From the BBC:
“US spending in Ukraine explained in four charts”
The US has given almost $50bn in military assistance to
Ukraine. The United States has poured more than a hundred billion dollars into
Ukraine's effort to repel Russia's invasion, spending far more than any other
nation. But as President Volodymyr Zelensky comes to Washington to ask for
more, there is growing Republican scepticism about funding the war effort. In
his Tuesday speech to the UN, Joe Biden made a passionate plea for the global
community to not turn its back on Ukraine. "Russia believes that the world
will grow weary and allow it to brutalise Ukraine without consequence," he
said. "But I ask you this: If we abandon the core principles of the United
States to appease an aggressor, can any member state in this body feel
confident that they're protected?"
For more than a year and a half, the US president has
followed up that tough talk with American dollars. The US Congress has now
authorised more than $110bn (£89bn) in aid to Ukraine. That includes:
$49.6bn in military assistance
$28.5bn in economic support
$13.2bn in humanitarian aid
$18.4bn to boost US defence industry capacity
As of 9 August, the White House said it had spent 91% of the
allocated funds. The administration is currently asking Congress for an
additional $24bn in aid, including $14bn in military support.
How does US support for Ukraine compare?
(Chart showing spending on Ukraine by various countries by %
of GDP)
The latest figures which enable us to compare levels of
support across countries are from the end of July. At that point, the US had
spent nearly $80bn on Ukraine, which was more than any other nation by far -
although it is less than the combined aid from EU institutions and its member
nations. The outlook for a speedy approval of the funds is murky, however, as
Congress grapples with passing funding just to keep the government open and
functioning beyond this month. Alyssa Demus, an international defence
researcher for the Rand Corporation, says that without this additional aid, the
Ukrainian counteroffensive that began this summer could grind to a halt in a
matter of weeks - sending a negative signal just as Ukraine is making some
"relatively significant" gains on the battlefield. With winter
coming, she says, Ukraine will eventually curtail its military operations
regardless of whether the US aid is forthcoming. But, she adds, a new US aid
package would have an impact on the war beyond the battlefield. "The US
tends to set the tone for other nations' aid," she says. "A lack of
new US aid could be a bellwether for European allies and partners to
potentially reconsider their own aid packages."
While the US gives the most military support of any nation,
the combined contribution from European nations is significant - and includes
advanced technology, such as tanks and fighter jets.
(Chart showing largest donors of military aid to Ukraine)
The Biden administration's insistence that additional
military aid is essential hasn't stopped some American politicians -
particularly Republicans - from criticising the Biden administration's Ukraine
aid packages and pledging to oppose any new funding. "There's no national
security interest for us in Ukraine," said Kentucky Senator Rand Paul.
"And even if there were, it would be trumped by the fact that we have no
money." Speaking to media after attending a closed-door briefing, Senator
Missouri Senator Josh Hawley said he was tired of being told to "buckle up
and get out your chequebook". "This isn't our money. For heaven's
sake… It's the American people's money," he said. According to Luke
Coffey, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank, US
aid to Ukraine is an easy issue for some Republicans to dislike, given the
nation's connection to Donald Trump's first impeachment and Hunter Biden's
questionable ties to a Ukrainian energy company. "Even though both of
these issues are not linked in any way to the war, if you're playing swamp
politics, then you can quickly build an anti-Ukraine narrative that resonates
with a certain part of the conservative movement," he says. Among the more
common refrains from a growing number of Republicans in Congress is that US
dollars would be better spent on other priorities - particularly on domestic
concerns like border security, disaster relief and crime control.
US aid to Ukraine pales when compared with the $751bn 2022 US
budget for defence spending or the $1.2tn paid out in Social Security
retirement benefits, however. It is also just 1.8% of the total US spending in
the 2022 fiscal year. On the other hand, the nearly $80bn given to support
Ukraine by the end of July is bigger than the annual budgets of many federal
agencies.
(Chart comparing Ukraine spending by US to other budgets of
various US government agencies)
It is also a level of aid that far surpasses previous major
US foreign commitments. According to data compiled by the Council on Foreign
Relations, US support to Ukraine as of July was 0.33% of it the nation's gross
domestic product, far more than US aid to Israel in 1970 (0.18%), Latin America
in 1964 (0.15%) and Pakistan in 1962 (0.08%). Even by modern standards, the
Ukraine package dwarfs amounts sent by the US to other countries. In 2020, the
US gave $4bn in support to Afghanistan, $3.3bn to Israel and $1.2bn to Iraq. As
with other forms of foreign aid, critics have called for US allies to shoulder
a greater share of the costs of the war. "Europe needs to step up,"
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said at last month's Republican presidential
candidate debate in Wisconsin. "Our support should be contingent on them
doing it." While the US does contribute more military support to Ukraine
than its allies, in term of total aid the European nations - individually and
under the auspices of the EU - have committed $140bn to Ukraine, which outpaces
the US. Coffey adds that comparing raw dollar amounts also understates the
level of support from the US's partner nations. "You can't compare what
the US is doing in Ukraine with what Estonia is doing," he says.
"Estonia has an economy the size of Vermont."
A better measure, he says, is to compare aid as a share of a
country's gross domestic product.
(Chart comparing overall funding commitments to Ukraine by
various countries)
According to data gathered by the Kiel Institute for the
World Economy, as of the end of July Norway had given the highest percentage,
at 1.4%. Estonia and the two other Baltic states bordering Russia all also give
over 1%. What it comes down to, Demus says, is a matter of perspective. For
some, Ukraine is a distant country that many Americans don't know or care
about. For others, it's a key battleground of a global conflict, with the US
helping a nation to defend its territorial integrity and sovereignty while also
degrading a foreign adversary at a (relative) bargain price and without the
loss of US lives. "If you're talking about pure cost-benefit
analysis," she says, "it kind of depends on what you value."
^ Some Countries (like Hungary) support Russia over Ukraine
some Countries (like Poland) have decided to stop giving weapons to Ukraine and
are de factoring supporting Russia.
The US cannot and should not stop helping Ukraine until
Russia is defeated. ^
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