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President Joe Biden signed a highly anticipated $95bn foreign aid bill on Wednesday, triggering a move by the Pentagon to rush $1bn in new weapons to Kyiv from US stockpiles, including much-needed air defence interceptors and artillery rounds.
The US military had pre-positioned much of the weaponry, which also includes armoured vehicles and anti-tank weapons, so it could be sent quickly to Ukraine’s frontline troops, which have been struggling to fend off Russian attacks since US aid dried up earlier this year.
“I’m making sure the shipments start right away,” Biden said in remarks from the White House. “We need to move fast.”
The package signed by Biden, which includes nearly $61bn in military aid for Kyiv, marks a major shift for Ukraine policy in Washington, after a small group of isolationist Republicans loyal to former president Donald Trump had blocked the aid for months.
The Trump loyalists had vowed to oust Mike Johnson, Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives, if he allowed a vote on the bill. But Johnson defied the his party’s rebels at the weekend, and their effort to remove him has sputtered.
Biden said the bill’s passage — despite months of delay — was a sign that a political consensus on America’s national security interests was still in place.
“We don’t walk away from our allies, we stand with them,” Biden said. “We don’t let tyrants win, we oppose them. We don’t merely watch global events unfold, we shape them.”
Biden added: “That’s what it means to be the ‘indispensable nation’. That’s what it means to be the world’s superpower and the world’s leading democracy.”
The new aid package from the Pentagon includes Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, 155mm artillery rounds, Bradley infantry fighting vehicles, TOW missiles, Javelins and other weapons and ammunition, according to the Pentagon.
“This package will surge munitions, weapons, and equipment forward to support Ukraine’s ability to defend its front lines, protect its cities and counter Russia’s continued attacks,” the Pentagon said in a statement.
The rest of the $95bn in aid is earmarked for Israel and Taiwan. The legislation also includes a provision that requires the Chinese group ByteDance, the parent of TikTok, to divest the popular video app.
TikTok said it would file a legal challenge against what it described as an “unconstitutional law” that amounted to a “ban” that would “devastate 7mn businesses and silence 170mn Americans”.
“We believe the facts and the law are clearly on our side, and we will ultimately prevail. The fact is, we have invested billions of dollars to keep US data safe and our platform free from outside influence and manipulation,” TikTok said.
Biden and his most senior aides have been sounding increasingly dire warnings about the implications of the failure to aid Ukraine, with the lapse in funding so far this year already leading to setbacks on the battlefield.
On Wednesday, Biden said the transatlantic alliance was at stake and warned that a Russian victory in Ukraine was likely to lead to a direct attack on Nato allies.
“Had we failed to step up, Lord only knows what would happen to the cohesion of Nato,” Biden said. He added that if Russian leader Vladimir Putin “triumphs in Ukraine, the next move of Russian forces could very well be a direct attack on a Nato ally” and the US would “have no choice but to come to their aid”.
Additional reporting by Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington