Kyiv faces tough battle this year, US aid flows vital: CIA chief

Firefighters work at a site where production facilities were damaged during a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, near Bila Tserkva city, in Kyiv region, Ukraine, in this handout picture released January 30, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 31 January 2024
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Kyiv faces tough battle this year, US aid flows vital: CIA chief

  • The administration of US President Joe Biden bars Ukraine from firing US-supplied weapons at targets inside Russia, refusing Kyiv’s requests for long-range missiles known as HIMARS

WASHINGTON: Ukraine will likely face a tough year fighting Russia in 2024, CIA Director Bill Burns said on Tuesday, arguing that to cut off US aid to Kyiv would be an error of “historic proportions.”
In an article on the Foreign Affairs journal’s website, Burns also said Ukraine could raise the costs of the war to Russia by striking deeper behind the front lines.
A former US ambassador to Moscow, Burns said the war has begun to erode Russian President Vladimir Putin’s power and suggested China could adopt a more aggressive stance toward Taiwan if it saw US support for Ukraine wane.
“This year is likely to be a tough one on the battlefield in Ukraine,” Burns wrote. “For the United States to walk away from the conflict at this crucial moment and cut off support to Ukraine would be an own goal of historic proportions.”
“Ukraine’s challenge is to puncture Putin’s arrogance and demonstrate the high cost for Russia of continued conflict, not just by making progress on the frontlines but also by launching deeper strikes behind them and making steady gains in the Black Sea,” he added.
The comment appeared to refer to hitting territory Russia has seized from Ukraine and claimed as its own, rather than to strikes on Russia itself.
The administration of US President Joe Biden bars Ukraine from firing US-supplied weapons at targets inside Russia, refusing Kyiv’s requests for long-range missiles known as HIMARS.
“The US does not enable or encourage strikes inside of Russia,” said a Biden administration official.
While some senior Republicans in Congress favor continued US funding for Ukraine, others on the right oppose it and an effort to tie such assistance for Ukraine and Israel to a US policy shift on immigration undercut such a bill in December.
Congress has approved more than $110 billion for Ukraine since Russia invaded in February 2022, but no new funds since Republicans took control of the House of Representatives in January 2023.
Saying Putin may threaten to use nuclear arms, Burns wrote, “it would be foolish to dismiss escalatory risks entirely. But it would be equally foolish to be unnecessarily intimidated by them.”
He also said support for Ukraine might temper a Chinese view that the United States “was in terminal decline” and would send “an important message of US resolve that helps Taiwan.”
“One of the surest ways to rekindle Chinese perceptions of American fecklessness and stoke Chinese aggressiveness would be to abandon support for Ukraine,” he wrote.

 


US judge blocks Trump admin from detaining refugees in Minnesota

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US judge blocks Trump admin from detaining refugees in Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS: A US federal judge temporarily blocked the administration of President Donald Trump Wednesday from detaining refugees in Minnesota awaiting permanent resident status and ordered the release of those in detention.
Trump has sent thousands of federal immigration agents to the Democratic state as part of a sweeping crackdown that has sparked outrage over two civilian deaths at the hands of officers.
Authorities launched a program this month to re-examine the legal status of the approximately 5,600 refugees in Minnesota who have not yet been given green cards.
In his order Wednesday, US District Judge John Tunheim said that the Trump administration could continue to enforce immigration laws and review refugees’ status, but that it must do so “without arresting and detaining refugees.”
“Refugees have a legal right to be in the United States, a right to work, a right to live peacefully — and importantly, a right not to be subjected to the terror of being arrested and detained without warrants or cause in their homes or on their way to religious services or to buy groceries,” Tunheim wrote.
“At its best, America serves as a haven of individual liberties in a world too often full of tyranny and cruelty. We abandon that ideal when we subject our neighbors to fear and chaos.”
The order drew a quick rebuke from White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, a powerful figure who leads Trump’s hard-line immigration policy.
“The judicial sabotage of democracy is unending,” Miller wrote on X.
Tunheim’s order requires any refugee detained under the Minnesota status review, known as Operation PARRIS, to be “immediately released from custody.”
Refugees awaiting their permanent resident status “have undergone rigorous background checks and vetting, been approved by multiple federal agencies for entry, been given permission to work, received support from the government, and been resettled in the United States,” Tunheim wrote.
“These individuals were admitted to the country, have followed the rules, and are waiting to have their status adjusted to lawful permanent residents of the United States.”