Pentagon officials said Thursday that Iranian troops are on the ground in Ukraine assisting Russian forces with drone strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure and other targets, marking a major escalation in Tehran’s involvement with the war and its military partnership with the Kremlin.
The exact number of Iranian troops in Ukraine is unclear, but administration officials said they’re stationed in Crimea, which Russia forcibly annexed in 2014.
“We do assess that Iranians have been on the ground in Ukraine to assist Russia with the drone operations there,” Pentagon spokesman Air Force Brig Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters Thursday. “And so, in terms of what that means, obviously again we continue to see Iran be complicit in terms of exporting terror, not only in the Middle East region but now also in Ukraine. I think that speaks for itself.”
Minutes before the Pentagon briefing, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters that a “relatively small number” of Iranian troops are in Crimea and that they’re directly helping the Russians fly drone missions over Ukrainian cities.
“The information we have is that the Iranians have put trainers and tech support in Crimea, but it’s the Russians who are doing the piloting,” Mr. Kirby said.
Despite Iranian and Russian denials, military analysts say Russia has increasingly relied on Iranian drones and other weapons as its own stockpiles of military equipment have dwindled after nearly eight months of war in Ukraine.
Just this week, Tehran reportedly agreed to send more weapons to Russia, including short-range Zolfaghar ballistic missiles and Shahed-136 drones. The latter has been one of Moscow’s weapons of choice in its brutal rocket-and-drone campaign in Ukraine, which has targeted Ukrainian energy infrastructure in a bid to freeze out its enemy over a long, cold winter.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday introduced a resolution to sever all diplomatic ties with Iran over its support for the Russian war effort. The European Union has already said it is preparing new sanctions to punish Iran for selling the so-called kamikaze drones to Russia used in the recent bombing campaign.
Russia and Iran have denied that Tehran has supplied military drones and missiles to help in the Ukrainian conflict, even as destroyed models of Iranian-design drones have been found in Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities in recent days.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, in a Thursday phone call with European Union chief foreign policy official Josep Borrell, again said the reports are “unfounded.”
“We cooperate with Moscow in the military sphere, but we are not sending them drones and other weapons for use in the Ukrainian conflict,” Mr. Amir-Abdollahian said, according to Iranian and Russian press reports.
On the ground, Russian and Ukrainian troops were preparing for a major battle over Kherson, The Associated Press reported, as Kyiv presses a counteroffensive that has reclaimed major swaths of territory in the east and south once controlled by Russian and separatist forces.
Kherson was one of the first major cities Russia captured when it invaded. It remains the largest city Russia holds. Kherson’s industrial base and river port also make it a prime target.
Mr. Zelenskyy’s office said Thursday that Ukrainian forces mounted more than a dozen attacks on Russian military strongholds in the Kherson region, the AP reported. Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed that its forces had turned back Ukrainian tank assaults on villages near the city.
Russia’s new military commander in Ukraine this week acknowledged the difficulties Russian forces face in Kherson. Britain’s Defense Ministry in its daily summary of the war, wrote Thursday that the remarks suggest “Russian authorities are seriously considering a major withdrawal of their forces from the area west of the Dnieper River.”
• This article was based in part on wire service reports.
• Ben Wolfgang can be reached at bwolfgang@washingtontimes.com.
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