Biden is sending aid to help Ukraine keep fighting next year, Blinken
says
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[November 13, 2024]
By SAMYA KULLAB and LORNE COOK
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The Biden administration is determined in its final
months to help ensure that Ukraine can keep fighting off Russia's
full-scale invasion next year, sending it as much aid as possible so
that it might hold Russian forces at bay and possess a strong hand in
any potential peace negotiations, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
said Wednesday.
“President Biden has committed to making sure that every dollar we have
at our disposal will be pushed out the door between now and Jan. 20,”
when president-elect Donald Trump is due to be sworn in, Blinken said.
NATO countries must focus their efforts on “ensuring that Ukraine has
the money, munitions and mobilized forces to fight effectively in 2025,
or to be able to negotiate a peace from a position of strength,” Blinken
said during a visit to Brussels.
The U.S. will “adapt and adjust” with the latest equipment it is
sending, Blinken said, without providing details.
The almost three-year war has shown no signs of winding down.
Russia attacked the Ukrainian capital Kyiv with a sophisticated
combination of missiles and drones for the first time in 73 days on
Wednesday. That came a day after the Pentagon said most of the North
Korean troops sent to help Moscow's war effort are fighting to drive
Ukraine's army off Russian soil in the Kursk border region.
Ukraine is also straining to hold back a monthslong Russian onslaught in
the eastern Donetsk region.
Political uncertainty over how a U.S. administration under Trump will
change Washington’s policy on the war is a key new factor in the
conflict. U.S. military aid is vital for Ukraine, but Trump has signaled
that he doesn’t want to keep giving tens of billions of dollars to Kyiv.
Air raid warnings blared for hours as Russia targeted eight regions of
Ukraine on Wednesday, firing six ballistic and cruise missiles and 90
drones, the Ukrainian air force said.
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In this photo taken from a video released by Russian Defense
Ministry press service on Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024, the Russian
army's multiple rocket launcher Solntsepyok fires towards Ukrainian
positions in the border area of Kursk region, Russia. (Russian
Defense Ministry Press Service via AP)
Air defenses downed four missiles and 37 drones, and another 47
drones were stopped by electronic jamming, the statement said. The
damage was being assessed.
The air assault came as most of the more than 10,000 North Korean
troops sent by Pyongyang to help Moscow in the war are engaged in
combat in Russia's Kursk border region, according to the Pentagon. A
Ukrainian army incursion into Kursk three months ago has succeeded
in holding a broad area of land and has embarrassed the Kremlin.
Russia’s military has trained the North Korean soldiers in
artillery, drone skills and basic infantry operations, including
trench clearing, Pentagon deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel told a
briefing Tuesday. The cooperation faces challenges, according to the
Pentagon, including how to achieve military interoperability and
overcoming the language barrier.
Kyiv officials say that Russia has deployed around 50,000 troops to
Kursk in a bid to dislodge the Ukrainians.
Russia has in recent months been assembling forces for a
counteroffensive in Kursk, according to the Institute for the Study
of War think tank, though the timescale of the operation isn't
known.
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Lorne Cook reported from Brussels.
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