Overnight Defense

Defense & National Security — Defense meeting ends with no tanks for Ukraine

About 50 defense leaders from around the world wrapped up a meeting in Germany on Friday without an agreement to send tanks to Ukraine.

We’ll talk more in-depth about the tanks decision and how Kyiv has responded to the news.

We’ll also discuss new sanctions against Russia’s Wagner Group and three U.S. Marines who were charged this week with breaching the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

This is Defense & National Security, your guide to the latest developments at the Pentagon, on Capitol Hill and beyond. For The Hill, I’m Brad Dress. A friend forward this newsletter to you?

Pentagon defends position on tanks  

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, speaking after the Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, dug in on the tanks position at a press conference.


What Kyiv is saying: Ukrainian President Voldymyr Zelensky thanked the U.S. and other nations for the security aid, but also expressed clear disapproval for the decision not to send over Western tanks.

“I can thank you hundreds of times,” Zelensky told the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, “but hundreds of thank yous are not hundreds of tanks.”

Kyiv has used upgraded, Soviet-era tanks in the war — but has yet to receive modern, Western tanks from partners, which would offer more firepower.

No to Leopards: After five hours of talks, there remains an impasse from the defense leaders on sending over Germany’s Leopard 2 tanks.

Germany’s new Defense Minister Boris Pistorius told The Associated Press a decision may shape up in the short term, but he is unclear what that might look like.

Several European nations who have the Leopards in stock can’t ship them to Ukraine without Berlin’s approval, and they are likely to continue pressing Germany on the issue.

Read more of the story here

Russia’s Wagner Group hit with US sanctions 

The Biden administration announced sanctions against Wagner Group, a private mercenary company fighting in Ukraine along with Russian forces.

The sanctions include labeling Wagner Group a “significant Transnational Criminal Organization” and warning nations and businesses not to do business with them lest they run afoul of the U.S. government.

Brutality: Wagner Group, headed by Yevgeny Prigozhin, is accused of brutal war crimes, human rights violations and of meddling in conflicts in West Africa and the Middle East.

In Ukraine, Wagner forces led a vicious assault this month against the eastern salt mining town of Soledar, which Russia claimed victory over after thousands of lives were lost and buildings completely leveled.

U.S. action: The new U.S. sanctions build on action taken last month by the Commerce Department to restrict Wagner Group’s ability to procure foreign produced items and U.S. tech and equipment.

North Korean ties: Kirby also presented evidence that North Korea is supplying weapons to Wagner, showing what appeared to be Russian rail cars traveling to North Korea and then returning in November.

The U.S. has previously assessed that North Korea has provided rockets and missiles to Russia for use by Wagner.

Read the full story here.

Three Marines charged in Jan. 6 Capitol riots case

The Jan. 6, 2021, defendants list is continuing to grow. 

The FBI on Wednesday charged three active-duty U.S. Marines with four misdemeanor offenses each, including disorderly conduct with the intention of disrupting government business.

The Marines are Micah Coomer, Dodge Dale Hellonen and Joshua Abate. According to the FBI, the defendants placed a red MAGA hat on a statue and posed for photos with it on Jan. 6.

The FBI said they identified the Marines through video footage inside the U.S. Capitol, which was paired with personal identifications.

‘Everything in this country is corrupt’: Agents said in an unsealed affidavit they also identified Coomer after he posted photos of the rioting on Instagram.

The bigger picture: The Department of Justice has had its hands full since the pro-Trump mob stormed the U.S. Capitol to overturn the 2020 election.

Read more here.

Toxic burn pits victims seeking justice

Remember the big hullabaloo last summer over Republicans derailing a bill (over spending concerns) to compensate veterans exposed to toxic burn pits?

Congress did end up passing the Honoring Our PACT Act, which expanded access to veterans exposed to toxic chemicals, but thousands of Americans are still in the dark about when their claims will be approved by the government.

Technicalities: Some victims have been turned away because of a legal technicality.

In limbo: Partain is a breast cancer survivor born at Camp Lejeune, a military base that experienced a contaminated water supply decades ago.

Within the Honoring our PACT Act is a provision permitting lawsuits for those exposed to toxic chemicals in Camp Lejeune.

Read more here.

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