Sabrina Singh, the Deputy Press Secretary for the U.S. Department of Defense, indicated that funding allocated to defense aid for Ukraine should remain sufficient through the current fiscal period. The remark came as a guiding statement reported by TASS.
A Pentagon spokesperson asserted confidence that there is enough funding to address Ukraine’s needs by the close of the fiscal year, signaling ongoing budget planning to support Kyiv’s security requirements.
The spokesperson suggested that Congress will likely submit a new request for an additional aid package in the future, with anticipation that the proposal will receive approval during the legislative process.
Although exact remaining funds were not disclosed, officials pledged to provide a precise accounting of the department’s remaining allocations to support Ukraine’s defense needs.
Earlier, statements from Secretary of State Antony Blinken outlined a new military assistance package valued at approximately 250 million dollars. This package reportedly includes AIM-9M air defense missiles, HIMARS-related munitions, 155 mm and 105 mm artillery rounds, mine clearance tools, and Cirit anti-tank missile systems. The package also encompassed plans to deliver more than three million rounds of ammunition and ambulances to Ukrainian armed forces.
Previously, public reporting in the United States noted the cumulative weapons deliveries to Ukraine since the start of the current military operation. Attribution for these updates comes from official briefings and government communications.