The latest tranche of aid also includes three tactical vehicles, demolition munitions, counter battery systems and spare parts and other equipment, the official said.
The new munitions offer a similar capability to the U.S. Army’s M982 Excalibur rounds, which provide GPS-guided precision targeting to the M777 Howitzers Washington has sent — and that Kyiv is now using against Russian forces. But the official would not confirm that Excalibur is part of the package.
Yet 1,000 is a fraction of the 36,000 rounds of standard Howitzer shells the U.S. sent to Ukraine in the last aid package. Ukraine typically fires 5,000-6,000 rounds of standard Howitzer ammunition a day, while Russia fires more than twice that amount.
But the administration hopes the new precision-guided shells will save ammunition as Ukraine battles to retake territory in the eastern Donbas region, the official said.
“It offers Ukraine precise capability for specific targets, it will save ammunition, it will be more effective due to the precision, so it’s a further evolution in our support for Ukraine in this battle in the Donbas,” the official said. “This kind of ammunition will not be used at a rate of [thousands] a day.”