Senator Proposes Improved Tracking of Weapons Sent to Ukraine
Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, announced March 15 that he has introduced a bill that would require the Pentagon to improve its tracking of certain weapons sent to Ukraine.
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Vance cited the Department of Defense inspector general’s recent finding that more than half of the nearly $1.7 billion in weapons sent to Ukraine that were designated for enhanced end-use monitoring (EEUM) were not tracked according to DOD standards (see 2401120033). He called the deficiency "totally unacceptable."
His proposed “Enhanced End-Use Monitoring Accountability Act” would require monthly reports on EEUM efforts for Ukraine until the rate of weapons not tracked falls below 1%. The bill also would prohibit sending additional equipment requiring EEUM to Ukraine until all EEUM-designated durable defense articles are tracked by serial number, the delinquency rate of EEUM-designated equipment is below 10%, and DOD fully implements recommendations in the inspector general’s January EEUM report.
The legislation was referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.