On Tuesday, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius arrived in Kyiv for an unannounced visit to reaffirm Berlin’s backing for Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s troops.
Boris Pistorius arrived by train and is due to hold talks with his Ukrainian counterpart as well as President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Berlin, the second-biggest supplier of military assistance to Kyiv after the United States, is seeking to offer reassurances after the shift in focus to the Middle East war prompted concerns about waning support for Ukraine.
The visit comes after an increase in Russian air attacks on Ukraine and as Kyiv braces for an expected rise in strikes on the country’s energy facilities over the coming winter months.
It is Pistorius’s second visit to Kyiv since he became defense minister at the start of this year, and it comes a day after US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin made an unannounced trip to Ukraine.
As well as political talks, Pistorius will take part in a wreath-laying ceremony at Kyiv’s Maidan Square and visit a military training center.
After some initial hesitation, Germany drastically ramped up its support for Ukraine in the wake of Russia’s invasion and delivered a huge array of armaments to Kyiv, ranging from heavy battle tanks to air defense systems and ammunition.
The conflict has also spurred the government to embark on an overhaul of the country’s creaking military, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz unveiling a 100-billion-euro ($109-billion) fund to boost the armed forces.
Haunted by guilt over its role in World War II, successive governments had considered the armed forces a low priority, and it suffered from years of neglect.
Since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war, Germany has offered strong support to Israel in its fight against the Palestinian fighters.
But Scholz pledged last month Germany would still maintain its aid to Kyiv, insisting that “we will support Ukraine as long as necessary”.