- Kurdish activist fled Iran into Italy nightmare
- Airlines around Asia ground Bali flights after volcano erupts
- Curry dazzles on Thompson's return as Warriors down Mavs
- Profiles of candidates for World Rugby chairman election
- Elon Musk: rocket man takes aim at Washington
- How China's censorship machine worked to block news of deadly attack
- Toxic smog smothering India's capital smashes WHO limit
- Australian airlines cancel Bali flights after volcano erupts
- China snuffs out memorials to victims of deadly car ramming attack
- Taliban score successes with embassy closures, COP attendance
- Evacuations, call for aid as Typhoon Usagi approaches Philippines
- Blinken in Brussels as Trump win raises alarm over Ukraine
- China's Xi heads to Peru for APEC meeting shrouded in Trump fears
- Popham hopes new World Rugby chairman heralds new dawn in concussion issue
- 7-Eleven owner considers going private to avoid foreign buyout: reports
- Palau president says China flouting its ocean boundaries
- China clears memorial to victims of deadly car ramming attack
- German lithium plant hopes to turbo-charge Europe's EV makers
- Asian markets extend losses as Trump fears build
- New push for EU-South America trade deal despite French fury
- France, Italy and Portugal target Nations League quarters
- Trump presidency raises fresh conflict of interest concerns
- Somaliland votes amid Horn of Africa tensions
- Chile's 'transplant' footballers champion organ donation
- Trump names Musk to 'efficiency' post as team takes shape
- UN nuclear chief heads to Iran for crucial talks
- Indonesia go Dutch in pursuit of World Cup dreams
- Israel gets US pass on Gaza aid but agencies say it's not enough
- US airman who leaked classified documents jailed for 15 years
- UK writer Samantha Harvey wins 2024 Booker with space novel
- US bans flights to Haiti after three jetliners hit by gunfire
- Lincicome ends 20-year LPGA career at hometown event
- Canadian women's coach, two aides out after drone scandal
- Sinner turns aside Fritz to close in on ATP Finals last four
- Global stocks slip as markets take post-US election breather
- UN condemns 'acts reminiscent of the gravest international crimes' in Gaza
- US bans flights to Haiti as gang violence rages
- Aga Khan emerald fetches record $9 mn in Geneva auction
- Venezuela crackdown helped avert 'civil war': attorney general
- Trump shapes team ahead of White House return
- Climate cash should also go to nuclear, says UN atomic chief
- Free Facebook in EU with less targeted ads
- Dupont set to be fit for New Zealand despite illness
- New balls, please, plead top men's tennis players
- Ban rules Radradra out of Fiji's final November internationals
- US contractor ordered to pay $42 mn to Iraqis tortured at Abu Ghraib
- Lame-duck US climate team vows to be 'effective' at COP29
- Painter Frank Auerbach, contemporary of Freud and Bacon, dies at 93
- UN carbon market inches closer after COP29 agreement
- US finalizes waste methane fine on drillers, but future uncertain
US says to spend $6 billion for Ukraine before Trump arrives
The White House will spend its remaining $6 billion of Ukraine funding before Donald Trump's presidential inauguration in January, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Sunday, warning of the global risks of ending US support for Kyiv.
Sullivan said President Joe Biden is expected to go over top foreign policy issues when he meets with President-elect Trump Wednesday in the Oval Office.
"The president will have the chance to explain to President Trump how he sees things, where they stand, and talk to President Trump about how President Trump is thinking about taking on these issues when he takes office," Sullivan said on CBS's "Face the Nation."
Biden has led an international coalition in support of Ukraine as it fights off invasion by Moscow, an effort at a crucial point following Russian military gains and an increasingly dire shortage of Ukrainian manpower.
Trump meantime has insisted that he could end the war in "a day," possibly even before taking office, presumably as part of a deal that would require Kyiv to cede some of its lost territory to Moscow.
The Ukrainians and European NATO members have been scrambling to reach out to Trump while making their own plans for a world in which the US president appears far less supportive of Kyiv and of NATO, and more friendly to Russia.
Sullivan said a prime goal of the Biden administration in its remaining months, will be "to put Ukraine in the strongest possible position on the battlefield so that it is ultimately in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table."
Russian President Vladimir Putin has demanded that Ukraine cede large swaths of territory as a precondition to peace talks, while Kyiv has adamantly refused to do so.
Sullivan also said he expected progress on efforts to end the fighting in Gaza and southern Lebanon, and to free the Israeli hostages held by Hamas.
"At some point, the Israeli government wants to do a deal that gets its citizens back home," he said. "I don't think it's doing that deal for American politics but to try to secure Israel, and I expect in the coming weeks we'll see progress."
Asked about Israel's response to a joint letter from the US secretaries of state and defense demanding that Israel improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza, Sullivan said, "This week, we'll make our judgments about what kind of progress they have made, and ... what we will do in response."
Trump has had a close relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called the Republican's electoral win "a huge victory" and said he had spoken to Trump three times in recent days.
H.Seidel--BTB