“Biden’s call for an enormous $33 billion for Ukraine is over half the entire budget for the State Department and USAID,” noted CodePink’s Medea Benjamin. “We need diplomacy, not billions more in weapons!”
“How can this not lead to escalation?”
Biden is asking Congress for additional funding for war-ravaged Ukraine, including more than $20 billion in “security and military assistance,” $8.5 billion in economic aid, and $3 billion in “humanitarian assistance.”
“It’s not cheap. But caving to aggression is going to be more costly if we allow it to happen,” said Biden. “We either back the Ukrainian people as they defend their country, or we stand by as the Russians continue their atrocities and aggression in Ukraine every day.”
The president’s appeal for additional funds comes on top of the $4.6 billion in security assistance the U.S. has given Ukraine since January 2021, including $3.7 billion since Russian forces invaded the country in February.
Medea Benjamin, co-founder of the women-led peace group CodePink, called Biden’s request “a down payment on World War III.”
You know what Biden’s request of $33 billion more for Ukraine is for? A down payment on World War III. #PeaceInUkraine
— Medea Benjamin (@medeabenjamin) April 28, 2022
Benjamin also noted that the Biden administration—which refuses to unfreeze Afghanistan’s central bank reserves—”won’t fill the $2 billion shortfall in the urgent U.N. appeal for the desperately poor people of Afghanistan.”
Jennifer Briney, host of the Congressional Dish podcast, tweeted: “How can the U.S. possibly maintain the already-pretty-clear-fiction that we aren’t ‘in’ the Ukraine-Russia war if we inject $33 billion into it? How can this not lead to escalation?”
Ben Freeman, a research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, pointed out that “the $20 billion military assistance package is more than the total defense budgets of all but 13 countries in the world.”
Others commented on what they implied are the administration’s misplaced priorities amid the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, worsening economic inequality, and the climate emergency.
Biden has requested $33 BILLION in aid for Ukraine– $20.4 billion of which would be spent on weapons & other military assistance.
— CODEPINK (@codepink) April 28, 2022
With that same $20 billion, the Biden admin could help 500,000 unhoused Americans by effectively ending homelessness. #CutThePentagon
“Biden’s $33 billion ’emergency’ military aid package for Ukraine is three times the size of the EPA’s entire budget for 2022,” tweeted CounterPunch editor Jeffrey St. Clair, referring to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Writer and activist Margaret Kimberly bemoaned that “Biden is asking struggling Americans who lost their child tax credit for $33 billion after his Ukraine police blew up in his face.”
Ben Cohen, co-founder of the ice cream company Ben & Jerry’s, wondered why Biden is “asking for an extra $33 billion to help Ukraine and not an extra $33 billion to replace every single lead pipe in America” when “we have at least 1.2 million children suffering from lead poisoning here and now.”
Another $33 Billion to the Ukraine but paying off student loan debt is too unbearable to consider.
— Queendom | Career Coach & Resume Revisionist (@HumblyChic) April 28, 2022
Jay Befaunt, an LGBTQ+ activist and co-host of the Revolutionary Blackout Network, tweeted: “Again? When Black and Brown countries need aid, you either never hear about it or it’s very little. But when it’s Ukraine, Biden is acting like he’s Ukraine’s sugar daddy. And don’t get me started on we citizens who need our material needs met. We don’t get diddly squat!”
Asserting that “we need healthcare, not warfare,” Benjamin lamented that Biden’s “initial ask of $22 billion for Covid has been slashed to $10 billion, cutting support to poor countries” even as “one million Americans died of Covid,” and more than six million people have perished worldwide.
$33 billion to the Ukraine.
— 🇵🇸 #FreePalestine #FreeGaza 🇵🇸 (@realnikohouse) April 28, 2022
Ppl can’t put food on the table. Rents gone up. Housing prices have gone up. Raises have almost gone down when accounting for inflation. We’re having supply shortages across the board.
But we have $33 billion to spend on Ukraine but not US citizens.
“Can we just start calling Americans Ukrainians,” quipped Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox, “and work Medicare for All into this package?”