Feanor said:
Now the US is talking about cutting aid, and wants Ukrainian resource concessions, and you're confident they will get more total aid as a result?
They were talking about cutting aid if there were no deal signed by next Monday.
Now that Zelensky has reacted fast and that there is a deal, and that Trump is probably satisfied with this deal because it didn't take months to agree, the US has a direct interest in continuing military aid to Ukraine.
At the very least they will ensure that Ukrainian defence don't collapse and that the Ukrainian state as a free nation is not in jeopardy.
Recovering territories where the most important mineral deposits lies would be a big plus. The US and Ukraine have now a common interest.
As we say: Time will tell. I don't think that Americans will announce in advance the type and quantity of weapons they will provide.
seaspear said:
How other countries that have also been heavy donors to Ukraine may react could be interesting, there was speculation about a better deal to be offered by the E.U before the new deal was agreed on
Europe's interests in Ukraine are different form direct investment. Ukraine is in the process of having trade agreements with the EU block and certainly with the UK and Norway too, and will ultimately join the EU in a few years. This will immediately profit a wide range of European enterprises, enlarge the free or semi-free trade zone, align business laws and norms, increase the economic weight of the EU when they will join it, and more generally of Europe as long as they don't join the EU.
That's why the EU and European nations separately, don't need the same type of contract Trump requires from Ukraine.
Europeans are not unhappy that Trump made a deal over rare earths (oil and gas too, in fact) if it helps getting more weapons to Ukraine and keep the US on board.
rsemmes said:
was actually reading about the $524bn direct reconstruction bill over the next decade (World Bank).
IMO, that's the bare minimum. The destruction Ukraine has suffered is of that order. It should also include agricultural land polluted with shell and drone debris. Many toxic metals spread all of the fields. Polluted rivers, other unseen environmental disasters...
When Putin offers to "give" $300B from frozen assets, while taking $100B for himself for the reconstruction of the occupied territories, leaving only $200B for Ukraine, and still, with the condition that Russian companies be involved, it's laughable.
The debt Russia has toward Ukraine is:
- $524B stated by the World Bank
- Real estate cost of land and buildings sized by Russia
- Compensation for killed and wounded persons
- Losses of revenue caused by the war
- Military expenses by Ukraine and their partners
IMO, it's above 1.2 trillion.