Europe

EU approves new €3.5bn military aid package for Ukraine

On June 26, the Foreign Affairs Council of the European Union approved an additional €3.5 billion in military assistance to Ukraine. The funds will be allocated to the European Peace Fund. The press service of the EU Delegation to Ukraine reported this.

“It is more important than ever to continue supporting Ukraine because what has happened this weekend shows that the war against Ukraine is cracking Russian power and affecting its political system. We are certainly following closely what is happening, but now is the moment to continue supporting Ukraine more than ever, and that is what we will do”.

Josep Borrell, chief European diplomat

High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy added that now is the time to support Ukraine more than ever. And this is precisely what the EU will continue to do, he said.

Earlier, Josep Borrell stated that Europe will continue to provide military support to Ukraine despite the voices against it. He stated this in an interview with the Onda Cero radio station.

Borrell also criticised those who advocate peace talks and an end to military support for Ukraine. The top EU diplomat recalled that all the leaders who met with Russian President Putin came back with the same answer: “He has military goals to fulfil, and until he fulfils them, he is not going to stop the war.”

Read also: EU approved 11th package of sanctions against Russia: who is on the blacklist?

On March 23 2021, the European Union established the European Peace Facility, a €5 billion extra-budgetary fund for 2021-2027, which contributions from the Union’s members will finance.

On March 21 2023, the defence ministers of the EU member states proposed to increase the European Peace Fund, which is used to compensate for military equipment and ammunition transferred to Ukraine, by €3.5 billion.

On June 23, it became known that the European Union would provide funds without the need for repayment for the development of Ukraine’s railway infrastructure for the first time.

Read also: Ukraine may receive F-16 fighter jets early next year.

Mike

Media analyst and journalist. Fully committed to insightful, analytical, investigative journalism and debunking disinformation. My goal is to produce analytical articles on Ukraine, and Europe, based on trustworthy sources.

Recent Posts

Putin’s ‘election guarantee’ becomes weapon: how Pro-Russian media in Europe amplify Kremlin’s war narrative

By portraying Vladimir Putin as the only actor able to “ensure security” and “restore legitimacy”…

17 hours ago

Lithuania Fights for Freedom of Speech: Society Defends Public Broadcaster LRT

Freedom of speech in Lithuania has become the centre of an unprecedented civic mobilisation, as…

1 day ago

Where Did Nearly One Million Russian Soldiers Go? A Chilling Manpower Puzzle

The question sounds almost abstract at first, like a numbers game. But it is not.…

4 days ago

Pro-Kremlin media coordinate lies about Ukraine’s Kupiansk loss to mask Moscow’s failure

European outlets synchronized a three-stage disinformation campaign that turned Russia's military defeat in Kupiansk into…

5 days ago

Putin Threatens Europe With War Over Kaliningrad: What Is Behind the Escalation?

Russian leader Vladimir Putin has once again raised the spectre of a large-scale war in…

5 days ago

The Kremlin’s Echo in Austria: How Russia-Friendly Outlets Repackage Moscow Propaganda for Local Audiences

Across Europe, Russia’s information strategy has evolved from centralized messaging to local translation—re-tailored for national…

7 days ago