The Biden administration on Saturday
announced a $988 million aid package to Ukraine to ensure it "has the
tools it needs to prevail in its fight against Russian
aggression." (Andrew Cabalero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)
The Biden administration has committed to
giving Ukraine as much aid as possible before Trump takes office in January
Gen. Jack Keane, a Fox News senior
strategic analyst, joins 'America's Newsroom' to discuss Ukrainian President
Zelenskyy's suggestion that captured land could be traded and the surprise
attack by Syrian rebels.
The Biden
administration on Saturday 7 Dec announced a $988 million aid package to
Ukraine to ensure it "has the tools it needs to prevail in its fight
against Russian aggression." "This administration has made its choice. And so has a bipartisan
coalition in Congress. The next administration must make its own choice,"
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Saturday at the Reagan National Defense
Forum in California. "But, from
this library, from this podium, I am confident that President Reagan would have
stood on the side of Ukraine, American security and human freedom."
The aid package is provided through the
Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative and "will provide Ukraine with
munitions for rocket systems and unmanned aerial systems," a release from
the administration said. "This
package also includes support for maintenance and repair programs to help
Ukraine reconstitute its forces and build and sustain combat power."The
announcement came as President-elect Trump met with Ukrainian President
VolodymyrZelenskyy while at a ceremony commemorating the reopening of the Notre
Dame Cathedral in Paris on Saturday after a devastating fire there in 2019.
During the campaign, Trump and running
mate JD Vance heavily criticized the Biden administration’s support for Ukraine
after Russia’s 2022 invasion, and Trump said he would end the war before even
entering office without offering further details. Vance also suggested earlier
this year that the best way to end the war was for Ukraine to cede the land
Russia has seized and for a demilitarized zone to be established, a proposal Ukrainian President
VolodymyrZelenskyy flatly rejected.Recently, Zelenskyy has said he is more
open to negotiations in the war and has called for Ukraine to be allowed to
join NATO. The Biden administration has committed to giving Ukraine as much aid
as possible before Trump takes office in January. "In September, the
president announced a surge in security assistance for Ukraine to put Ukrainian
forces in the strongest possible position before he leaves office,"
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said in a statement Monday while
announcing $725 million in aid to Ukraine.
"Between now and mid-January, we
will deliver hundreds of thousands of additional artillery rounds, thousands of
additional rockets and other critical capabilities to help Ukraine defend its
freedom and independence." Last month, U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken said, "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."
Saturday’s
announcement marks the administration’s 22nd aid package through the Ukraine
Security Assistance Initiative.
"It is not the place of Joe Biden to
make that decision now," Johnson said. "We have a newly elected
president, and we’re going to wait and take the new commander in chief’s
direction on all that. So, I don’t expect any Ukraine funding to come up
now."