Australia will donate more Abrams tanks to Kiev than the US has given
Australia has announced it will donate most of its retired M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, after months of Kiev requesting any hardware Canberra could provide.
The US sent Ukraine 31 Abrams in mid-2023. More than half have been damaged in the fighting so far, while at least one was captured and put on display in Moscow.
Australian Defense Industry Minister Pat Conroy announced the decision in London on Wednesday, stating that his country is “committed to supporting Ukraine, to end the conflict on its terms.”
Kiev will be receiving 49 tanks out of the 59 that Canberra retired in July. The older M1A1 models are to be replaced by 120 of the newer M1A2, under a contract Australia finalized with the US in January 2022.
Ukraine’s ambassador to Australia, Vasily Myroshnychenko, has been requesting the tanks since their retirement was announced. Previously, Australia had opted to scrap its fleet of multi-purpose Taipan helicopters rather than donate them to Kiev, while selling off retired long-range patrol vehicles and boats at auctions.
Retired General Peter Leahy, who was Australia’s army chief from 2002 to 2008 and oversaw the introduction of the Abrams, told the Sydney Morning Herald last month that he was confused as to why the tanks weren’t being sent to Ukraine.
“Although we are retiring them, they are a very capable tank, they should be well-maintained, there are spare parts available, and the Ukrainians are very eager to get them,” he said at the time.
According to the Herald, the tanks were never used in combat, but are “nearing the end of their working lives.” Some of the donated hardware will need to be repaired before being shipped to Ukraine, while others will be cannibalized for spare parts.
Kiev had urged for Western-made tanks ahead of the unsuccessful spring offensive in 2023. Washington promised to deliver the stripped-down, older Abrams models as a means of pressuring Berlin to send more of the German-made Leopards, while the UK sent around a dozen Challenger 2 vehicles.
Far from being the hoped-for “game changer,” however, the Western tanks ended up being vulnerable to drones and guided artillery rounds. Those damaged vehicles that could be recovered had to be sent to Poland for repairs, a process that took weeks.
Russia has repeatedly warned the US and its allies that their deliveries of weapons to Ukraine merely prolong the fighting without affecting its outcome, as well as risked a direct confrontation. The West has insisted that supplying Kiev with hundreds of billions of dollars in weapons, ammunition, equipment and cash does not actually make it a party to the conflict.