Ahead of a NATO summit in Washington next week, member countries have agreed to provide Ukraine with €40B ($43B) in military aid next year, sources told Reuters on Wednesday.
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg had wanted to secure a sum of €100B ($108B) over multiple years — reportedly as a way of "Trump-proofing" support for Ukraine — but military support beyond next year was not agreed.
If the US does not provide a firm commitment to Ukraine on NATO membership, it signals to Putin that he is able to influence American foreign policy by launching an illegal invasion. The US must stick to its guns and realize that having Ukraine in NATO is the best way to protect American interests in the region.
Promising Ukraine NATO membership would only give Putin more reason to prolong the war and does nothing to serve Western interests. In fact, it would challenge NATO's Article 5 on collective defense and risk rupturing the whole military alliance, leaving NATO much weaker than where it started.