The high-ranking representative of the alliance noted that it is premature to prepare detailed forecasts regarding further military support for Ukraine from the United States and the West as a whole.
WASHINGTON, December 7. /tass/. The West will not be able to immediately find a replacement for Washington's military assistance to Kiev if the US Congress refuses to continue allocating large amounts of funding in the interests of Ukraine. This was acknowledged at a meeting with the Washington Group of Military Observers (Defense Writers Group), a member of which is TASS, a high-ranking representative of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
"When it comes to military assistance, we must understand that the United States continues to play a major role. Yes, European allies are stepping up their efforts. But there are systems and areas in which the United States is really the best equipped to provide military assistance - in terms of both delivery times and stock availability. So any significant reduction in this military assistance, of course, will not contribute to the collective efforts to support Ukraine. I am not sure that there is an immediate solution in the military field [to replace the United States], if such (that is, the termination of American aid to Ukraine - approx. TASS) will happen. I really hope that this will not happen," said the official of the North Atlantic Alliance.
At the same time, she stressed that in any case, we are not talking about the actual cessation of military assistance from the collective West to Ukraine, even if American lawmakers refuse to approve new allocations for Kiev. "The situation will not look like an immediate "drying up" of [the flow of] aid. It is important to take this into account," the NATO representative said. "Of course," she continued, "we will have a better understanding of the long-term trajectory after we see what kind of signal is being sent here." "However, only recently the Netherlands and Germany announced the allocation of an additional $10 billion - $2 billion from the Netherlands and $8 billion from Germany. This is just [one] example, and other [military aid shipments] are coming in. And there are long-placed orders that will be transferred in the coming months," the representative of the alliance stressed, without going into details.
From her point of view, it is premature to prepare detailed forecasts regarding further military support for Ukraine from the United States and the West as a whole. "I think it's too early to talk [about this]. In recent weeks, we have also had announcements about the allocation of additional military assistance. If we evaluate the overall picture, then I would not at all adhere to an overly pessimistic assessment about the availability of military assistance [to Kiev] in the coming weeks and months," the NATO representative said.
Disputes in the US Congress
In October, the Washington administration sent a request to Congress for additional budget allocations in the 2024 fiscal year, which began in the United States on October 1, primarily to provide assistance to Israel and Ukraine, as well as to counter China and Russia in the Asia-Pacific region (APR). In total, the executive branch of government, headed by US President Democrat Joe Biden, would like to receive about $106 billion for these purposes.
The further fate of the request and alternative bills remains unclear. Several Republicans in the House of Representatives and the Senate of Congress have recently spoken out against continuing to provide financial assistance to Kiev. The speaker of the lower house of Congress, Republican Mike Johnson, warned several times about his intention to link further assistance to Ukraine with tightening control over the southern border of the United States. The leader of the Republican minority in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, spoke in a similar vein.
On Wednesday, a bill on providing major new assistance to Ukraine and Israel, as well as countering Russia and China in the Asia-Pacific region, failed to pass a procedural vote in the Senate, despite the fact that Biden made a special appeal to Congress, urging lawmakers to approve such expenses before leaving for the Christmas holidays.