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Increase in military aid to Ukraine marks a shift in White House policy toward Russia

A military vehicle drives by Patriot air defense systems installed at the Rzeszow-Jasionka airport, a logistics hub for U.S. and European military aid to Ukraine, in southeastern Poland on March 6.
Sergei Gapon
/
AFP via Getty Images
A military vehicle drives by Patriot air defense systems installed at the Rzeszow-Jasionka airport, a logistics hub for U.S. and European military aid to Ukraine, in southeastern Poland on March 6.

The Pentagon and U.S. military officials in Europe are working with NATO members to ship more Patriot missile systems to Ukraine, and release more munitions that were briefly halted.

On Monday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with his German counterpart, Federal Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius, and "discussed how to help set conditions for an end to the war in Ukraine and on terms that support an enduring peace," said Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell in a statement released today.

NATO said in a release it is now working on what it called "substantial military equipment packages," including air defense systems, missiles and ammunition. "This is Europe stepping up," said NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, noting commitments from Germany, Finland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Canada, with more expected to follow.

While there were no details on what will be in the military equipment packages, two sources tell NPR – a Pentagon official and a military officer from a NATO country, both not authorized to speak publicly -- that NATO will cobble together 17 Patriot missile systems to further help protect Ukraine from Russian drone and missile attacks. Ukraine currently has half a dozen Patriot systems, mostly being used to protect the capital Kyiv. There was no sense on when the additional systems would arrive.

President Trump said in a meeting with Rutte that NATO would provide its own Patriot systems and then buy additional ones from the U.S.

"You have very wealthy countries buying the best equipment in the world, and we have the best equipment in the world," Trump said on Monday. "We make equipment like no other."

Meanwhile, a separate NATO official not authorized to speak publicly on the state of military aid said shipments of U.S. armaments paused by the Pentagon are now flowing into Ukraine from Poland.

According to a U.S. official who requested anonymity to discuss specifics on the security assistance, the shipments include 30 Patriot missiles, 92 AIM missiles and 142 Hellfire missiles that can be used by F-16 warplanes already provided to Ukraine. Also included: nearly 9,000 Howitzer artillery rounds, as well as more than 250 GMLRS, a precision-guided rocket, meaning it has a high degree of accuracy. The weapons now moving in from Poland also include some 125 AT-4 grenade launchers and 25 Stinger missiles. Stinger missiles are shoulder-fired systems that operate as an infrared homing surface to air missile, key to striking Russian helicopters and drones.

Russia meanwhile continued to pummel Ukrainian cities overnight with some 267 drones and Ukraine's air force said it shot down 244 of them, according to Ukrainian military officials. Russia continued its nightly bombardment shortly after Trump announced his decision to supply Ukraine with new military equipment and threatened further economic measures against Moscow.

Russia's Defense Ministry, meanwhile, said its forces downed at least 70 Ukrainian drones overnight into Tuesday morning. Among the areas targeted were the southwestern Voronezh region which borders northeastern Ukraine. At least 24 people were injured there, Gov. Aleksandr Gusev said on Telegram.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin would make a decision about how to respond to Trump.

"The U.S. president's statements are very serious," Peskov told reporters during a daily briefing. "Some of them are addressed personally to President Putin. We definitely need time to analyze what was said in Washington."

Trump has also threatened sanctions if Russia doesn't come to the negotiating table. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, said in an interview with NPR's Morning Edition that he welcomed the additional armaments for Ukraine and said he'll continue to push for sanctions against Russia with his co-sponsor Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

Blumenthal said Trump's evolution on Russia and the war and his willingness to send more weapons, is "a remarkable shift" and reflects his frustration with Putin and his unwillingness to negotiate.

"And clearly there is a personal element," Blumenthal said, "the sense of betrayal, but also a clear understanding that Russians are mercilessly and murderously continuing to bomb and attack civilians, hospitals, homes.

The Federation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington think tank, said increasing the weapons flow to Ukraine also helps American industry and sends a message beyond Kyiv and Moscow.

"In concert with tougher sanctions on the Kremlin, supporting Kyiv while expanding U.S. defense production and stockpiles is a wise, sustainable, and necessary strategy to secure American interests, compel Putin to negotiate seriously, and deter new aggression in Europe or the Pacific."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Tom Bowman
Tom Bowman is a NPR National Desk reporter covering the Pentagon. He is also a co-host of NPR's Taking Cover podcast and “A Good Guy” from NPR’s Embedded.

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