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The Latest Aid Package to Ukraine Is a Major Escalation of Support
Mark F. Cancian
U.S. aid packages to Ukraine have become routine—four in the last three months—but the recently announced $800 million package is different. It expands support by including major crew-operated weapons and, for the first time, major U.S. weapons. The latter requires Ukrainians to be trained by U.S. troops. The package acknowledges the provision of Soviet-era weapons and, by what it does not include, implies that supplies of Javelins and Stingers may be getting low. The inclusion of items that will take weeks to deliver indicates that the United States now expects a long war. Finally, the U.S. record of providing about $52 million a day of military support means that the next aid package will be announced in late April and may involve another escalation. Let's start with the biggest change: the provision of major U.S. weapons. Until now, the United States has provided self-contained munitions like Javelins and Stingers. This package includes two major crew-operated weapons: 18 howitzers and 200 M113 armo...
Topics in this document
Armoured personnel carrier
Land mine
Shell (projectile)
Ammunition
Tank
Technology
Security
Military technology
Military
Military science
Hazards
Warfare
Weapons
Artillery
Military forces
Equipment
M18 Claymore mine
Anti-tank warfare
Weapon
Ukraine
Booby trap
M113 armored personnel carrier
International security
Howitzer
War
Loitering munition
Anti-aircraft warfare
Tools
Citations
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