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Ukraine will be America’s next Vietnam, Russia says after House passes massive aid bill

If the U.S. remains involved, Ukraine will become a “humiliating fiasco” for the United States similar to Vietnam, a Russian official said on Sunday.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said U.S. House of Representatives members have given the go-ahead to a long-delayed $60 billion aid bill for Ukraine to help the war-weary country buy more advanced weapons and defense systems. The day after that, he released a scathing comment.

“Washington’s increasing preoccupation with hybrid wars with Russia will be a loud and humiliating debacle for the United States, including Vietnam and Afghanistan,” Zakharova said, adding that the United States had no intention of forcing Ukraine to “fight to the end.” “It’s clear that they want it,” added the Ukrainian. ”

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Congress’ approval of the massive aid package for Ukraine shows that the United States is foolishly moving deeper into the war. Pacific Press/LightRocket (via Getty Images)
Zakharova said the war would end in humiliation for the United States similar to Vietnam. Reuters

He said Russia has “unconditionally and He warned that a firm response would be taken.

Relations between Russia and the United States, the Cold War enemies, have deteriorated as a result and are at their worst since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, U.S. and Russian diplomats say.

Last week, CIA Director William Burns said Ukraine could hold the line against its Russian adversary if the U.S. gave more support, but without it, the war with heavy shelling and drones would end in Ukraine’s defeat. He said it was possible.

The United States has refused to send American troops to the battle-scarred country, but its massive aid package could extend a lifeline to Ukraine when it needs it most.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy expressed gratitude for the vote and said U.S. lawmakers had acted to “put history on the right track.”

Flags fly as pro-Ukrainian supporters demonstrate outside the Capitol after the House of Representatives approved a bill providing more than $60 billion in aid to Ukraine. Reuters
House Speaker Mike Johnson has come under fire from the far right for passing the bipartisan aid bill. Nathan Posner/Shutterstock

“The important US aid bill passed by the House of Representatives today will stop the spread of war, save thousands of lives, and help both countries become stronger,” President Zelenskiy said on the X program.

The policy would also allow the US to seize billions of dollars in frozen Russian assets, but Zakharova said that before claiming the only real beneficiaries were US defense contractors. “Theft,” I whined.

Zakharova claimed that Ukrainians were being used as “cannon fodder” and that the United States only wanted the country to hold out until November’s elections.

The specter of Vietnam, a bloody conflict in which more than 58,000 Americans died, has loomed large over American foreign policy since the disastrous 1973 evacuation of Saigon.

Although Afghanistan did not inflict similar casualties on U.S. troops (approximately 2,500 dead and more than 20,000 injured), its withdrawal in August 2021 after nearly 20 years of conflict similarly shocked the American public. .

The United States’ long-running operations in Southeast Asia during the last century sparked mass protests across the United States. Corbis via Getty Images
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has criticized the Ukraine bill, subsequently called on Johnson to resign.

Russia currently controls about one-fifth of Ukraine, mainly the eastern and southern parts of the country.

After the Kiev counterattack in 2023 failed to dislodge many soldiers, Russian forces have gradually expanded in strength.

Ukraine has been begging the U.S. to send money and weapons for months, even though Russian officials say the aid won’t change the bottom line.

with post wire

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