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What Trump’s Surprise Weapons Freeze Means for Ukraine — And the World

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Zelensky invites Trump to Ukraine to come and see the damages by Russia

In a major policy shift, the United States has paused certain weapons shipments to Ukraine, citing concerns over dwindling US military stockpiles, the White House confirmed on Tuesday, July 1, 2025.

White House Press Secretary Anna Kelly stated the move followed a Department of Defense review and aligns with President Donald Trump’s “America First” strategy.

“We’re putting America’s interests first,” she said during a briefing, while also referencing recent U.S. airstrikes in Iran as proof of continued U.S. strength.

What’s on Hold?

While the administration did not specify which arms are being withheld, air defence systems and precision-guided munitions are reportedly among the affected shipments, according to Reuters and CBS News sources.

The pause has sparked concern among NATO allies and Ukrainian officials, especially following Russia’s largest air offensive in over a year, with 500+ drones and missiles hitting Ukrainian cities over the weekend.

Tensions Between Trump and Zelensky Resurface

President Trump met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during the recent NATO summit in the Netherlands, where diplomatic tensions appeared to thaw briefly.

“We’ve had some rough moments, but he couldn’t have been nicer,” Trump said, referring to their March Oval Office clash that temporarily froze both aid and intelligence sharing.

Now, that aid freeze appears to be returning in a more strategic form.

Pentagon Reacts to Aid Suspension

Elbridge Colby, U.S. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, said the Pentagon is “rigorously adapting its approach.”

“We must balance support for Ukraine with our own force readiness and long-term defense strategy,” Colby said.

Geopolitical Ripples Widen

The halt comes as France’s President Emmanuel Macron held his first phone call in over two years with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who accused the West of creating an “anti-Russian bridgehead” in Ukraine.

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Meanwhile, Ukraine has not officially responded, though insiders suggest frustration is building in Kyiv.

Background

Since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, the US has delivered over $75 billion in aid to Ukraine, but Trump’s renewed presidency has brought heightened scrutiny over foreign military spending.

A controversial April 2025 resource-for-weapons deal between the U.S. and Ukraine granting the U.S. access to Ukrainian mineral reserves now risks collapse under these new policy shifts.


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