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U.S. increasing non-lethal military aid to Ukraine
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[November 21, 2014]
By Warren Strobel and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States
plans to increase non-lethal military assistance to Ukraine, including
deliveries of the first Humvee vehicles, having decided for now not to
provide weapons, U.S. officials said.
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The increase in non-lethal aid to Ukraine, which is grappling with
a Russian-backed separatist movement in its east, is expected to be
announced on Thursday during a visit to Kiev by Vice President Joe
Biden.
The officials, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity,
described it as an expansion of U.S. support for Ukraine's armed
forces, but one that was unlikely to significantly alter the
conflict.
The aid falls short of what Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko
requested during a visit to Washington in September when he appealed
for lethal aid - a request echoed by some U.S. lawmakers in response
to what NATO allies say is Russia's movement of tanks and troops
into eastern Ukraine.
Officials in the Obama administration had said Washington believed
Ukraine had enough lethal aid and the types of weaponry requested
for Ukraine would be of only marginal value. They had also
emphasized the need for a diplomatic outcome.
The United States and its European allies have imposed several
rounds of economic sanctions on Russia for its seizure of Crimea and
incursion into eastern Ukraine.
The new non-lethal aid Biden will present in Kiev includes Humvees
from excess supplies in the Pentagon's inventory, as well as the
delivery of previously promised radars that can detect the location
of enemy mortars, officials said. They did not specify a dollar
value for the assistance.
Previous non-lethal aid to Ukraine includes $53 million announced in
September for military equipment such as counter-mortar detection
units, body armor, binoculars, small boats and other gear for
Ukraine's security forces and border guards in the east.
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LONG DEBATE
President Barack Obama's administration has long debated providing
weapons to the Kiev government, but has so far concluded that it
might only prompt Russia to escalate its aid to the separatist
rebels.
Lethal assistance "remains on the table. It's something that we're
looking at," Obama's deputy national security adviser and nominee
for deputy secretary of state, Tony Blinken, said at his Senate
confirmation hearing on Wednesday.
In response to Blinken's comment, Russia warned the United States on
Thursday against supplying arms to Ukrainian forces.
Hours before Biden was due to arrive in Kiev, Russian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich cautioned against "a major
change in policy of the (U.S.) administration in regard to the
conflict" in Ukraine.
U.S. Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican, said he had not
been briefed on the new non-lethal aid but called it "a continuation
of the ridiculous."
"They are fighting against people with lethal weapons. They need
lethal weapons to fight back. It is disgraceful and shameful that we
won’t give them lethal weapons," McCain told Reuters.
(Editing by Jason Szep and Howard Goller)
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