American allies in Asia are increasingly concerned about stalling aid to Ukraine. These worries are particularly acute in Taiwan, where leaders told me this month that a major decline in U.S. military assistance to Kyiv would embolden Beijing and weaken deterrence in Asia. President Joe Biden failed at a weekend summit in India to unite world leaders around a condemnation of Russia’s war in Ukraine, drawing a rebuke from Kyiv and putting him on the defensive as he wrapped up a trip abroad. The Russians are losing their war on Ukraine. They just don’t know it yet. Secretary of State Antony Blinken omitted eight key documents related to the Afghanistan withdrawal in his response to a request from House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul, Just The News has learned. President Joe Biden is asking Congress for more than $24 billion for Ukraine and other international needs as he works to sustain support for the war amid signs of softening support among Americans. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many fear that China could take Taiwan by force. But there is plenty the Taiwanese government can do to avoid the (far from certain) scenario of an all-out invasion – and continue to resist Beijing’s hybrid tactics.
The Taiwanese Are Worried That the U.S. Will Abandon Ukraine
Biden finds himself on the defensive after G20 leaders fail to rally around Ukraine
Ukraine’s victory is closer than ever – but a shattered Russia is nothing to celebrate
Blinken omitted key docs related to Afghan withdrawal in response to House Foreign Affairs chair
Biden asks Congress for $24 billion in more Ukraine assistance
How tomorrow never comes: Russia’s war against Ukraine and its impact on Taiwan
DEFENSEadmin.ws2015-05-13T11:03:56-05:00
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