US lawmakers were expected to approve a $45 billion aid package for Ukraine on Friday (local time), as President Volodymyr Zelenskiy returned from Washington with the promise of Patriot missiles to help fend off Russia's invasion.
The military and economic assistance, part of a wider government spending bill, follows US aid worth around $50 billion sent to Ukraine this year as well sanctions imposed on Russia by the West that now include a cap on Russian oil prices.
Russia responded to the cap on Friday by threatening to cut oil output by 5 percent-7 percent early next year through halting sales to countries that support a measure that seeks to limit Moscow's ability to fund the war.
Zelenskiy has long sought Patriot missiles to help counter Russian air strikes, which have razed cities, towns and villages during 10 months of conflict and knocked out power and water supply across the country over the past three months.
US officials say, however, that the single Patriot battery that President Joe Biden told Zelenskiy would be supplied to Ukraine would not change the course of the war.
Washington and its allies have been unwilling to supply Kyiv with modern battle tanks and long-range missiles called ATACMS that could reach far behind frontlines and into Russia itself.
On Thursday, the US Senate approved $44.9 billion in new Ukraine aid as part of a US government funding bill.
On Friday, the debate shifted to the floor of the Democratic-led House of Representatives, discussing the giant $1.66 trillion spending bill that includes the Ukraine funds. A vote was expected later on Friday although the timing was not certain.
Kyiv and the Biden administration are wary that retaining US Congressional support for aid could become more complicated when Republicans take a narrow majority in the House early in the new year.
A small number of rightwing Republicans oppose aid and other lawmakers have called for tighter oversight.
Even as it fights for its survival, Ukraine is pursuing a fight against domestic corruption to help reassure international donors that their money will be spent well.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow would find a way to counter the Patriots while also seeking to end the fighting. "Our goal is not to spin the flywheel of military conflict, but, on the contrary, to end this war," he said.
In response, White House spokesman John Kirby said Russia's actions showed Putin was clearly set on escalating its invasion.
'ANYTHING BUT WAR'
By using the word war, Putin departed from the usual Kremlin practice of referring to its invasion as a "special military operation".
A politician in St Petersburg asked prosecutors to investigate Putin over his use of the word, accusing the Kremlin chief of breaking his own laws on spreading "disinformation".
Nikita Yuferev, an opposition councillor in the city where Putin was born, said he knew his legal challenge would go nowhere, but filed it to expose the "mendacity" of the system.
The Kremlin said "significant progress" had been achieved towards its stated goal of "demilitarising" Ukraine.
Kyiv and its Western allies say Moscow is fighting an illegal war of conquest and suspect its repeated offers of negotiations on its own terms are a ploy to buy time after battlefield setbacks.
"We are coming back from Washington with ...something that will really help," Zelenskiy said on his Telegram channel.
In later posts, he said he was back in Kyiv and working towards "victory", thanking the Netherlands for earmarking up to 2.5 billion euros ($2.65 billion) for Ukraine next year.
REPORTED REINFORCEMENTS
Ukraine has driven Russian forces from the areas around its capital Kyiv and second biggest city Kharkiv. Moscow is now focused on holding on to areas its forces occupy in southern and eastern Ukraine - around a fifth of the country.
Ukrainian forces repelled attacks on at least 17 settlements in eastern Ukraine, its general staff said early on Friday.
It added that Kremlin forces had launched 12 missile and air strikes, including on civilian targets, away from the front lines in eastern and southeastern Ukraine.
The exiled mayor of Russian-occupied Melitopol in the south said more Russian troops had been brought into the city and were strengthening fortifications, with residents now only able to leave on foot.
A car bomb went off in the city earlier in the day, Ivan Fedorov added in his online media briefing.
Russian forces shelled the southern Kherson region 61 times in 24 hours, half of those within Kherson city, killing one person, Governor Yaroslav Yanushevych said. Russia withdrew from that city last month.
In the neighbouring Zaporizhzhia region, a governor installed by Russia, Yevgeny Balitsky, said shelling of the nuclear power plant there had "almost stopped" but Russian troops would not leave.
Ukraine and Russia have accused each other of risking nuclear disaster in fighting near the plant, Europe's largest, and the United Nations has called for a safe zone there.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has called for a safe zone around the plant to reduce the risk of nuclear disaster, said talks with the two sides were making progress on the issue.
Reuters was not able to confirm the battlefield reports.
Reuters