March 10, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

March 10, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

new satellite images chernihiv
'Staggering': Retired general on Russian convoy's tactics
01:29 - Source: CNN

What we covered

  • New satellite images show the 40-mile-long Russian convoy near Kyiv has largely been dispersed as the fight for the Ukrainian capital continues.
  • About 100,000 people were evacuated via humanitarian corridors in several parts of Ukraine over the past two days, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday.
  • A deadly Russian bomb attack on a maternity hospital in Mariupol Wednesday sparked international outrage. Zelensky said the bombing was “proof of a genocide,” and renewed his call for NATO to declare a no-fly zone over Ukraine.
  • Want to help? Learn how to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine here. 
  • Having connection issues? Bookmark CNN’s lite site for fast connectivity. You can also read updates at CNN Español here.
109 Posts

Zelensky hits back at Russian chemical weapons propaganda

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has hit back at widely discredited Russian disinformation suggesting Ukraine is preparing a chemical attack. 

In a video message posted to Facebook late Thursday, Zelensky said no chemical weapon or weapons of mass destruction were developed in Ukraine, and Moscow’s accusations that Kyiv was developing biological weapons and preparing a chemical attack made him “really worried.”

Some context: The United Nations Security Council will hold a meeting Friday at the request of Russia about its false claim the US is developing chemical weapons in Ukraine. The US’ UN Mission spokeswoman Olivia Dalton said the move was “exactly the kind of false flag effort we have warned Russia might initiate to justify a biological or chemical weapons attack.”

Some Russian-themed businesses in the US say they are being targeted due to the war in Ukraine

Russia House Restaurant and Lounge in Washington, DC.

Owners of some Russian-themed establishments in the United States believe they are being targeted as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

The businesses said they have received threatening phone calls — and at least one has been vandalized. 

Here’s what’s happening around the country:

Washington, DC: Police are investigating whether hate or bias was behind vandalism at Russia House Restaurant and Lounge in DC, DC Metropolitan Police said.

According to an incident report, the owner of Russia House told police that parts of the restaurant, including five windows and a door, were vandalized between Feb. 25 and Feb. 27. The report noted that “bias-related signs were affixed to the property.”

CNN has reached out to Russia House Restaurant and Lounge but has not received a response. The restaurant is temporarily closed, according to its Facebook page.  

New York: The owners of the Russian Samovar restaurant in midtown Manhattan said they received harassing phone calls and that people have kicked down their sign since Russia invaded Ukraine.

Vlada Von Shats — who is from Russia, while her husband is from Ukraine — said she received a phone call telling her to die, and another calling “us Nazis and Fascists.” 

She said she had not reported any of the incidents to the police.

San Diego: Owners of Pushkin Russian Restaurant in San Diego have received threats following the invasion, according to CNN affiliate KFMB.  

One caller said they would blow up the restaurant “as payback for what Russia is doing to Ukraine,” owner Ike Gazaryan told KFMB. Another caller said “you killed my uncle and my whole family, you disgusting Russians,” KFMB reported.

Gazaryan is from Armenia, and most of his staff are from Ukraine. Despite the threats, the owner has no intentions of changing the name of his business.  

CNN reached out to Pushkin Russian Restaurant but has not received a response. The San Diego Police told CNN they are not actively involved in any investigation at this address.  

Twitter will add labels to Belarusian state media accounts 

Twitter will add labels to Belarusian state media accounts “to better surface credible information” on the war in Ukraine, the social media giant said Thursday.

Yoel Roth, Twitter’s head of site integrity, said the move comes “after detailed reporting” about the role of Belarusian state-affiliated media outlets in the war in Ukraine.

The background: Last week, Twitter launched labels on tweets sharing links to Russian state-affiliated news media, Roth said in a tweet Thursday. 

“Early data suggests that our interventions here are working: We’ve seen a 30% drop in impressions on Tweets labeled under this expanded policy,” Roth said.

Belarus is an ally of Russia and is being used as a launch point for Russian troops into Ukraine.

China is pushing a Russian conspiracy theory about an alleged US bioweapons lab in Ukraine

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian.

China has joined Russian propaganda efforts in promoting a conspiracy theory that the United States has funded the development of biological weapons in Ukraine.

Speaking in a briefing Thursday, Beijing’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Washington should accept “multilateral inspection” of an alleged US-controlled bioweapons lab in the embattled country.

