International

Here’s everything the US is sending to Ukraine’s military

President Biden on Wednesday announced $800 million in new lethal aid for Ukraine, bolstering U.S. support to the ex-Soviet nation as it ends the third week fighting Russian forces.    

The latest tranche — part of the nearly $14 billion Congress appropriated for Ukrainian aid which Biden signed into law a day prior — brings the U.S. government’s total pledge of military assistance for the embattled nation to $1 billion in the past week and $2 billion since Biden took office. 

The package includes anti-tank weapons, unmanned drones, small arms and ammunition among other crucial defense equipment.   

The White House also said the U.S. is helping the Ukrainians “acquire additional, longer-range systems on which Ukraine’s forces are already trained, as well as additional munitions for those systems,” though it did not detail what those may be. 

The administration was likely referring to the S-300 surface-to-air missile system, a Soviet-era defense system possessed by NATO ally Slovakia that could help against Russian airstrikes in Ukraine. Greece and Bulgaria also own the system.  

But Ukrainian officials have not gotten everything they want to beat back the Russian incursion.  

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday made an impassioned plea to Congress and the nation, asking for a NATO-imposed no-fly zone over Ukraine, or at the very least, fighter jets – specifically MiG-29 aircraft that Poland has said it could transfer over to the country with the U.S. military’s help.  

Administration officials have so far shot down both asks, fearing it may prompt Russia to escalate the war.  

Biden has also repeatedly and staunchly said the United States will not put troops on the ground in Ukraine, which is not a NATO member.

Here’s what the U.S. is doing instead to bolster the Ukrainian military: 

The $800 million military assistance package 

The previous $1.2 billion  

The Omnibus spending bill

The behemoth spending bill includes $13.6 billion worth of military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. Of that, $6.5 billion will go toward the Pentagon to be roughly split between deploying U.S. troops to the region and sending defense equipment to Ukraine.   

The types and amount of specific equipment shipped to Ukraine is unknown and could vary based on the ever-changing conflict, but the Pentagon said it would consider the following: