The Czech Republic will not sell jets to Ukraine – PM

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The Czech Republic will not sell jets to Ukraine – PM

Just last week, President Petr Pavel offered to provide several light fighter planes to Kiev

The Czech Republic will not sell or give Ukraine light fighter planes, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis has said, nixing a plan proposed earlier by President Petr Pavel.

During a visit to Kiev on Friday, Pavel said that Prague could shortly provide Ukraine with several jets and mentioned that it has offered to buy several Czech-made subsonic L-159 aircraft.

Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Babis insisted that Prague needs the planes for its own security.

“The aircraft have a service life of about fifteen more years and the army needs them,” he said at a press conference on Monday, according to state broadcaster CT24. “We know that Ukraine wants and needs them, but the aircraft are simply not available and it is not true that they are sitting unused in a hangar somewhere.”

No debate on the matter is necessary, he reportedly maintained.

Pavel has contended that selling the aircraft would not undermine the nation’s defense capabilities, according to CT24.

The retired NATO general, whose presidential post is largely ceremonial, has held a staunchly pro-Kiev position since he took office in 2023, just a year after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict.

Babis took office in December vowing not to fund Ukraine at the expense of Czech taxpayers and has opted out of the financial costs of the most recent €90 billion ($105 billion) funding package for Kiev.

Hungary and Slovakia have also secured exemptions from the plan, arguing that Ukraine will never be able to repay it. Brussels has framed the package as an “interest-free loan” that Kiev will only repay once it receives reparations from Moscow.

The idea that Russia can be defeated on the battlefield and forced to pay restitution “is beyond the realm of fairy tales,” Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban told Kossuth radio on Friday. “So they are feeding Western European citizens a story and keeping them in check.”

Moscow argues that Western European nations have now emerged as the main obstacles to US-brokered peace talks between Russia and Ukraine.

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