Zhao was referring to a report Monday by China’s state broadcaster CCTV, which cited allegations by a Russian Defense Ministry spokesman that Washington had funded the development of biological weapons in Ukrainian labs.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Wednesday dismissed the accusations as “conspiracy theories.”

Some background: A CNN analysis on Thursday found state-run news outlets in China — which dominate the country’s highly censored media space — have largely echoed Russian state media or information from Russian officials about the invasion of Ukraine.

In a series of tweets this week, Psaki slammed the biological weapons claims, noting the US had also seen Chinese officials “echo these conspiracy theories.”

Psaki also noted Russia’s “long and well-documented track record of using chemical weapons” as well as its pattern of “accusing the West of the very violations that Russia itself is perpetrating.”

Ukraine labs: Following the breakup of the Soviet Union, US-funded biolabs were established in Ukraine — partly to secure old weapons left behind in the former Soviet republics. The State Department has described the claims as nonsense — and the US and Ukrainian governments have repeatedly, and for years now, tried to bat down conspiracy theories about the labs and spoken about the work that is actually being done in them

Russia’s claims discussed at the UN: The United Nations Security Council will hold a meeting Friday at the request of Russia about the allegation the US is developing chemical weapons in Ukraine. The US’ UN Mission spokeswoman Olivia Dalton said the move was “exactly the kind of false flag effort we have warned Russia might initiate to justify a biological or chemical weapons attack.”

Read more about Russia’s disinformation machine:

20220308-russian-biowar-misinfo-gfx

Related article Analysis: Russia and QAnon have the same false conspiracy theory about Ukraine

Russian major general killed in Ukraine at end of February

Russian Maj. Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky seen in March of 2021.

Russian Maj. Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky was killed while fighting in Ukraine, according to a statement from the Novorossiysk city government in Russia on March 3.

In the statement, the government said Sukhovetsky — the deputy commander of the 41st Combined Arms Army of the Russian Ground Forces — died on Feb. 28 “while performing a combat mission during a special operation in Ukraine.”

Sukhovetsky had previously served in the Russian military during operations in the North Caucasus region and Syria, the statement said. 

US Senate passes government funding bill with $13.6 billion in Ukraine aid

The US Senate has voted on a bipartisan basis to pass the massive $1.5 trillion government funding bill that includes $13.6 billion in aid to Ukraine.

The final tally was 68 to 31. 

The bill, which the House passed Wednesday evening, can now be sent to President Joe Biden for his signature.

What the Ukraine aid includes: Of the $13.6 billion in aid to Ukraine, money is set aside for humanitarian, defense, and economic assistance. The bill also includes provisions for sanctions enforcement.

The emergency aid package sets aside $4 billion to help refugees who have fled or were displaced within the country and it increases the President’s authority for defense equipment transfer to Ukraine and other allied nations to $3 billion, according to a fact sheet from the House Appropriations Committee.

Biden to announce US will move to revoke most-favored-nation status for Russia

President Joe Biden will announce Friday that the US, along with the G7 and European Union, will call for revoking “Most Favored Nation” status for Russia, referred to as permanent normal trade relations in the US, sources familiar with the move tell CNN.

Each country is expected to implement this measure based on its own national processes. The sources made note of congressional efforts to revoke Russia’s permanent normal trade relations.

The move would require an act of Congress.

Read more:

US President Joe Biden speaks about trade and Russia in Washington, DC on March 11, 2022.

Related article Biden to announce Friday that US will move to revoke 'most favored nation' status for Russia | CNN Politics

US warns Russia is "gaslighting the world" as UN Security Council discusses chemical weapons claims

The United Nations Security Council will hold a meeting Friday at the request of Russia about an allegation the United States is developing chemical weapons in Ukraine.

The US’ UN Mission spokeswoman Olivia Dalton said the move was “exactly the kind of false flag effort we have warned Russia might initiate to justify a biological or chemical weapons attack.”

“Russia has a well-documented history of using chemical weapons and has long maintained a biological weapons program in violation of international law. Russia also has a track record of falsely accusing the West of the very violations that Russia itself is perpetrating,” Dalton said.

Some context: At a UN meeting Thursday, Russia accused the US of funding research for chemical weapons in Ukraine. Earlier this week, White House press secretary Jen Psaki slammed the allegations as “false claims.”  

Ukraine asks to withdraw more than 300 peacekeepers from UN missions

Ukraine has requested to withdraw more than 300 peacekeepers from five operations, a United Nations representative said Thursday.

According to UN Secretary-General spokesman Stephane Dujarric, the peacekeepers are in Mali, Cyprus, Kosovo, South Sudan and Abyei — a disputed border region claimed by Sudan and South Sudan.

This includes 250 troops, 36 staff officers and experts on mission and 22 police officers —  a total of 308 personnel from Ukraine.

Additional peacekeepers from other regions will remain in these five locations.

“We are in discussions with other states to maintain our troop capabilities in all those missions,” Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for the Secretary-General told CNN Thursday. 

It comes after an earlier Ukrainian request to withdraw peacekeepers from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Ukraine has lost all communications with Chernobyl, UN nuclear watchdog says

Ukraine has lost all communications with the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said in a statement Thursday.

The statement comes a day after the Russian-controlled site lost external power supplies.

Power to the site: IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi said the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog is aware of reports that power has been restored to the site and is looking for confirmation.

Earlier on Thursday, Ukraine’s regulatory authority told the IAEA that emergency generators were providing electricity to the Chernobyl plant.

IAEA cited the Ukrainian regulatory authority, saying: “According to the information received before the loss of communication, both of the site’s power lines had been damaged, in effect disconnecting it from the grid.”

Effect of the disconnection: The IAEA statement said the disconnection from the grid “will not have a critical impact on essential safety functions at the site, where various radioactive waste management facilities are located, as the volume of cooling water in the spent fuel facility is sufficient to maintain heat removal without a supply of electricity.” 

According to the IAEA, Ukraine’s regulator said eight of the country’s 15 reactors remained operating, including two at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, three at Rivne, one at Khmelnytsky and two at South Ukraine. Radiation levels at the four sites were normal, it said.

Grossi also said the IAEA is in touch with Ukrainian authorities about radiation monitoring systems in Ukraine.

The IAEA has not been able to re-establish communication with the monitoring systems installed to monitor nuclear material and activities at the Chernobyl and Zaporizhzhia facilities following the loss of remote data transmissions from those systems.

Satellite images show suburbs of Kyiv have sustained significant damage

Fuel storage tanks are seen on fire at the Russian-controlled Antonov Airbase in Hostomel,Ukraine.

The northwest suburbs of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and parts of the northern city of Chernihiv have sustained significant damage, new satellite images from Maxar Technologies show.

Satellite images taken on Thursday show fuel storage tanks on fire at the Russian-controlled Antonov Airbase in Hostomel, a northwest suburb of Kyiv. A thick black plume of smoke can be seen rising from the tanks, which are located on the southern end of the airbase.

A series of apartment buildings demolished are seen in Borodyanka, Ukraine, a town just northwest of Kyiv.

The images also show a series of apartment buildings demolished in Borodyanka, a town just northwest of Kyiv. CNN has previously reported that these apartment buildings were damaged by Russian military strikes

A burned out warehouse in Stoyanka, Ukraine.

A satellite image shows a warehouse just outside Kyiv’s city limits in Stoyanka completely gutted by fire. 

The Epicenter K supermarket destroyed by fire n Chernihiv, Ukraine.

In Chernihiv, roughly 80 miles (130 kilometers) northeast of Kyiv, the Epicenter K supermarket has also been destroyed by fire, the images show. The charred remains of the building can be seen —  but there is no roof.

A fire burning in an industrial district in Chernihiv, Ukraine.

A fire is also seen burning in one of Chernihiv’s industrial districts, located on its south side.

Stalled 40-mile-long Russian convoy near Kyiv now largely dispersed, satellite images show

Russian military vehicles are seen sitting on roadways in residential areas in the town of Ozera, Ukraine -- 17 miles northwest of Kyiv. 

With the clouds temporarily clearing around the Ukrainian capital, new satellite images taken earlier on Thursday show that the Russian military convoy northwest of Kyiv that stretched more than 40 miles (more than 64 kilometers) has “largely dispersed and redeployed,” Maxar Technologies says.

The satellite images show that some elements of the convoy have “repositioned” into forests and treelined areas near Lubyanka, Ukraine, according to Maxar. The satellite images were taken at 11:37 a.m. Kyiv time (4.37 a.m. ET) on Thursday.

Just north of the Antonov Airbase in Hostomel, Ukraine, Russian military vehicles are seen sitting on roadways in residential areas in the town of Ozera — 17 miles northwest of Kyiv. 

