President Barack Obama approved military aid for Ukraine:
Trained Ukrainian troops since April 2015 as part of JMTG-U (Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine) [528]
US$5 million of non-lethal military equipment on 4 June 2014.[529][530][531]
$75 million of non-lethal military equipment on 11 March 2015.[532][533][534]
President Donald Trump approved military aid for Ukraine:
$560 million on 12 May 2017 via the 2017 Consolidated Appropriations Act.[535]
$350 million on 12 December 2017 via the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act.[536]
Light weapons export license approved on 13 December 2017.[537]
$47 million of lethal weapons, including 210 Javelin anti-tank missiles, on 1 March 2018.[538]
$250 million of security aid, including $50 million in lethal weapons,[539] on 12 September 2019.[540][541][542]
$250 million of lethal military equipment on 11 June 2020.[543][544]
$600 million of security aid, including 16 Mark VI patrol boats, on 17 June 2020.[545][546]
President Joe Biden approved military aid for Ukraine:
90 tons[clarification needed] of lethal military equipment on 22 January 2021.[547][548]
$125 million of lethal military equipment on 1 March 2021.[549][550]
$150 million of lethal military equipment on 11 June 2021.[551][552]
$60 million of lethal military equipment on 1 September 2021.[553][554][555]
$350 million of lethal military equipment, on 25 February 2022.[556][557][558]
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken assured Ukraine's foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba of unspecified further military aid, on 1 March 2022.[559][560]
$200 million of arms and equipment, including Javelin anti-tank missiles and Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, on 12 March 2022.[561]
The White House said that before 16 March 2022, aid sent by the US included:[562]
600 Stinger systems
About 2,600 Javelin missiles
Five Mil Mi-17 helicopters
Three patrol boats
Four counter-artillery and counter-unmanned aerial system tracking radars
Four counter-mortar radar systems
200 grenade launchers and ammunition
200 shotguns
200 machine guns
Nearly 40 million rounds of small arms ammunition
Over 1 million grenade, mortar and artillery rounds
70 Humvees and other vehicles
Unspecified amounts of secure communications, electronic warfare detection systems, body armor, helmets and other tactical gear, military medical equipment, explosive ordnance disposal and demining equipment
Satellite imagery and analysis capability.
$800 million in military equipment announced on 16 March 2022, funded from the $13.6 billion in aid signed on 15 March. The package includes:[563]
2,000 Javelin anti-tank missiles
1,000 light anti-armor weapons
6,000 AT4 anti-armor systems
800 Stinger anti-aircraft systems
100 Switchblade drones[564]
100 grenade launchers
5,000 rifles
1,000 pistols
400 machine guns
400 shotguns
Over 20 million rounds of small arms ammunition, grenade launcher rounds and mortar rounds
25,000 sets of body armor
25,000 helmets
Laser-Guided Rockets
$800 million of lethal military equipment, on 13 April 2022:[565][566]
18 M777 howitzers calibre 155 mm and 40,000 rounds of artillery ammunition
11 Mi-17 military helicopters[567]
200 armoured personnel carriers
'counter-artillery radars'.[568][569]
$800m military package was announced 21 April completing the drawdown from the $13.6bn military and humanitarian funding envelope approved by Congress 15 March[570]
72 M777 155 mm towed howitzer with 144,000 rounds of ammunition[570]
72 artillery towing vehicles
121 Phoenix Ghost tactical drones, a reduced capability alternative to the Switchblade quickly designed for export to Ukraine.[571]
5 May the California National Guard had announced it had donated 4,320 ballistic vests, 1,580 helmets and facilitated the delivery of 7 medical field stations to Ukraine.[572] 6 May another military package was announced worth $150 million:[573]
25,000 155mm artillery shells
Counter artillery radars
Jamming equipment
Spare parts[574]
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