New Aid Pledges To Ukraine At Lowest Level Since War Began: Study
- New aid pledges to Ukraine have reached their lowest level since the start of the war, with a nearly 90% drop compared to the same period last year.
- Western support for Ukraine is waning as attention shifts to the Israel-Hamas war. Senate Republicans in the US are blocking additional funding, and negotiations on a 50-billion-euro EU package for Ukraine are dragging on.
- Ukraine hopes for the EU to pass the long-awaited support package, as further delays would strengthen Russia's position. Uncertainty remains about US aid.
50 Articles
50 Articles
Promises of aid to Ukraine have fallen dramatically since the beginning of the Russian invasion, with limited US and EU commitments.
Western Aid to Ukraine Falls Off a Cliff – German Monitor
Fewer donors pledge smaller new packages, with the focus shifting towards weapons, IfW Kiel has said New commitments of weapons and money to Ukraine by the US and its allies have reached a new low in the past three months, Germany’s Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel) reported on Thursday. The research institution maintains Ukraine Support Tracker, a database of public aid pledges, which it updated this week. Between August and Octob…
Ukraine aid nears zero while supplemental remains stalled
WASHINGTON — For months, Pentagon officials have warned that without action from Congress, the Defense Department would quickly burn through the remaining security aid for Ukraine. Now they’re saying the tank is almost empty.“It’s fumes,” said Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment Bill LaPlante, speaking with reporters at the Reagan National Defense Forum over the weekend.The dwindling aid presents a messaging challenge for W…
Funding between August and the end of October fell by 87% compared to the same period of 2022. The Kiel data: only 20 out of 42 countries have announced new packages. Italy stops at 700 million
Ukraine recap: western divisions an ominous sign for Kyiv as the aid funding tap begins to dry up
For the past week or so it has felt as if Ukraine’s fate is more likely to be decided in Washington and Brussels than on the battlefield as US president Joe Biden struggles to get his US$111 billion (£88 billion) package of aid through the senate and EU members quibble over a €50 billion euro (£43 billion) lifeline for Kyiv. “History is going to judge harshly those who turn their back on freedom’s cause. We can’t let Putin win,” Biden said after…
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