Blinken admits US sent arms to Ukraine ahead of conflict
America
By
Xinhua
| Jan 06, 2025
Armed soldiers on guard at Donetsk on March 1, 2022. [Xinhua]
The US Secretary of State Antony Blinken admitted Saturday that the United States had "quietly sent a lot of weapons to Ukraine" five months ahead of the conflict.
"We saw it coming," Blinken said in an interview with The New York Times, noting the United States made sure that "Ukraine was prepared" by sending billions of dollars and weapons since September 2021.
"What we've had to look at every time is not only should we give this to the Ukrainians but do they know how to use it? Can they maintain it?" he added.
When asked whether it is time to end the conflict, Blinken said a cease-fire would likely give Russia a break, and that any cease-fire must ensure Ukraine can "deter further aggression," which, he noted, could be achieved through NATO membership.
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"Russia has been talking about this for many years," said Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova on Saturday in response to Blinken's remarks, noting that they underscored "the rationale behind Russia's objective on the demilitarization of Ukraine."
"We voiced concerns over the United States and Britain pouring arms into Ukraine, the endless NATO exercises in the Black Sea that violate Russian borders, and the dangerous proximity of Western military aircraft to civilian airliners in our airspace," she added.
The Kremlin has repeatedly criticized Western arms shipments to Ukraine, claiming they escalate the conflict, obstruct peace efforts, and drag NATO members into direct involvement.
According to the US Department of State, as of Monday, the United States has provided Ukraine with 61.4 billion US dollars in military assistance since the conflict.
And it has "approved" its NATO allies to deliver 12,000 anti-armor systems of all types, over 1,550 anti-air missiles, radars, night vision devices, machine guns, rifles and ammunition, and body armor.