Zelenskyy says US has resumed military aid supply to Ukraine
Published in News & Features
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the U.S. resumed shipping military aid to Ukraine, which was unexpectedly put on halt last week.
“According to all reports, the supply has been renewed,” Zelenskyy said late Friday in his daily video address to the nation. “We will continue to work with the American side at the military level, in particular our military with General Keith Kellogg.”
Kellogg is a retired general and the U.S. special envoy for Ukraine and Russia.
The Pentagon suspended flows of some air-defense missiles and artillery shells to Ukraine, saying the pause was necessary while the U.S. reviewed its stockpiles and weighed the need to save weapons for other threats.
U.S. President Donald Trump said earlier this week he’d ship more weapons to Ukraine, an apparent reversal after he spoke to Zelenskyy.
A Pentagon review of the stockpiles of air-defense missiles, artillery shells and other hardware to Ukraine last week was misunderstood, Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday.
Separately, Germany plans to deliver long-range missiles to Ukraine in the “high three-digit” range starting at the end of July, according to a ZDF interview with Maj.Gen. Christian Freuding published late Friday.
(Arno Schütze contributed to this report.)
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