Defense

Here Are The US Troops In Europe Supporting Ukraine

(Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

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Micaela Burrow Investigative Reporter, Defense
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  • During the buildup to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and in the months since, the U.S. has surged an additional 20,000 troops to Europe and placed “non-combat” military personnel at the embassy in Kyiv.
  • The Biden administration has pledged no boots on the ground in Ukraine.
  • “I don’t see a distinction — boots on the ground or military personnel — regardless of what they’re doing.” Mark Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

While the U.S. has stationed thousands of troops close to the front lines in Ukraine, even before the Russian invasion, revelations of defense personnel operating out of the Embassy in Kyiv suggest the U.S. military involvement has deepened in recent months, experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February, the United States deployed thousands of troops into Europe to bolster defense against Russia and support training for Ukrainian troops on the front lines. In addition, on Oct.31, the Pentagon confirmed that the U.S. had re-deployed an unspecified number of military personnel to the Kyiv embassy — with Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder later emphasizing the U.S. has “no combat forces in Ukraine” in an effort to avoid retaliation from Russia.

“But [Russia] will view them as in an adversarial role. If you’re a uniform on the ground, Moscow could say that’s a valid target,” Defense Priorities senior fellow and military expert Daniel Davis told the DCNF.

The State Department released a plan on Oct. 27 for tracking security assistance to Ukraine, which reached nearly $19 billion as of Nov. 4. To do so, Defense Attache Offices (DaTT) and Office of Defense Cooperation (ODC) personnel, who evacuated the Kyiv embassy along with the remaining embassy staff members in February, returned, according to the Pentagon. (RELATED: ‘Dangerously Depleted’: The US Is Sending So Many Weapons To Ukraine That Experts Are Starting To Worry)

Personnel have been conducting oversight activities “within the last couple months,” Ryder told the DCNF in a statement. The Kyiv embassy reopened in May.

Ryder declined to shed light on the number of personnel and their exact duties, saying the return of U.S. personnel did not represent an escalation in U.S. involvement.

“I don’t see a distinction — boots on the ground or military personnel — regardless of what they’re doing. And that’s always been the way it’s been defined,” Mark Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the DCNF.

The Defense Department’s personnel data center shows 16 active duty servicemembers in Ukraine as of June 30.

In December 2020, there were 38 military personnel in Ukraine, “probably all at the embassy and half consisting of the Marine guard,” whose return to the Kyiv embassy has not been confirmed but are a standard presence at U.S. embassies, Cancian explained.

To properly track U.S. assistance to Ukraine could require a body equivalent to the Special Investigator General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), the organization tasked with monitoring Afghanistan reconstruction assistance, experts told the DCNF. SIGAR recorded 189 staff members, including at least 30 for in-country operations before the U.S. military withdrawal, according to the latest public budget document.

“I can’t imagine anything less than 50 would even put a dent in the process,” Davis told the DCNF.

In addition, to Russia, their non-combatant role does not change that they are out-sized targets for Russia, Davis explained. ODC conduct arms sales and military training, and defense attaches often serve intelligence collection purposes — all activities Russia has an interest in neutralizing.

It is also “possible” that CIA-backed paramilitary troops are directly involved in the conflict, the Intercept reported, and Davis said.

Cancian expressed doubts, explaining that in the event Russia caught covert U.S. operators in Ukraine, Moscow would widely publicize the event because a U.S. armed forces presence in Ukraine supports Putin’s political objectives.

“I think eventually it would come out. That’s why I don’t think the U.S. would do that,” said Cancian.

SOLINA, POLAND – OCTOBER 15: Soldiers of the 101st US Airborne Division help each other during a climb exercise during the Recon Clash-22 Military Drill on October 15, 2022 in Solina, Poland. Soldiers from the United States, Poland And Estonia demonstrated tactical skills in line with NATO procedures. (Photo by Omar Marques/Getty Images)

Biden has taken pains to reassure Americans that the U.S. will have no military presence within Ukraine, a policy intended to preclude a wider war breaking out on the European continent.

Instead, the Biden administration focused on providing equipment and funding for Ukraine’s military, while stepping up North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) deployments and support activities, according to media reports.

As of February, the European continent housed roughly 80,000 permanent and rotational U.S. troops, including those sent to bolster NATO’s eastern flank, according to Military.com. Since the Russian invasion, the Department of Defense deployed or extended postings for 20,000 troop members, according to a June 29 memo.

While most U.S. troops are stationed in permanent bases in Germany, Italy, Poland and the U.K., the U.S. has expanded force capabilities in Spain and several countries in the Baltic region, the memo states.

Approximately 4,700 soldiers in the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division operate in Romania at a base just three miles from Ukraine’s border, arriving on June 20. They’re still in Romania as of October, the U.S. forces nearest to the conflict and fully prepared to cross the border should an attack occur on NATO territory, Colonel Edwin Matthaidess, Commander of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, told CBS News.

The Department of State deferred questions from the DCNF to the Department of Defense.

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