The United States government is considering allocating an additional $126 million in aid to Ukraine.
The White House announced this in a statement.
The money is to be provided under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961. The U.S. government does not disclose how the funds will be spent.
“By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 621 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA), I hereby delegate to the Secretary of State the authority under section 614(a)(1) of the FAA to determine whether it is important to the security interests of the United States to furnish up to $126 million in assistance to Ukraine without regard to any provision of law within the purview of section 614(a)(1) of the FAA,” the statement reads.
Militarnyi previously reported that the Pentagon published a list of munitions included in the new aid package for Ukraine.
The DoD marked additional security assistance as an “extraordinary measure” to address some of Ukraine’s most pressing security and defense needs.
This package worth up to $300 million includes items to meet Ukraine’s needs for air defense, artillery, and anti-tank weapons.
The package includes:
The source of the funds is “savings on contracts from previously allocated supplemental funding that can be used to replenish the DoD’s inventories.”
The package, the report says, provides a short-term stop gap, but it is nowhere near enough to meet Ukraine’s battlefield needs.
The Pentagon insists that security assistance to Ukraine remains a smart investment in US national security.
As previously reported, the Pentagon is considering whether to use the last source of Ukraine’s military funding, even without guarantees that those funds will be replenished by Congress.
The Defense Department still has around $4 billion, which allows the Pentagon to draw from its own stockpiles to send military equipment to Ukraine.
However, the Pentagon had previously been reluctant to spend any of that remaining funds without assurances it would be reimbursed by Congress because taking from DoD stockpiles with no plan to replenish that equipment could impact U.S. military readiness.
No decisions have been made yet, but the conversations about that option and other potential plan Bs have become increasingly urgent.
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