The munitions can be produced in eastern European countries and are produced elsewhere too, I mean for things like bullets, shells and mortar bombs. I doubt they will scrap all the equipment, because I figure they will inherit a lot more of it from the Russians soon. The regular Ukrainian army was transitioning away from Soviet arms for awhile before the war and that has been accelerated by the war.
How are they going to inherit shells? The Russians are going to go home and leave them for the Ukrainians? The munitions can be produced. Where are the factories that will produce them? You believe in the Easter Bunny, don't you.
Seeking Arms for Ukraine, Pentagon Buyers Scour Eastern European Factories
And since the Sept. 11 attacks, the Pentagon has been buying large amounts of such weapons through a variety of American defense firms to supply client armies in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and other countries that still rely on Soviet-designed arms.
One of those companies is the Ultra Defense Corp. in Tampa, Fla., which has about 60 employees and has built a bustling business working with factories in Romania, Bosnia, Serbia, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Bulgaria.
Those countries have provided about 90 percent of the nonstandard ammunition purchased by the Pentagon for forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria over the past 20 years, according to Matthew Herring, the company’s owner, though his firm has filled just a fraction of those orders.
Soviet-designed ammunition is part of the ‘life blood’ for Ukrainian troops fighting Russia, and the United States is keeping it flowing.
www.nytimes.com
Ukraine’s Shift To A New NATO Arsenal Is Unprecedented-And Inevitable
Right now, Ukraine soldiers making do with “old-stye” Russian munitions and platforms. To keep the fight going, old Warsaw Pact countries, are donating whatever remaining Russian-derived weapons systems, ammunition, or other still-serviceable gear. Anything that might still work with Ukraine’s arsenal of Russian-sourced heavy weaponry is getting dusted-off and sent to the Ukraine frontier.
But these antiques, often stored under dubious conditions, are in finite supply.
In Ukraine, ammunition and other military consumables
are running low. The West’s ability to support Russian-sourced equipment is already very limited, and the handful of Eastern European weapons manufacturers that may still make Russian-compliant ammunition and spare parts are probably pushing hard to break production records.
For Ukraine to survive, the country needs new Western weapons. And that means everything from training to supply chains must change—and all while under combat.
www.forbes.com