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News

Biden Signs Lend-Lease Act For Ukraine, Washington Doubles Down on Its Support for Kyiv

June 9, 2022 by SOFREP Leave a Comment

President Biden signed the Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act on Monday in an Oval Office ceremony.

“I’m signing a bill that provides another important tool in our efforts to support the government of Ukraine and the Ukrainian people in their fight to defend their country and their democracy against (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s brutal war — and it is brutal,” Biden said who was with Vice President Kamala Harris and the bill’s sponsors Maryland Democrat Sen. Ben Cardin, Michigan Democrat Rep. Elissa Slotkin, and Indiana Republican Rep. Victoria Spartz.

This bill is a revival of a World War II lend-lease program devised by the US for Ukraine. This will ease restrictions for the US to lend or lease weapons to Ukraine, allowing for a quicker turnover of equipment. The bill passed with a bipartisan majority, as with any proposal regarding the matters of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which is in its 3rd month.

From left to right: Michigan Democrat Rep. Elissa Slotkin, Indiana Republican Rep. Victoria Spartz, President Biden, Maryland Democrat Sen. Ben Cardin, and VP Kamala Harris (Rep. Victoria Spartz Twitter). Source: https://twitter.com/RepSpartz/status/1523782539785441280
From left to right: Michigan Democrat Rep. Elissa Slotkin, Indiana Republican Rep. Victoria Spartz, President Biden, Maryland Democrat Sen. Ben Cardin, and VP Kamala Harris (Rep. Victoria Spartz Twitter)

According to the bill’s sponsors, the law will give Biden more tools to answer Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s call for support against the unjust invasion of his country.

“This legislation will allow us to timely provide the necessary defensive equipment for Ukraine to defend itself against Mr. Putin’s aggression. It also is a clear message to our NATO allies that they need to step up even more as we look forward to how we can make sure Ukraine is successful in this military operation that Mr. Putin initiated,” Cardin said last month after the bill was passed.

“Every day, Ukrainians pay with their lives, and they fight along — and the atrocities that the Russians are engaging in are just beyond the pale,” Biden said during the ceremony. He noted that, although taking such a stance is not cheap, allowing Russia to continue with its aggression will prove even more costly.

“That’s why we’re staying in this,” Biden added.

The signing came as the Biden administration continued to urge Congress to pass an additional $33 billion in funding to help Ukraine. The proposal is currently caught up in a legislative tie-up as lawmakers contest a $10 billion COVID fund tied up to the package request.

Zelensky expressed his thanks with a tweet:

Grateful to @POTUS and 🇺🇸 people for supporting 🇺🇦 in the fight for our freedom and future. Today's signing of the law on Lend-Lease is a historic step. I am convinced that we will win together again. And we will defend democracy in Ukraine. And in Europe. Like 77 years ago.

— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) May 9, 2022

A Tight Balance

Reviving an 81-year-old war support policy is a significant escalation from the US as it tries to draw its limits and avoid a full-scale war with Russia. Recent news outlined the continued and exponentially growing support by Washington for Kyiv.

However, the White House continues to walk on a political minefield that will make it appear that the US is fighting a proxy war in Ukraine. Administration insiders said that Biden had chastised some of his top officials after news of US intelligence allegedly helping Ukrainians kill Russian troops.

Added to the mixed messaging the White House has said that one of its goals is to so degrade and deplete the Russian military that it will never be able to engage in aggression against a neighbor again.  This is in contrast to the stated goals of Ukraine’s President Zelensky who simply wants Russian forces out of Ukrainian territory.

SOFREP Editor-in-Chief Sean Spoonts wrote about how the Biden Administration had tried to walk back a recent story from The New York Times claiming that the United States provided intelligence to Ukraine to kill Russian generals. Almost immediately after the story had gone public, National Security Spokesperson Adrienne Watson said that the intelligence given to Ukraine was not intended to kill high-ranking Russian generals. She also said that the US “self-prohibits” providing information to Ukraine about high-ranking Russian leaders.

Spoonts explained the situation  with a historical twist to the whole intelligence world where the US and the Soviet Union had a gentlemen’s agreement not to kill each other’s spies, called the “Moscow Rules.”

“This agreement was informally known as the Moscow Rules, and under these rules, the US and USSR agreed not to attack each other physically and not do certain things, like counterfeiting each other’s money and interfering in each other’s internal politics (Yeah, I know). In all those years, the CIA and, by extension, our other intelligence agencies have not killed any Russian agents, dissidents, political opponents, or U.S. Traitors.  Russia has pretty much followed the rules as well.”

Added to this was a Presidential Order dating back to the Ford administration in the 1970s about the US not engaging in the “assassination” of the leaders of foreign countries.  By giving Ukraine information to specifically target high-ranking military officers our intelligence agencies may have been in violation of that directive which has been amended by preceding administrations but maintained.

In the case of a single general or colonel killed by Ukraine, US claims about not providing specific intelligence on their location or movements would be plausible, but not when there have been dozens killed in just 2 months.

President Joe Biden walks with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and their interpreters along the West Colonnade of the White House, Wednesday, September 1, 2021, on their way to the State Dining Room for an expanded bilateral meeting. (The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons). Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:P20210901AS-1039_(51706788263).jpg
President Joe Biden walks with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and their interpreters along the West Colonnade of the White House Wednesday, September 1, 2021, on their way to the State Dining Room for an expanded bilateral meeting. (The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

Furthermore, according to Russian Policy Specialist and President of the Center for European Policy Analysis Alina Polyakova, there has been this “constant balancing effect” that the administration has been trying to do between supporting Ukraine and making sure it can defend itself militarily and more so, being concerned about military escalation against Russia.

“It’s increasingly untenable to maintain this kind of hand-wringing,” she noted. “It’s probably more effective to say this is what our policy is, and we will deal and manage the potential escalation responses we see from the Kremlin.”

Some veteran officials have agreed with Biden’s strategy to take caution from excessively poking at Vladimir Putin after he has continuously threatened to use tactical nukes.

“Putin wants us to make it a proxy war,” former Russia adviser who is now with the Brookings Institution Fiona Hill said. “Putin is still telling people outside Europe this is just a repeat of the Cold War, nothing to look at here. This isn’t a proxy war. It’s a colonial land grab.”

Former Ambassador to Russia, Michael A. McFaul, has also warned that there is a clear difference between providing aid for Ukraine and publicly flaunting that US intelligence was used to kill Russian troops.

“Yes, Putin knows that we are providing intelligence to Ukraine,” he said. “But saying it out loud helps his public narrative that Russia is fighting the U.S. and NATO in Ukraine, not just the Ukrainians. That doesn’t serve our interests.”

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