Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Quick Senate OK ahead for $40B aid for Ukraine

- Alan Fram ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – Final congressio­nal approval of a $40 billion Ukraine aid bill seems certain within days as top Senate Republican­s said Wednesday they expect strong GOP backing for the Housepasse­d measure, signaling a bipartisan, heightened U.S. commitment to helping thwart the bloody Russian invasion.

“I think there'll be substantia­l support,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told The Associated Press about the legislatio­n, which cleared the House late Tuesday by an emphatic 368-57 margin. “We're going to try to process it as soon as possible.”

No. 2 Senate GOP leader John Thune of South Dakota predicted “a big vote over here” for the bill, which he and others suggested might come Thursday but could spill into next week. Thune said some Republican­s would vote against it and procedural tactics by opponents to slow it were possible, but added, “I think because there's so much forward momentum behind doing this and doing it in a timely way that I don't think we'll have anybody who will hold it up.”

It's taken just two weeks for lawmakers to receive President Joe Biden's smaller, $33 billion package, enlarge it and move it to the brink of passage – lightning speed for Congress. That reflects a bipartisan consensus that Ukraine's outnumbere­d forces need additional Western help as soon as possible, with added political pressure fueled by near-daily tales of atrocities against civilians inflicted by Russian President Vladimir Putin's armies.

“Act quickly we must,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “I will make sure this is a priority for the Senate. We have a moral obligation to stand with our friends in Ukraine.”

The legislatio­n would bring American support for the effort to nearly $54 billion, including the $13.6 billion Congress enacted in March. That's about $6 billion more than the U.S. spent on all its foreign and military aid in 2019, according to a January report by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Research Service, which studies issues for lawmakers.

Washington has become increasing­ly assertive about its goals and willingnes­s to help Ukraine with more sophistica­ted weapons. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said recently the U.S. wants a “weakened” Russia that can't quickly restore its capability to attack , and reports have emerged about U.S. intelligen­ce helping Ukrainians kill Russian generals and sink the Russian missile cruiser Moskva.

A senior Russian official said in Moscow

Wednesday that the assistance package was part of Washington's proxy war against Russia. Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia's Security Council and former president, said on a messaging app that the aid was driven by a desire to “inflict a heavy defeat on our country, restrict its economic developmen­t and political influence in the world.”

The measure sailed to House passage backed by every voting Democrat, while around 1 in 4 Republican­s opposed it. It would provide $7 billion more than Biden's request from April, dividing the increase evenly between defense and humanitari­an programs.

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