Towed artillery and other vehicles are seen taking cover in a sparse patches of trees near Lubyanka — about three miles northwest of the Antonov Airbase.

In Berestyanka — 10 miles west of the airbase — a number of fuel trucks and, what Maxar says, appears to be multiple rocket launchers are seen positioned in a field near trees.

Southeast of Ivankiv — the end of what was the 40+ mile convoy — a number of trucks and equipment are still seen on the roadway.

See more of the images below:

In Berestyanka -- ten miles west of the airbase -- a number of fuel trucks and what Maxar says appears to be multiple rocket launchers are seen positioned in a field near trees.
According to Maxar, the satellite images show that some elements of the convoy have "repositioned" into forests and treelined areas near Lubyanka, Ukraine.
Southeast of Ivankiv -- the end of what was the 40+ mile convoy -- a number of trucks and equipment are still seen on the roadway.

On the ground: CNN's Clarissa Ward reports on how heavy fighting unfolded east of Kyiv Thursday 

Drone video shows Russian tanks being attacked.

After multiple days of significant fighting to the west and northwest of Kyiv — the capital of Ukraine — Thursday saw additional battlefields develop.

There has been “an alarming development today, which is a real uptick in Russian activity to the east of the city, beyond a suburb called Brovary. We saw some very heavy fighting there,” said CNN’s Clarissa Ward, in a live report from Kyiv.

In addition to video of the battle, Ward noted that there is also relevant audio.

“There is a voice heard over this video. Apparently, the voice of a Russian soldier in that tank unit saying that his commander has been killed,” she said.

But as the Ukrainians fight to defend their position, it’s worrisome for citizens of Kyiv, Ward noted, that Russian forces are expanding their offensive.

“It is certainly of grave concern to everybody here in this city that the Russians appear to be making a real play, pushing east and then potentially, of course, pushing downwards, presumably, the goal would be to totally encircle the city [of Kyiv]. And meanwhile, so many civilians, Wolf, are still pinned down and trapped under heavy fighting,” she added.

Ward noted that Ukraine’s Minister of Foreign Affairs — Dmytro Kuleba — shared social media video showing the war’s impacts, especially on children.

“We saw a tweet today from the Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba, where he … shows the true cost of this, which are the children who are so often the victims in this war. And [Kuleba] posted some dramatic video that was shot during an evacuation in a town called Vorzel, again to the northwest, of an orphanage. A young child, a toddler, Wolf, one of two very sick children being ferried out of that orphanage looking frankly, completely unconscious,” reported Ward.

As the fighting continues, so too does the civilian suffering in the suburb, Ward said.

“The people in this suburb have had no access to water, to medicine, to food, to gas, to heat, to electricity. It has been a completely traumatic experience and rescue workers still struggling to get into these hardest-hit areas and get Ukraine’s most vulnerable citizens out,” said Ward.

CNN boarded a NATO surveillance plane above the Polish-Ukrainian border. Here's what we saw.

Russia has been using Belarus as a springboard for many of its air operations in Ukraine, according to intelligence collected by NATO surveillance planes flying over the Polish-Ukrainian border and radar seen by CNN.

CNN accompanied NATO’s Flying Squadron 2 on one such surveillance mission on Thursday. Within two hours of taking off at 8 a.m. CET, the radar on board the NATO AWACS plane — short for Airborne Warning and Control System — picked up about a dozen Russian-made planes idling in Belarus just north of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, NATO tactical director Denis Guillaume told CNN.

Hours later, at least nine Russian-made planes were spotted entering Ukrainian airspace from Belarus, appearing to head toward Kyiv, the radar showed.

The “vast majority” of the Russian-made fighter jets that NATO forces have seen entering Ukrainian airspace since Russia’s invasion began have originated in Belarus, the NATO mission’s technical director told CNN on board Thursday’s flight.

On one particularly “active” day last week, NATO forces saw about 20 Russian jets heading to Kyiv from Belarus, he said. The military aircraft taking off from Belarus and entering Ukrainian airspace have been in support of Russian military operations in Ukraine, the NATO airmen told CNN.

Among the major questions looming over the war has been whether Belarusian forces have directly entered the conflict to support Russia. But the NATO troops said they could not answer that — Belarus and Russia use the same Soviet-era MiG-29s, they said, so it is difficult to say in real time who is actually operating them. Ukrainian pilots also use the MiG-29s, they noted, so it is similarly unclear how contested Ukraine’s airspace has become.

