Report: Europe Scrambles to Help Ukraine Find a Viable Starlink Replacement
Europe scrambles to aid Ukraine after US intelligence cutoff
Ukraine is already “shooting half-blind” one analyst says, as Kyiv struggles to fend off Russia without U.S. intel.
Without US intelligence, Ukraine will struggle to strike targets inside Russia
The U.S. decision to stop sharing military intelligence with Ukraine hobbles its ability to strike and defend against the Russian army
Security guarantees. It’s the phrase Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky used countless times during an explosive clash with United States President Donald Trump and Vice-President JD Vance at the White House last week – and since.
The Ukrainian President said more than 260 weapons were used in a strike against his country and thanked France's Emmanuel Macron for the French Mirage jets used to help repel the attack.
European leaders met in London to form a plan to help end the war in Ukraine. But even potential peacekeepers face political and economic hurdles.
Suggestions that Ukraine could lose access to Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet system, which has been vital in maintaining its military communications as it fights Russia's invasion, have focused investor interest on Starlink's smaller European rival Eutelsat .
Although it has given Ukraine €132bn in military and financial aid (more than America’s €114bn), Europe’s big countries could afford to do more. Over the past three years Germany and Britain have allocated less than 0.
Ukraine has received many of its most powerful pieces of weaponry from the US. If US aid stops, Europe may need to look for replacements.
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