U.S. Congress includes $300 million for Ukraine, addresses China in
massive defense bill
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[December 08, 2021]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers
included efforts to push back against Russia and China in a compromise
version of a massive annual defense bill released on Tuesday, proposing
$300 million for Ukraine's military and a statement of support for the
defense of Taiwan.
But they omitted some measures that had strong support in Congress,
including a proposal to impose mandatory sanctions over the Russian Nord
Stream 2 gas pipeline and a plan to subject women to the military draft
for the first time.
The fiscal 2022 National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, authorizes
$770 billion in military spending, $25 billion more than requested by
President Joe Biden and about 5% more than last year's budget.
The bill - the result of intense negotiations between House of
Representatives and Senate Democrats and Republicans - includes a 2.7%
pay increase for the troops, and more aircraft and Navy ship purchases,
in addition to strategies for dealing with geopolitical threats.
The NDAA normally passes with strong bipartisan support, and the House
of Representatives backed the compromise measure by 363-70 later on
Tuesday.
The bill is closely watched by a broad swath of industry and other
interests because of its wide scope and because it is one of the only
major pieces of legislation that becomes law every year.
This year's bill was released shortly after U.S. President Joe Biden and
Russian President Vladimir Putin held two hours of virtual talks on
Ukraine and other disputes.
It includes $300 million for the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative,
which provides support to Ukraine's armed forces, $4 billion for the
European Defense Initiative and $150 million for Baltic security
cooperation.
It does not include a provision that would force Biden to impose
sanctions over the $11 billion Nord Stream 2 pipeline to bring Russian
gas directly to Germany. The measure's supporters argue that the
pipeline would be harmful to European allies.
Lawmakers also omitted an amendment that would have banned Americans
from purchasing Russian sovereign debt.
Biden's fellow Democrats control both the House and Senate. The White
House has said it supports sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine, but not
provisions that could threaten trans-Atlantic ties.
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Servicemen of the U.S. and Ukrainian armies attend the opening
ceremony of the "RAPID TRIDENT-2021" military exercise at Ukraine's
International Peacekeeping Security Centre near Yavoriv in the Lviv
region, Ukraine September 20, 2021. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich/File Photo
EYES ON CHINA
On China, the bill includes $7.1 billion for the Pacific Deterrence
Initiative and a statement of congressional support for the defense
of Taiwan, as well as a ban on the Department of Defense procuring
products produced with forced labor from China's Xinjiang region.
The United States has labeled China's treatment of its Uyghur Muslim
minority in Xinjiang as genocide, and lawmakers have been pushing a
ban on imports of products made with forced labor from Uyghurs.
China dismisses the genocide charge as a slanderous assertion about
conditions in Xinjiang.
The compromise NDAA omits a proposal to require women to register
for the military draft that was included in earlier versions. It had
faced stiff opposition from social conservatives who thought it
would erode traditional gender roles, threatening to stymie the
entire NDAA.
It includes an overhaul of the military justice system to take
decisions on whether to prosecute cases of rape, sexual assault and
some other major crimes out of the hands of military commanders.
The change was a partial victory for activists because it did not
strip military commanders of the authority to prosecute all
felonies. It came after Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand led a
years-long effort to change the system in response to the thousands
of cases of sexual assault among service members, many of which are
never prosecuted.
Gillibrand said she still wanted a separate vote on her full
proposal.
Now that it has passed the House, the NDAA must win Senate backing
and be signed by Biden to become law.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Editing by Matthew
Lewis and Stephen Coates)
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