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Zelenskyy cheers US aid as Kyiv looks to retake initiative

Daryna Krasnolutska, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

Ukrainian authorities were jubilant at the approval in the U.S. House of more than $60 billion in aid, though the focus is shifting to how quickly assistance can get to the front line and how the package will change months of waiting. Since U.S. President Joe Biden proposed the aid Kyiv’s military has been increasingly hamstrung as stocks of ammunition dry up and Kremlin forces press their advantage on the battlefield.

The legislation passed by the House late Saturday will likely make it to Biden’s desk this week after the Senate takes up the package as soon as Tuesday.

“This support will really strengthen the armed forces of Ukraine,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, through an interpreter. “We did lose the initiative. Now we have all the chance to stabilize the situation and to overtake the initiative.”

Ukraine is in constant contact with the U.S. in an effort to ensure the “package has the right things, which are so much awaited by our warriors on the battlefield,” Zelenskyy said in his regular address to the nation on Sunday. “The time between political decision and real hitting of the enemy on the front line must be as short as possible. Now, every day matters.”

But whether the long-awaited aid will enable a decisive change in Ukraine’s fortunes on the battlefield is another question. Stepped-up missile and drone attacks by Moscow’s have wiped out parts of Ukraine’s power-generating infrastructure and destroyed residential buildings in city centers, driving up the war-battered nation’s civilian death toll.

The U.S. Defense Department could get weapons moving to Ukraine “very quickly” once the aid bill clears the final hurdle, Pentagon spokesman Pat Ryder said last week. Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.S., said Friday that delivery logistics have been in the works all along.

 

“The Pentagon and our Defense Ministry didn’t stop working daily together at finding weapons, identifying them, and such packages are being prepared,” Markarova told Ukrainian television.

Some of the equipment, which will likely include longer-range Army Tactical Missile Systems, or ATACMS, could be on the way by the end of the week, Democrat Mark Warner, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Painful shortages in weapons and manpower along the 1,200-kilometer (930-mile) front, along with a dire need for more air defense systems, have pushed Ukraine’s fighting forces close to a breaking point, raising the risk of a Russian breakthrough. Moscow has also escalated its bombardment of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, in what Ukrainian and Western officials see as a bid to force an evacuation of the city, less than an hour’s drive from the Russian border.

‘Seriously damaged’

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