The defeat of Russian forces near Kyiv — and the trail of atrocities they left behind — have fueled a Western willingness to provide Ukraine military aid once thought too provocative and cumbersome for a war Russia was expected to win in weeks.
The defeat of Russian forces near Kyiv — and the trail of atrocities they left behind — have fueled a Western willingness to provide Ukraine with military aid once thought too provocative and cumbersome for a war Russia was expected to win in weeks.Fears of angering a nuclear-armed Vladimir Putin or undermining peace talks with the Russian president have faded.
The guardrails against triggering World War III have largely fallen — short of providing the air and ground forces President Biden has pledged not to send.The Biden administration was careful early in the conflict to differentiate between what it called "offensive" and "defensive" weapons, fearful of becoming a "co-combatant" under international law.no longer applied given the "nature of the battle" and "war crimes" committed by Russian forces.
"[W]e have gotten to a place in the United States, and across many members of the NATO alliance, where the key question is, 'What does Ukraine need, and how can we provide it to them?'" Sullivan said on NBC's "Meet the Press."the administration is looking at an additional $750 million in aid that includes Mi-17 helicopters the Ukrainians could easily fly.
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