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Ukraine’s NATO Sponsors Fear They'll Run Out of Money to Continue Anti-Russia Proxy War Into 2025

© AP PhotoIn this image provided by the Office of the Ukrainian Presidency, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, is watched by Rich Hansen, the commander's representative for the Scranton Army Ammunition Plant, while signing military ordnance in Scranton, Pa., Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024.
In this image provided by the Office of the Ukrainian Presidency, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, is watched by Rich Hansen, the commander's representative for the Scranton Army Ammunition Plant, while signing military ordnance in Scranton, Pa., Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024. - Sputnik International, 1920, 27.09.2024
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Western leaders, Kiev officials and military and international affairs observers the world over have long recognized that the NATO-Russia proxy war in Ukraine would swiftly end if not for the West's desire to strategically and militarily "weaken" Russia, using Ukrainians as cannon fodder to do so.
The continued delivery of NATO weaponry to Ukraine into next year is at risk due to a pressing lack of funds among the Zelensky regime’s top sponsors, policy insiders have told Bloomberg.
At stake is a controversial $50 billion loan agreement generated by the profits of Russian Central Bank assets frozen in Western banks, which Washington reportedly fears could be blocked by Hungary, or whittled down. Even that sum would be enough to keep Kiev stocked up on war materiel for only half the year.
That’s not counting Kiev’s economic situation, including a projected $35 billion gap in the 2025 budget, about $15 billion of which has yet to be accounted for after IMF and EU subsidies are applied. The shortfall could push Kiev into peace talks with Russia ‘from a position of weakness’, Bloomberg’s sources warned.
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Kiev is apparently also having a hard time convincing patrons to continue shelling out tens of billions of dollars-worth of arms for the conflict as ramped up Russian production “outpaces” the combined output of the collective West.
Then there is the pressure on Zelensky that Donald Trump is expected to apply, should he win the White House in November, and the cash-poor position of Germany – Ukraine’s second-largest sponsor after the US, whose constitutional debt restrictions have already affected support. As economic troubles sweep over France, Italy and the UK, these countries may similarly reduce assistance, although the Starmer government has vowed to continue backing Kiev up to the hilt despite hard budgetary choices to make at home.
The aid crunch is the second time this year that Kiev’s battlefield prospects have been challenged by its patrons’ reluctance to fork over more cash. In April, the Republican-held House of Representatives passed a $48 billion package of security aid for Ukraine after a six-month deadlock connected to the crisis at the US’s southern border.
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