The Los Angeles County Fire Department (LACoFD) and several other departments across the United States sent supposedly “surplus” equipment, including fire engines and ambulances, to Ukraine over the past several years. According to critics, this has left the first responders in the U.S. depleted in the face of natural disasters, including the catastrophic floods in North Carolina and Tennessee, as well as the massive wildfires currently engulfing some of Los Angeles’s largest suburbs.
In 2022, the LACoFD announced it was sending surplus “hoses, nozzles, turnouts, helmets, body armor, and other associated personal protective equipment” to Ukraine to aid first responders amid the Russian invasion. Additionally, fire engines from Kern County, in central California, were donated to Ukraine—possibly limiting the ability to rush units from other parts of the state to Los Angeles to help combat the current conflagrations, which have seen thousands of acres and homes burned.
Currently, at least two civilians are reported dead in the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California. That fire and the Palisades Fire just west of downtown Los Angeles remain at zero percent containment. In the Pacific Palisades and Malibu, reports are emerging that insufficient water pressure to deliver water to fire hydrants is hampering containment efforts. Notably, Kern County, California, sent a 500-gallon water tanker to Ukraine late last year.
The transfer of U.S. munitions and equipment to Ukraine has long been a point of contention due to the impact on both first responders and American military readiness. The National Pulse has previously reported that the U.S. is set to begin outsourcing some weapons production to countries like Australia, Japan, Poland, and India after the military’s stockpiles have become dangerously low from supplying munitions to Ukraine.
Malibu is completely on fire. pic.twitter.com/h2EL4QyB67
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) January 8, 2025