The US is willing to support Ukraine's finances with $1.5 billion a month in aid throughout the war against Russia and is pushing its European allies to commit to similar amounts, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Biden administration, which signed off last week on $4.5 billion in grants to cover the rest of the year, has held conversations with European Union officials --- including in recent days -- and has pressed Europe to do more, the people said, asking not to be identified because the discussions are private.
With the EU haggling internally over the delivery of previous pledges, allies have been discussing a more regular mechanism to help keep Ukraine's economy afloat as the war drags on, one of the people said. Officials have been warned that there would be growing demands in Congress, whose approval is required for longer-term support, for more burden sharing among allies, another person said.
The International Monetary Fund has previously said Ukraine needs about $5 billion every month to cover essential services and keep its economy going. The country received about $2 billion in aid last month, down from $4.7 billion in August, Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko said.
Bloomberg reported in July that a number of allies had privately criticized the bloc for not delivering on its commitments of nearly 9 billion euros ($8.8 billion) and called on it at the time to do so urgently.
EU Summit
EU leaders are expected to discuss Kyiv's financial requirements, which the draft budget for 2023 has placed at $38 billion, at a summit in the Czech Republic this week.
Diplomats preparing the leaders' meeting were told last week that expected funding levels from European nations would be on a similar scale to the monthly $1.5 billion the US was willing to provide, one of the people said. The funding was critical to covering essentials such as basic public expenditure, schools, hospitals and Ukraine's electrical network, the person said.
A number of senior EU officials have been extremely frustrated by the slow pace of the bloc's decision-making over financial support for Kyiv, as well as lack of urgency among some national governments toward the debate, especially as winter approaches.
Amid disagreement among member nations over the details of the 9 billion euro-package, the bloc paid out 1 billion euros last summer, while another 5 billion euros have been approved but not yet delivered to Kyiv. The outstanding 3 billion euros remain stuck over issues including whether the aid should be in the form of grants or loans, and how to structure guarantees.
The EU has also supported Ukraine with 1.2 billion euros in loans in the first half of the year, as well as billions more to pay for weapons deliveries and longer-term reforms. The block is also aiming to shepherd conversations around Ukraine's post-war reconstruction but officials admonish that Kyiv's immediate needs are far more pressing, two of the people said.
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OMG, $1 billion/month, how will we ever afford this? That's like 1/10 of what r-slurs spend on Star Wars merchandise.
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Ukraine has become our golem against russia tbh. It's worth it.
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I know it’s gay but the destruction of a national rival is worth that much. Also i want to hit a higher rank in csgo.
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Are you referring to Europe?
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Another day, another $12bn aid package to the hohols
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I've found it alarming that even in America every decision has been made at least a few weeks later than it should have been. If the Russians hadn't been more incompetent than expected and the Ukrainians tougher than expected, this whole war would have been lost while politicians dithered in western capitals.
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Okay so
The samurai were officially abolished as a caste in Japanese society during the Meiji Restoration in 1867
The first ever fax machine, the "printing telegraph", was invented in 1843
And Abraham Lincoln was famously assassinated at Ford's Theatre in 1865
Which means
There was a 22 year window in which a samurai could have sent a fax to Abraham Lincoln
Snapshots:
archive.org
archive.ph (click to archive)
ghostarchive.org (click to archive)
support:
archive.org
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ghostarchive.org (click to archive)
criticized:
archive.org
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