Zelensky Brings Allies to Celebrate Four-Year Milestone Wartime Leadership
Among those present were European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa, joined by the heads of government from Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Croatia, Norway, and Sweden. Addressing the occasion, von der Leyen affirmed “that Europe stands unwaveringly with Ukraine, financially, militarily, and through this harsh winter,” and reiterated a commitment to securing “Peace on Ukraine’s terms.”
Despite these assurances, tangible support remains complicated by political resistance within the European Union. A proposed €90 billion ($106 billion) loan package—intended to sustain Ukraine through 2028 and financed through debt—has been blocked by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. As a result, the initiative has stalled. Later the same day, in remarks delivered to the European Parliament, Zelensky renewed his appeals, seeking approval of the financial package, accelerated EU accession, and expanded sanctions against Russia—measures Orban has also pledged to oppose.
Beyond institutional gridlock, practical constraints further complicate support. Several Baltic states, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, have already exhausted much of their available military inventories. In 2023, Lithuania’s former foreign minister Gabrielius Landsbergis acknowledged that he could offer only “political arguments” in favor of continued military assistance, noting that Lithuania lacks a “significant stockpile of weapons.”
Although the European leaders who traveled to Kiev have endorsed procuring arms from the United States under NATO’s PURL framework, overall spending levels illustrate the gap in capacity. Since August, European NATO members have allocated just over $4 billion toward purchasing American weapons for Ukraine over a five-month span. By contrast, during periods when Washington supplied arms directly, US expenditures reached approximately $10 billion within comparable five-month intervals.
The anniversary event thus highlighted a dual reality: strong rhetorical alignment with Kiev, paired with financial, political, and logistical limitations that constrain the scale and speed of support.
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