"...In the near term the assistance is now on the way, some of
it has already arrived and more of it will be arriving," said
Blinken, during a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy. "And that's going to make a real difference against
the ongoing Russian aggression on the battlefield."
Zelenskiy lauded the "crucial" U.S. aid, and thanked Washington
for bipartisan support.
He said Ukraine's biggest deficit for now was in air defense,
telling Blinken Kyiv needs two Patriot air defense batteries for
the northeastern region of Kharkiv, being pummeled by Russian
air strikes.
“Civilians, warriors, everybody -- they are under Russian
missiles,” Zelenskiy said.
The Ukrainian president said he also wanted to discuss security
guarantees with the U.S., in addition to asking Blinken to rally
support from more countries at an upcoming high-level peace
summit set to take place in Switzerland in June.
Ukraine repelled Russian troops from the outskirts of Kyiv and
seized back swathes of occupied land in the first year following
Russia's 2022 invasion.
But a counter-offensive launched in 2023 fizzled, and recent
months have seen Moscow make slow but steady gains at the front.
Kyiv says it hopes renewed commitments of Western arms will
allow it to reclaim the initiative on the battlefield and
recapture some of the fifth of its territory still occupied by
Russia.
"We're equally determined that over time, Ukraine stands
strongly on its own feet: militarily, economically,
democratically," said Blinken. "A strong, successful, thriving,
free Ukraine is the best possible rebuke to Putin."
(Reporting by Simon Lewis; Writing by Anastasiia Malenko;
Editing by Peter Graff)
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