US Secretary of State Antony Blinken assured NATO on November 13 that the Biden administration would bolster its support for Ukraine in the few months before Donald Trump’s return as president and would try to strengthen the alliance in that time.
Meeting NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in Brussels, Blinken also said the deployment of North Korean troops to help Russia in the Ukraine war would get a “firm response”.
President-elect Trump, who has questioned US military support for Ukraine, says he will quickly end Russia’s war without saying how, raising concerns among some US allies he could try to force Kyiv to accept peace on Moscow’s terms. Biden leaves office on January 20.
Blinken said after meeting Rutte at the alliance’s headquarters they discussed ongoing support for Ukraine, where Russian forces have been making gains on the eastern front lines, and the work NATO must do to strengthen its defence industrial base.
The outgoing US administration would “continue to shore up everything we’re doing for Ukraine,” he said.
“President Biden fully intends to drive through the tape and use every day to continue to do what we have done these last four years, which is strengthen this alliance,” Blinken added.
The deployment of North Korean troops to support Russia in the conflict “demands and will get a firm response,” he said.
Mark Rutte said that “Russia has not won” in Ukraine, which it invaded in February 2022.
“Obviously we have to do more to make sure that Ukraine can stay in the fight and is able to roll back as much as possible the Russian onslaught and prevent (President Vladimir) Putin from being successful in Ukraine,” he said.
Blinken is expected to meet Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha later, according to a State Department schedule.
He will also meet NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe General Christopher Cavoli, top EU officials and British foreign secretary David Lammy in Brussels.
Ukraine owes its continued existence to the United States, NATO’s new Secretary General Mark Rutte has claimed. https://t.co/ixr95E2708
— Brussels Signal (@brusselssignal) October 1, 2024