After battle with Republicans, Biden to sign Ukraine aid package
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[April 24, 2024]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden will sign a bill into law on
Wednesday that provides billions of dollars of new aid to Ukraine for
its war with Russia, a bipartisan victory for the president as he seeks
re-election and a boost to allies who have looked to Washington to
support Kiev.
Biden, a Democrat who is expected to face Republican former President
Donald Trump, a Ukraine aid skeptic, in the November election, has
pressed lawmakers for six months to approve more funding for Ukraine,
which has been fighting a full-scale Russian invasion for more than two
years.
Despite bipartisan support, a proposed package of aid idled amid
opposition mostly from Republicans closely tied to Trump.
That ended when the Republican-controlled House of Representatives
abruptly changed course and approved four bills that included funding
for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and other U.S. partners in the Indo-Pacific
on Saturday.
Biden and House Speaker Mike Johnson held intense talks about Ukraine in
February and the president has both pleaded with Republicans to back the
package and scolded them for not doing so. Johnson, who faces calls by
some right-leaning Republicans to oust him for his turnaround on aid,
met with Trump in Florida earlier this month; the former president said
Johnson was "doing a really good job."
The U.S. Senate followed the House on Tuesday evening, passing a
sweeping bill that provides $61 billion in aid to the country, which has
suffered setbacks in the war that supporters blame on the delay in
getting the additional U.S. funding.
"Congress has passed my legislation to strengthen our national security
and send a message to the world about the power of American leadership:
we stand resolutely for democracy and freedom, and against tyranny and
oppression," Biden said in a statement after the Senate vote on Tuesday.
He said he would sign the bill on Wednesday.
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U.S. President Joe Biden returns to the White House in Washington,
U.S., April 23, 2024. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Heather Conley, an expert on European affairs, said the victory for
U.S. allies and for Biden was tempered by effects that the delay has
had for Kiev on the battlefield.
"This is a strong message of American leadership at a time of
enormous instability, but the delay created cracks in that
credibility," said Conley, president of the German Marshall Fund of
the United States. "As we start rolling into the election, that
credibility will continue to be under close scrutiny."
Biden has argued that he helped restore U.S. credibility on the
world stage after Trump's tumultuous 4-year tenure, in part by
strengthening the NATO alliance and providing a united front against
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Trump has argued for an "America First" policy and has threatened to
let NATO allies fend for themselves if they do not increase their
defense spending.
Biden's administration is already preparing a $1 billion military
aid package for Ukraine, the first to be sourced from the bill, two
U.S. officials told Reuters.
Republicans who backed the aid package said it was not a vote for
Biden but a reflection of their party’s values.
“Peace through strength. That's our tradition," Senator Dan
Sullivan, a Republican from Alaska, said in a Senate speech. "To my
Republican colleagues and friends in the Senate, our tradition is
much more serious. It's prouder. And I will tell you this: It's much
more supported by the American people. Peace through strength, not
American retreat."
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle;
Editing by Stephen Coates)
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