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May 10, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news


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The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.cnn.com/europe/live-news/russia-ukraine-war-news-05-10-22/index.html
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Summary

Bookmark CNN's lite site for fast connectivityOur live coverage of the war in Ukraine has moved here.By CNN's Clare Foran, Annie Grayer and Ellie KaufmanThe Democratic-led House of Representatives voted on Tuesday evening to pass a roughly $40 billion bill to deliver aid to Ukraine as it continues to face Russia's brutal assault.The measure will next need to be passed by the Senate before it can go to President Joe Biden to be signed into law.Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier in the day that after the House approved the package, the Senate "will move swiftly" to get the measure passed and sent to Biden's desk.Aid to Ukraine has been a rare bright spot of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill with Democrats and Republicans largely rallying around a call to help the nation as it faces Russian attack.Lawmakers unveiled the bill text earlier in the day ahead of the House vote. This has been one of the main ways the administration has provided Ukrainians with military equipment quickly over the past 75 days of the conflict in Ukraine.Read more here:From CNN's Katie Bo Lillis and Michael ConteThe US intelligence community believes that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine is likely to become “more unpredictable and escalatory” in the coming months, the nation’s director of national intelligence told Congress on Tuesday. This has been one of the main ways the administration has provided Ukrainians with military equipment quickly over the past 75 days of the conflict in Ukraine.In the Ukraine aid supplemental that was signed into law in mid-March, $3 billion in this kind of funding was included. USAI funding allows the administration to buy weapons from contractors and then provide those weapons to Ukraine, so this method does not draw directly from US stocks.To address humanitarian needs, the bill will include $900 million to bolster refugee assistance, including housing, trauma support, and English language instruction for Ukrainians fleeing the country.The measure provides an additional $54 million that will be used for public health and medical support for Ukrainian refugees."This package, which builds on the robust support already secured by Congress, will be pivotal in helping Ukraine defend not only its nation but democracy for the world," Pelosi said.Senate Democratic leadership has indicated the chamber will take up the bill quickly once it passes the House.Read more here. From CNN's Jennifer HanslerLithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said the removal of not only Vladimir Putin, but the entire regime that supports him is necessary to stop Russia's "warmongering" and predicted the Kremlin leader will become increasingly erratic as his battlefield losses grow in Ukraine.Speaking to CNN in Washington on Tuesday, Landsbergis also said his nation is seeking a permanent US troop presence, calling it "the biggest deterrent to an aggressor like Russia," as well as fortified support from NATO at next month's leaders' summit in Madrid.Lithuania has been a strong supporter of Ukraine since the start of the war more than two months ago and has pushed for a robust response to counter Russia, becoming the first country in the European Union to stop Russian gas imports.Landsbergis said the United States and European allies have thus far been focused on their "tactical approach" to the war in Ukraine, responding to the developments on the ground.However, the foreign minister stressed that they also need to think strategically about the longer-term — and until Putin and his enablers are gone, the world needs to be prepared that Russia "might war again, and not excluding NATO countries."Landsbergis did not suggest the West should take concrete action to remove Putin from power and acknowledged that "it might take quite some time for it to change, because we don't have any active means to change it.

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