Donald Trump freezes military aid to Ukraine amid increased Russian missile strikes
- On July 1, the Pentagon announced a freeze on military aid to Ukraine, suspending shipments of key air defense and artillery ammunition following a review of US stockpiles.
- The aid freeze resulted from a Pentagon review finding U.S. munitions stocks too low, after a months-long evaluation to replenish arsenals for readiness.
- U.S. froze supplies of Patriot, GMLRS, Hellfire missiles, and others amid record Russian drone and missile strikes in June, highlighting severe attack scale and frozen weapon stocks.
- Following the aid freeze, Ukraine summoned U.S. diplomat Ginkel, warning that cuts could severely undermine its defense against Russian attacks.
- More broadly, the U.S. is shifting support to Europe as focus turns to the Middle East and China, with resumption timing remaining uncertain.
30 Articles
30 Articles
RECIT - The Trump Administration has announced the suspension of supplies of crucial weapons for Kiev, such as Patriot air defence missiles, to rebuild Pentagon stocks.
The United States of America has decided to suspend the books of ancient and “precise” municipalities to Ukraine, on the basis of American military concerns related to the reduction of the stocks of U.S. military deposits. Commentary, the Ministry of Defence from Kiev stated Wednesday that it was not "notified" by such a decision, while Russia welcomed President Donald Trump's decision. The Trump article closes the robbery with money for Ukraine…
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