Do not let Putin win, Biden pleads with Republicans on Ukraine
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[December 07, 2023]
By Trevor Hunnicutt, Steve Holland and Mike Stone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden pleaded with Republicans on
Wednesday for a fresh infusion of military aid for Ukraine, warning that
a victory for Russia over Ukraine would leave Moscow in position to
attack NATO allies and could draw U.S. troops into a war.
Biden spoke as the United States planned to announce $175 million in
additional Ukraine aid from its dwindling supply of money for Kyiv. He
signaled a willingness to make significant changes to U.S. migration
policy along the border with Mexico to try to draw Republican support.
"If Putin takes Ukraine, he won’t stop there," Biden said. Putin will
attack a NATO ally, he predicted, and then "we’ll have something that we
don't seek and that we don't have today: American troops fighting
Russian troops," Biden said.
“We can’t let Putin win,” he said, prompting an angry reaction from
Moscow.
Russia's RIA news agency quoted the Russian ambassador to the United
States, Anatoly Antonov, as saying that Biden's comments on a potential
U.S.-Russia conflict were "provocative rhetoric unacceptable for a
responsible nuclear power".
However, Senate Republicans later on Wednesday blocked Democratic-backed
legislation that would have provided billions of dollars in new security
assistance for Ukraine and Israel, among other international concerns,
saying they wanted to press their point about the importance of tighter
border policy.
The White House warned this week that the U.S. is running out of time
and money to help Ukraine repel Russia's invasion.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, in a phone
interview with Reuters about building up Ukraine's defense industrial
base, said the U.S. was sticking to its long-held position not to
pressure Ukraine into negotiations with Russia.
"That's going to have to be up to them. We're just going to keep
fighting day in and day out to try to secure this money," Sullivan said.
"We're going to keep making the case that it would be a historic mistake
for the United States to walk away from Ukraine at this moment and we
believe that argument will ultimately penetrate and prevail," he said.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy walks down the White House
colonnade to the Oval Office with U.S. President Joe Biden during a
visit to the White House in Washington, U.S., September 21, 2023.
Doug Mills/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
He said Biden is prepared to have "reasonable, responsible
discussions to produce a bipartisan outcome on border policy and
border sources."
By mid-November, the U.S. Defense Department had used 97% of $62.3
billion in supplemental funding it had received and the State
Department had used all of the $4.7 billion in military assistance
funding it had been allocated, U.S. budget director Shalanda Young
said this week.
A U.S. official said Washington has less than $1 billion in
"replenishment authority." This means that if Congress does not
provide new funds to buy replacement equipment, the U.S., Ukraine
and arms makers may have to take other steps to backfill stocks.
Border security with Mexico is a major issue weighing on the
negotiations about Ukraine and Israel funding.
House and Senate Republicans are backing renewed construction of a
border wall, former President Donald Trump's signature goal, while
deeming large numbers of migrants ineligible for asylum and reviving
a controversial policy under which asylum seekers are told to remain
in Mexico while their immigration case is heard.
Biden said he was willing to make "significant" compromises on the
border issue but said Republicans will not get everything they want.
He did not provide details.
"This has to be a negotiation," he said.
Biden, who had discussed Ukraine in a virtual summit with G7 leaders
earlier on Wednesday, said U.S. allies are prepared to continue
supporting Ukraine in its 22-month war to repel Russian invaders.
"Extreme Republicans are playing chicken with our national security,
holding Ukraine's funding hostage to an extreme partisan border
policy," said Biden.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Steve Holland; Additional
reporting by Patricia Zengerle and Katharine Jackson; Editing by
David Gregorio and Stephen Coates)
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