In Washington, they said that the cost of help provided by Ukraine was $ 100 billion, not $ 300 billion.
The United States softened its requirements to restore Ukraine’s assistance during a communication with an economic agreement between the two countries. Bloomberg reported this on Wednesday, April 16, which refers to its own resources.
“After the negotiations of Washington last week, the president’s administration Donald Trump reduced its assessment of assistance, given by the United States to Kyiv from the beginning of Russia’s entire -scale raid, from $ 300 billion to $ 100 billion, the resources reported.
The publication records that the Ukrainian government refused to comment until the agreement was signed. The White House and the US Finance Department did not respond to a request for a comment. Instead, the Ministry of Finance’s Press Secretary noted that technical negotiations are very productive.
Answering a question about the state of negotiations, financial minister Scott Immentin said Ukraine has made a proposal against the weekend, and negotiations are still ongoing. “We are very, very close … It can be signed this week,” he said.
One of the resources also said in the publication that the United States still responded to the agreement as an opportunity to pay for the costs of Ukraine due to revenue from the fund, the amount of which was not yet specified in the final project.
Remember, on April 11-12 in Washington, technical consultations were held through a subsoil agreement with the participation of the Ministers of Justice and the Economy of Ukraine. The media has written that the assembly of the delegations of Ukraine and the United States were held in a tense environment, and the communication itself on antagonistic tones.
Subsoil Agreement: Ukraine tries to stretch time
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Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.