Missile news welcomed in Ukraine but âwonât win warâ
President Zelensky has been pushing for this moment for months. When it finally came, he was a little coy.
Strikes are not made with words, he said in his nightly address: âSuch things are not announced, missiles speak for themselvesâ.
President Biden has given Ukraine permission to use long range missiles supplied by Washington to strike deep inside Russia.
It is thought that initially Ukraineâs use of the Army Tactical Missile System â known by its acronym ATACMS â will be confined to defending Ukrainian troops still holding on to a small chunk of Russian territory in the Kursk region.
A major Russian counter offensive is expected there within days, assisted by as many as 10,000 troops from North Korea.
Use of the missiles, capable of targeting military facilities deep inside Russia, could complicate Russiaâs efforts, enabling Ukraine to hold onto this valuable bargaining chip ahead of any possible peace talks next year.
Ukrainian military experts have welcomed Washingtonâs decision â saying it will not necessarily change the course of the war, but will restore a little balance.
This comes at a time when Russian forces are creeping forward all along the eastern front and Ukraine feels it has been on the back foot for several months.
âUkrainians are very much inspired with the news,â said Maj Volodymyr Omelyan from the Brigade of Armed Forces of Ukraine.
Putin has previously warned that such a move from the US would amount to direct participation of Nato countries in the war â but Maj Omelyan said this was simply âbluffingâ.
âWe shall not pay any attention,â he told the BBC World Service, since Russia had issued similar warnings about âmany other systems and weapons we receivedâ.
âNothing happened. Nothing will happen this time as well.â
The former government minister added that Ukraine needed similar permission for the use of Storm Shadow missiles, manufactured by Britain and France.
Ukrainian MP Inna Sovsun said Ukrainians were âhappy this decision has been takenâ and that it would make a âhuge differenceâ.
But she said there was discontent âthat it took Biden so long to make a decision that could have saved livesâ had it been taken earlier.
âI wish it [had] been made before Putin had destroyed half of Ukraineâs energy infrastructure,â she said.
What we do not know are the specifics of Washingtonâs decision. We do not know how many of the systems Ukraine has.
Oleksiy Goncharenko, an MP for Odessa, stressed that Ukraine needed a sufficient quantity of missiles for Washingtonâs move to matter.
âItâs very important to have not just permission but missiles â to be capable⊠to make a difference to the situation.â
He added that it was a âpityâ the decision âtook almost 1,000 daysâ, adding that it was âbetter late than neverâ.
We do not know what the Americans are saying in terms of what Ukraine can and cannot do with the missiles. We will also have to see whether Ukraine is allowed to use the missiles more widely in the future
But another Ukrainian MP, Maria Ionova stressed that missiles were ânot the silver bulletâ.
She said the focus needed to be on a change in strategy.
âBecause our enemies are united â and we should stand together as well.â
It is a significant move ahead of another long hard winter.
But Sundayâs Russian missile and drone attacks, which killed as many as 20 people, served as a stark reminder that Moscow is still intent on winning the war, on its terms.