessor Oleksii Reznikov was fired after a series of corruption scandals involving his ministry. Last year two senior officials lost their jobs amid claims contracts for food supplied to troops were being inflated.
âFor me corruption at a time of war is worse than terrorism,â Umerov said. He said his colleagues working with other government agencies were taking measures to âeradicate corruption routesâ and to prevent the problem.
Ukraine had dramatically scaled up drone production, and was constructing its own version of Russiaâs Lancet drone, he added. It had also produced models capable of flying 700km to hit strategic targets deep inside Russia, as well as more than a million first-person view drones.
Officials indicated that in a time of artillery shortages home-produced drones would be the first line of defence, as Russia tries to advance with armoured vehicles and infantry. âThis is a war of firsts. It is the first war where more than 8,000 missiles were hurled against Ukraine and with massive drone involvement,â he said.