Russia's Special Operation in Ukraine

US Weapons Sent to Ukraine for Over $1 Billion May Be Stolen, Report Says

The inspector general report from the US Department of Defense last year came to the conclusion that the Pentagon had "challenges" in keeping track of all the US military hardware that was entering Ukraine following the commencement of the Russian special military operation.
Sputnik
US officials have failed to properly track more than $1 billion in American weapons sent to Ukraine, a new report by the Pentagon’s inspector general has revealed.
The inspector general went on to conclude that the 40,000 weapons may have been stolen or smuggled.

The report, a copy of which was seen by the New York Times, says that although the US Department of Defense improved its ability to track military supplies sent to Ukraine, it "did not fully comply" with requirements and much of the military equipment sent is "delinquent."

According to the document, the items that are designated for the so-called “enhanced end-use monitoring” (EEUM) include Javelin and Stinger missiles, night-vision goggles, kamikaze drones and advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles.
The Department of Defense's Office of the Inspector General (DoD OIG) said in a statement that while “delinquency” could suggest the weapons had been stolen or diverted away from Ukraine, it was outside the scope of the Pentagon’s probe to determine what had happened to the arms that were not properly tracked.

"The DoD OIG now has personnel stationed in Ukraine," the report clarified, "And the DoD OIG’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service continues to investigate allegations of criminal conduct with regard to US security assistance to Ukraine."

The statement comes as White House national security spokesperson John Kirby told reporters on Thursday that the US assistance for Ukraine "has now ground to a halt."
In a separate development, independent Senator Kyrsten Sinema said that White House and Senate negotiators are very close to clinching a deal on a supplemental bill to fund the Ukraine aid and the border security, among other national security priorities.
The White House earlier asked Congress to provide more than $100 billion in supplemental funds including more than $60 billion for Ukraine but Republican lawmakers refused to approve it without measures to strengthen border security and restrict immigration.

Late last year, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced that Washington would be releasing the Biden administration’s "final" military package to Ukraine to the tune of up to $250 million. This followed Pentagon Comptroller Michael McCloud warning that the US will run out of Ukraine funding on December 30 after it completed a transfer of $1.07 billion to replenish US stocks of weapons sent to Kiev.

The US and its allies ramped up their military assistance to Kiev shortly after Russia launched its special military operation in 2022. Moscow has repeatedly warned that NATO countries are "playing with fire" by supplying arms that the Kremlin said adds to prolonging the conflict in Ukraine. Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, for his part, underscored that any cargo with weapons for the Zelensky regime would become a legitimate target for Russian forces.