Servicemen of the 24th Mechanized Brigade, named after King Danylo, of the Ukrainian Armed Forces fire a US-made M109 Paladin self-propelled howitzer towards Russian troops in a front line, Feb 28, 2025.
Credit: Reuters Photo
Washington: US President Donald Trump has frozen military aid to Ukraine, just days after publicly confronting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the White House and accusing him of being insufficiently grateful for Washington's backing.
The halt to US military aid does not only have significant implications for the three-year-old war between Ukraine and Russian invasion forces. It will also impact the US defense industry. Here's how:
The United States has pledged and spent at least $65 billion on military aid for Ukraine since Russia's full-blown February 2022 invasion. Primarily, that assistance has been allocated through two tools: the Presidential Drawdown Authority (PDA) and the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI).
More than $31 billion worth of weapons and equipment has been pledged to Ukraine under the Presidential Drawdown Authority (PDA), which allows the president to approve rapid transfers to foreign countries from US military stockpiles, without having to seek congressional approval. More than $20 billion worth of weapons and equipment has already been shipped this way, according to a Reuters analysis.
Ukraine is still awaiting a large shipment of armored vehicles that are not set to be delivered until mid-2025, said a Ukrainian official, speaking on condition of anonymity. They are currently being refurbished at depots in Europe.
The US has bought nearly $33.2 billion worth of new arms and military equipment for Kyiv directly from US and allied defense contractors. That money was allocated by Congress. The USAI is a longer-term approach to arming Ukraine. It will take years for all these weapons to be manufactured and shipped to the battlefield. This category of weapon provides Ukraine a sustained pipeline of modern weaponry and simultaneously sustained revenue for manufacturers. The amount of aid that still needs to be delivered from the American contracts is "significantly less than 15 percent", a Ukrainian official said. Some of the weapons still to be delivered include advanced rocket launchers and missiles.
The halt to USAI not only impacts current orders, but also future production plans and investment decisions for US companies such as L3Harris Technologies, Lockheed Martin Corp, RTX Corp and General Dynamics.
It's unlikely that the US government would cancel the orders for Ukraine that have not yet been delivered. It could decide to keep those weapons for itself.
Washington needs to replenish its own stocks and - instead of placing new orders - could instead keep the weapons that were bound for Ukraine, essentially reducing the future amount of new contracts on offer to US companies.
Among the weapons and equipment provided during the war are US-made F-16 fighter jets, long-range ATACM missiles, High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS), the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS), short-range air defense interceptors, replacement vehicles, air-to-ground munitions, and artillery.