From KyivPost:
"Has US Really Only Sent Ukraine 10 Percent of Arms Promised This Year?
Ukraine’s President Zelensky said fighting Russia is tough when nine out
of every ten bucks’ worth of US arms promised this year haven’t shown
up – the Pentagon numbers seem to support the claim.
by Stefan Korshak |
October 31, 2024
President Volodymyr Zelensky’s
recent charge that only ten percent of the military assistance the US
said it would transfer to Ukraine this year has actually reached
Ukrainian troops, is largely accurate, a Kyiv Post review of figures
published by the Pentagon found.
Speaking
at a meeting with reporters in Reykjavik on Wednesday, Zelensky said
one of Ukraine’s many problems battling Russian invasion is that
allied-promised arms assistance arrives too late or not at all - which
complicates defense planning and kills and injures Ukrainians.
In the case of the US, Ukraine’s biggest military materiel supporter, a
whopping 90 percent of military assistance approved by Congress for FY
2024 has yet to reach the battlefield, the Ukrainian leader said.
“This is the problem. What to do, for example, when Russia gains (more
Ukrainian territory and takes) some steps forward in the East? You
[Ukraine’s leadership] do your job. You count your reserves. You count
on special brigades. You count on such-and-such [foreign-donated]
equipment. And then, if you get ten percent of that package, [which has]
already been voted on …You know, it’s not funny… the Congress voted.
It’s not a question of money, it’s bureaucracy and logistics,” Zelensky
said, speaking in English...
Based on Pentagon-published official figures, Zelensky’s ten percent
delivery claim is probably a fairly, if not absolutely accurate estimate
of the actual numbers of US arms put into the hands of Ukrainian troops
so far this year, Kyiv Post found.
In a move seriously damaging
Ukraine’s ability to fight, the US stopped all military assistance to
Kyiv at the end of December because of Congressional wrangling over
border law reform and political maneuvering between Democratic and
Republican leadership eyeing upcoming elections.
The five-month American embargo on arms transfers to Ukraine ended on
April 24 when US President Joe Biden signed a bipartisan bill approving
$60.84 billion in military assistance to Ukraine, to be completed by the
end of FY2024.
Since then Pentagon aid disbursements, for the most part drawing down
existing US hardware or munitions stocks which the funds would replace,
have been steady at one or two support packages a month - each almost
always valued well below a billion dollars, a volume distinctly less
than what would be needed, to buy all the weaponry and assistance
Congress approved for Ukraine for the year.
According to the Pentagon figures published in December 2023, a few
days before US arms assistance to Ukraine was cut off, the total value
of that assistance, counted from the start of Russia’s February 2022
full-scale invasion, was $44.9 billion.
An Oct. 21 press release
(the most recent on Ukraine assistance published by the Pentagon)
placed the value of US military assistance earmarked for Ukraine,
incorporating all money actually spent on Ukrainian military support in
2024, at $59.5 billion.
The difference between those two official
numbers - $14.6 billion - is less than one quarter of the nearly $61
billion of military assistance approved by Congress in April 2024.
Zelensky’s Wednesday ten percent claim implied that, of the $14.6
billion worth military assistance for Ukraine that the Pentagon had
actually said it has earmarked or spent in 2024, slightly more than $6
billion worth is in the hands of Ukrainian troops...
Congressionally appropriated money not spent by a US Federal agency
during the fiscal year, in which it was approved, is not typically
carried over to the next year and is effectively lost.
A Wednesday evening broadcast
by Ukraine’s Channel 5 Television, one of the country’s oldest and most
widely watched news platforms, was entitled “Why Has Ukraine Received
Only Ten Percent of the Assistance Congress Voted For?” It told viewers
the 90 percent gap between promised US military aid and actual arms
deliveries was real, and exists because Washington is dragging its feet
on Ukraine assistance.
The Ukrainian web news magazine Telegraf published an article on
Wednesday article about US arms deliveries to Ukraine headlined: “Time
to Get Ready for Problems with United States Aid”. Political Scientist
Maksym Yakolev said: “Considering the… rift in US politics, Ukraine
should prepare for the worst.”
On Oct. 17 Zelensky broached the once-taboo subject of a Ukrainian nuclear deterrent, arguing at a press conference that Ukraine must be allowed to join NATO to stop Russia from invading Ukraine a third time, because Ukraine gave up its own nuclear weapons, at the behest of the US, in the 1990s..."