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White House touts ‘massive surge’ in arms shipments to Kiev
President Biden wants every allocated dollar spent by the time he leaves office, Jake Sullivan has said
Outgoing US President Joe Biden will use every opportunity to deliver more weapons to Ukraine in the final days of his administration, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan has pledged.
With 50 days left, the Biden administration is working to “get Ukraine all the tools we possibly can to strengthen their position on the battlefield,” the senior official told ABC News on Sunday.
“President Biden directed me to oversee a massive surge in the military equipment that we are delivering to Ukraine so that we have spent every dollar that Congress has appropriated to us by the time that President Biden leaves office,” he said.
President-elect Donald Trump has claimed that he could end the Ukraine conflict in 24 hours after he is sworn in on January 20. Biden’s stated strategy has been to stand with Ukraine “for as long as it takes” to defeat Russia.
Read more White House comments on nukes for UkraineKiev will eventually have to engage Moscow diplomatically, Sullivan acknowledged on Sunday, and the purpose of the US military aid is to “give Ukraine as many tools as possible so that they could go into that negotiation and feel they could achieve the outcome that they would like to see.”
Ukraine’s stated goal has been to retake all lands it claims under sovereignty, an aim that Russia considers detached from reality. When asked by anchor Jonathan Karl about the possibility of territorial concessions, Sullivan said it was up to Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky to decide that. He mused that the “key thing” in the situation is that Ukraine’s destiny should “not be imposed by outside powers, including the United States.”
In 2022, Kiev and Moscow preliminarily approved a draft peace agreement that would have ended the hostilities in exchange for Ukraine renouncing its ambition to join NATO and accepting a cap on the strength of its army. Russia was willing to offer it security guarantees in exchange.
READ MORE: Boris Johnson admits Ukraine conflict is a ‘proxy war’
However, Kiev dropped the proposal after then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the Ukrainians to “just fight,” as Kiev’s top negotiator later put it. Western officials have denied that the Ukrainian government was pushed to continue fighting, though Johnson last week described Ukrainian soldiers as “our proxies” as he urged giving them more arms to “do the job.”
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