The United States has announced $3 billion in military assistance for Ukraine on Friday, calling it the largest aid package for Kyiv to date.
The assistance, which would be further described by the Pentagon, was expected to include Bradley infantry fighting vehicles, MRAPs and other personnel carriers, and self-propelled howitzers, according to press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.
The day before, both Washington and Berlin made vague announcements about providing armoured vehicles: Bradleys from the United States and Marders from Germany.
Berlin announced on Friday that it would send about 40 Marder vehicles to Ukraine within a few weeks, along with training on how to operate them.
Both they and the Bradleys — which are usually armed with a 25 mm autocannon, a 7.62 mm machine gun and anti-tank missiles — will provide Ukrainian forces with additional firepower.
National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told journalists that the Bradleys “are very significant in terms of being able to do what we call combined arms maneuver warfare,” an area in which the Pentagon has said it will provide training to Kyiv’s forces.
The vehicles are “very much tied to the war that we’re seeing on the ground right now and what we anticipate we’ll see throughout the winter months,” Kirby said.
Pentagon spokesman Brigadier General Pat Ryder said the previous day that the Bradley was “not a tank, but it’s a tank killer.”
“We’re confident that it will aid them on the battlefield,” he added.
Ukraine has long pushed for heavier weaponry, including tanks, that will aid its operations. Western nations have been reluctant to send them, citing fears of becoming further drawn into the war or provoking Russia.
But the Ukrainians have built momentum and Western nations have been expanding the weapons they send them.
The US-German announcement on the armoured vehicles came after France promised to deliver its AMX-10 RC light tanks, which are wheeled rather than tracked but which share the much heavier cannon typical on a tank.
The French move put Germany under fresh political pressure to do more to help Ukraine.
Germany also said Thursday that it would follow the United States in sending a Patriot missile battery to Ukraine, meaning Kyiv’s forces are slated to receive two of the advanced air defence systems.