Russia Asked China for Military Aid in Ukraine Conflict: Lt. Gen. Kellogg
From The Epoch Times By March 14, 2022
Natalie’s Commentary: I said, Russia did not have the military capability in the amount of trained men and women to launch this war. This coupled with the fact that Ukraine’s capability proved to be more than sufficient to be able to defend themselves with minimal combat equipment. So far 2,500 Ukrainians have lost their lives. Including a women who was pregnant and injured during a bombing attack. She lost her baby and later she died.
As Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg said, “there’s got to be ways we can get them those jets,” referring to the Polish MiG-29 fighter jets whose transfer to Ukraine has stalled. General Jack Keene on Fox News said the very same thing, to find a way to get those fighter jets to Ukraine. We should not be allowing ourselves to be bullied or threatened by Putin or Xi Jinping. We have to come from a place of strength and be absolutely firm during communications with either Putin or Xi Jinping but that’s impossible with illegitimate Biden in place. ~ Natalie
Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg told Fox News on Monday that Russia had asked China for military assistance amid its military operation in Ukraine, confirming a series of anonymously sourced media reports to that effect, while Chinese and Russian officials have denied the allegations.
“There’s a real tell here, and here’s what the tell is. He’s going to China to get military support, and economic support as well,” Kellogg said in an interview on Fox Business that aired on Monday morning, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“He wouldn’t be reaching out to the Chinese for military aid or support if he wasn’t having some real problems with his own military,” Kellogg continued, adding that he believes the battlefield should be extended in light of this development.
“Extend it by giving the Ukrainians as much support as we can,” he said, adding that, “there’s got to be ways we can get them those jets,” referring to the Polish MiG-29 fighter jets whose transfer to Ukraine has stalled.
Ukraine has asked for the MiGs to bolster its air defenses. Polish authorities have offered to supply them via NATO, a proposal rejected by the Pentagon as too risky as it could be seen by the Russian side as an escalation.
“You’ve got to be creative how you do it, I understand that. But we should give them everything. I don’t care if it’s a rock, I don’t care if it’s a BB gun, I don’t care if it’s a MiG-29,” Kellogg said.
“We just need to help them out and keep pressing the envelope on Putin. We know he’s stretched and that’s why I made the comment about the tell. He wouldn’t be going to the Chinese if he was not having problems in the fight today,” he added.
‘Never Heard of That’
China has denied any Russian requests for military aid, with Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in the United States, telling CNN in a statement, “I’ve never heard of that” when asked about reports about such a request coming from Moscow.
Separately, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian told a briefing on Monday that, “the allegations on the matter disseminated by the U.S. are false information.”
Liu, meanwhile, called the situation in Ukraine “disconcerting” and called for “utmost restraint and preventing a massive humanitarian crisis.”
Since Russia launched its “special military operation” in Ukraine, some 2.5 million people have fled their homes, the U.N. says, with Western officials calling the exodus one of the biggest refugee crises since the Second World War.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov also denied the claims, telling Reuters on Monday that Russia is able to take full control of major Ukrainian cities with no help from China.
“Russia possesses its own independent potential to continue the operation,” Peskov said. “As we said, it is going according to plan and will be completed on time and in full.”
‘Concern’ Over Potential Chinese Military Aid to Russia
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that the United States was “watching closely” to see whether China does provide support to Russia, be it “material support or economic support.”
“It is a concern of ours,” Sullivan told the outlet. “And we have communicated to Beijing that we will not stand by and allow any country to compensate Russia for its losses from the economic sanctions,” he added.
Crippling sanctions have been imposed on Russia in the wake of its military action in Ukraine. IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva told CBS on Sunday that the impact of the sanctions is “quite severe” and that the IMF expects a “deep recession” in Russia.
Georgieva added that the IMF no longer considers a Russian sovereign debt default as “improbable.”
She warned of knock-on impacts of the Ukraine crisis on Russia and Ukraine’s immediate neighbors, due to their close trade relations with Moscow and as a result of the refugee wave.
The Red Cross, meanwhile, has called for an urgent ceasefire to be implemented in the besieged city of Mariupol to prevent a “worst-case scenario.”
The ICRC said in a statement Sunday that, “a worst-case scenario awaits the hundreds of thousands of civilians trapped by heavy combat in Mariupol unless the parties reach a concrete humanitarian agreement urgently.”
Ukrainian officials have said over 2,500 people have been killed in Mariupol amid the Russian offensive.
Russia’s military operation in Ukraine has been dealt a number of setbacks in the face of poor planning and unexpectedly staunch Ukrainian resistance, a number of military analysts have said.
Michael Kofman, director of Russia studies at CNA, called Russia’s initial operation a “shambolic attempt at regime change, with little planned or organized,” noting “smart” Ukrainian efforts at defending in the face of an “unimpressive Russian attempt to adjust and prosecute this tragic war.”