The $1 billion package is the largest single tranche of aid provided by the U.S. since the war began on Feb. 24. It includes $350 million in rapid, off-the-shelf deliveries by the Pentagon and $650 million in other longer-term purchases.
According
to report, the $1 billion package of military assistance the U.S. announced for
Ukraine on Wednesday is aimed at bolstering the country's ability to push back
Russian advances in the eastern Donbas region. Several European nations added
their own contributions, as U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin wrapped up a
meeting of more then 45 nations in Brussels to discuss Ukraine's security
needs.
The aid
reflects Ukraine’s needs for longer-range rocket and missile systems that will
allow it to target Russian troops and locations from farther away, thus making
strikes less likely for Ukrainian forces.
All
combined, the U.S. has now committed about $6.3 billion in security assistance
to Ukraine since the beginning of the Biden Administration, including
approximately $5.6 billion since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. The U.S.
military aid announced on Wednesday includes:
Eighteen
owitzers and 36,000 rounds of ammunition for them.
Eighteen
actical vehicles to tow the howitzers.
Ammunition
for High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) that the U.S. previously agreed
to send,
Four
tactical vehicles to recover equipment.
Spare
parts and other equipment.
Two
Harpoon coastal defense systems.
Thousands
of secure radios, night vision devices, thermal sights and other optics.
Funding
for training, maintenance, sustainment, transportation, and administrative
costs.
Austin
said other countries also agreed to send more aid:
Germany
will send three Multiple Launch Rocket Systems, which are very similar to the
HIMARS. and guided munitions for the systems.
Slovakia
will send helicopters and urgently needed rocket ammunition.
Canada
and Poland will send artillery.
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