US and NATO grapple with critical ammo shortage for Ukraine

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The US and Europe are struggling to provide Ukraine with the large amount of ammunition it will need for a prolonged counteroffensive against Russia, and Western officials are racing to ramp up production to avoid shortages on the battlefield that could hinder Ukraineโ€™s progress.

The dwindling supply of artillery ammunition has served as a wake-up call to NATO, US and Western officials told CNN, since the alliance did not adequately prepare for the possibility of a protracted land war in Europe following decades of relative peace.

UK Secretary of Defense Ben Wallace told CNN last week that while NATO was poised early on for a โ€œnight one, day oneโ€ offensive, โ€œno one had really asked themselves the question, well, what if โ€˜day one, night oneโ€™ becomes โ€˜week two, week three, week four?โ€™ How much of our exquisite capabilities have we actually got in stock? And I think thatโ€™s been the broader question.โ€

US officials emphasized to CNN that there is a set level of munitions in US stockpiles around the world, essentially an emergency reserve, that the military is not willing to part ways with. The levels of those stockpiles are classified.

But officials say the US has been nearing that red line as it has continued to supply Ukraine with 155mm ammunition, the NATO standard used for artillery rounds. The US began ramping up ammunition production last year when it became clear that the war would drag on far longer than anticipated. But the ammunition will still take โ€œyearsโ€ to mass produce to acceptable levels, National Security adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN Sunday.

The US decided to send cluster munitions to Ukraine to help alleviate a potential shortage in the meantime, providing Kyiv with a supply of American weapons that havenโ€™t been tapped into so far. But because cluster munitions can pose a long term risk to civilians, their transfer to…

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