Biden administration sends Congress long-awaited Ukraine strategy report, sources say
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A congressional aide said the report reached lawmakers on Sept 9, and they had not yet had a chance to review it.
PHOTO: AFP
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WASHINGTON – US President Joe Biden’s administration has sent Congress a classified report on its strategy for the war in Ukraine, three sources said on Sept 9, months after a June deadline mandated in a multibillion-dollar spending Bill lawmakers passed in April.
A congressional aide said the long-awaited report had reached lawmakers on Sept 9, and they had not yet had a chance to review it.
Two other sources, requesting anonymity to discuss a classified matter, confirmed that it had been delivered.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Congress has approved nearly US$175 billion (S$228 billion) in aid and military assistance for Ukraine and allied nations in the 2½ years since Russia’s full-scale invasion
After months of delay, the Republican-led House of Representatives passed a US$95 billion supplemental spending Bill
As part of that Bill, Congress asked the Biden administration to submit a detailed strategy for Ukraine by early June.
Mr Biden’s support for Ukraine is backed by Democrats and many Republicans in Congress.
Some Republicans, however, have criticised his administration for restricting how Ukraine can use US equipment, for example by refusing to supply weapons that could strike targets deep inside Russia.
Washington has restricted the weapons’ use because of limited supply of missiles, the lack of a rationale for using them given that most Russian aircraft are out of range and for fear it would escalate the conflict.
Weeks after the deadline passed with no report, some members of Congress said they were frustrated and would consider blocking further funding.
In a statement e-mailed to Reuters in late August about the report, Senator Jim Risch, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he supported assisting Ukraine but did not do so blindly.
“Since the earliest days of (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s war on Ukraine, we have asked the Biden-Harris administration for a strategy on how the US and our allies can help Ukraine win the war,” Mr Risch said.
“When they did not respond to our requests, we mandated in law that a strategy be sent to Congress, but the deadline has passed with no response. President Biden and (Vice-President Kamala) Harris owe a strategy not just to us, but to the American people, and their dereliction suggests they don’t have one or are afraid to share it.” REUTERS

