Ukraine war: US approves $2.6bn in new aid

2 years ago 17
ARTICLE AD BOX

By Patrick Jackson
BBC News

Lloyd Austin at Ramstein, 8 SeptemberImage source, EPA

Image caption,

Lloyd Austin told allies their support for Ukraine should be long-lasting

The US has approved nearly $2.7bn (£2.3bn) in new aid for Ukraine including $675m in arms supplies as the country battles Russia's invasion.

Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin announced the package at a meeting with dozens of fellow ministers at the US air base in Ramstein, Germany.

Military aid includes howitzers, munitions, Humvee vehicles, armoured ambulances and anti-tank systems.

The US has already pledged at least $13bn in military aid for Ukraine.

The new funding includes $2bn in long-term assistance.

Mr Austin said Ukraine's allies must commit to supporting the country for as long as necessary and be prepared to adapt the type of support offered.

"It means moving urgently to innovate and to push all of our defence industrial basis to provide Ukraine with the tools that it will need," he said.

Describing Russia's invasion as an "illegal, imperial and indefensible war of conquest", he said: "Now we're seeing the demonstrable success of our common efforts on the battlefield."

On Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his country's military had recently carried out successful attacks against Russian forces which control large areas of Ukraine in the south and the east - and retaken settlements near the north-eastern city of Kharkiv.

He did not give details but both Ukrainian and pro-Russian officials report fighting around Balakleya, 60km (38 miles) south-east of Kharkiv.

UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace says there are signs Ukraine is making real military progress. Western-supplied long-range artillery and rockets are helping to target Russian supply lines and command centres.

Russian President Vladimir Putin denied reverses on Wednesday, saying: "We have not lost anything and will not lose anything."

Russia says it is fighting neo-Nazis in Ukraine - a claim widely dismissed - and that it is threatened by the Nato alliance's strong relations with Ukraine.

Media caption,

Olena Zelenska speaks about the human cost of the war

Russia, a global energy supplier, is locked in an economic struggle with the West which imposed sweeping sanctions in response to the invasion.

Read Entire Article