Still, some signs are obvious, they say. For example, the jets flying into Ukraine from Russian-allied Belarus are clearly not Ukrainian.

The AWACS plane on which CNN flew Thursday is one of the few military assets owned by NATO itself, rather than donated by a member country, and the fleet of 14 AWACS planes together conduct nearly two dozen missions per week, spying more than 400 kilometers east to ensure that no unfriendly aircraft are headed toward NATO’s airspace.

The missions are routine but have become particularly “intense” since Russia invaded Ukraine, one of the co-pilots told CNN. NATO has stepped up its defense of the eastern flank members over the last several weeks, and Thursday’s surveillance flight was particularly long, requiring a midair refueling.

Read the full report here.

About 100,000 people have evacuated Ukraine through evacuation corridors in the past 2 days, Zelensky says

Karolina, who fled Poltava, waits with her son at a distribution center in Przemysl, Poland on March 10, to board a bus heading to Pforzheim.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said about 100,000 people have been evacuated via evacuation corridors over the past two days.

“One of the main tasks for us today was the organization of humanitarian corridors,” Zelensky said in a video address posted to Facebook late Thursday night. “Sumy, Trostyanets, Krasnopillya, Irpin, Bucha, Hostomel, Izium. Almost 40,000 people have already been evacuated this day. They were given safety at last. In Poltava, Kyiv, Cherkasy, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Lviv.”

He said humanitarian aid, food and medicine was delivered.

Mariupol and Volnovakha, however, remain completely blocked, he said, adding that despite Ukrainian officials’ best efforts to make the corridor work, “Russian troops did not cease fire.” Regardless of this, Zelensky said he still decided to send a convoy of trucks carrying food, water and medicine.

“But the invaders started a tank attack exactly in the area where this corridor was supposed to be. Corridor of life. For the people of Mariupol,” the president said.

Earlier on Thursday: Local authorities in the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol said Russian forces have begun dropping bombs on the “green corridor” designated to evacuate Mariupol residents.

“Right now, the air bombardment of Mariupol is underway,” said Petro Andryushchenko, the adviser to the mayor of Mariupol.

“They did it consciously. They knew what they were disrupting. They have a clear order to hold Mariupol hostage, to torture it, to carry out constant bombardment,” Zelensky said.

He added: “Today they destroyed the building of the main department of the State Emergency Service in the Donetsk region. Right next to this building was the place where Mariupol residents were to gather for evacuation”

Earlier in the day, the mayor of Mariupol, Vadym Boychenko, also issued a furious video message condemning what he calls Russia’s “cynical and destructive war against humanity” and said every 30 minutes the city was invaded by Russian forces. The mayor said humanitarian aid cannot get through to Mariupol for the sixth day in a row.

Zelensky noted that the state would continue trying to bring Mariupol the aid its people “so desperately need.”

Ukrainian authorities say 20,000 evacuated from Sumy region Thursday

Debris is seen next to houses destroyed by shelling, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Sumy, Ukraine March 8, in this picture obtained from social media.

Regional authorities in eastern Ukraine say 20,000 people were evacuated from the Sumy region in northeastern Ukraine Thursday.

Dmytro Lunin, head of the Poltava region administration, said that “20,000 people left the Sumy region through a green corridor. Buses from Sumy and Trostianets are already arriving in Lubny, from where the evacuees will travel by train to the west of the country.” 

CNN cannot independently verify the number of evacuees, but in recent days the Ukrainian authorities have said that tens of thousands of civilians have been evacuated through evacuation corridors from Sumy, including hundreds of foreign students. 

US senators in talks about taking aim at Russia's trade status and changing House bill

Bipartisan talks in the US Senate are taking shape to take more aggressive action on Russia’s trade status — after the White House effectively watered down the Russia bill that passed the House Wednesday night.

Initially, there had been a bipartisan and bicameral agreement to revoke the “permanent normal trade relations” (PNTR) that Russia and Belarus enjoy with the United States. But the White House objected to that language, so the bill that passed in the House — which would ban Russian energy imports — instead simply called for a review of Russia’s status in the World Trade Organization.

Now, Senate Finance Chairman Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, told CNN that he is engaging in talks with the top tax writers in Congress and the Biden administration about the matter, as pressure grows to include tougher language in the House bill when the Senate takes it up — as soon as next week.

GOP Sen. Mike Crapo from Idaho, the ranking Republican on the Finance Committee, said he probably wouldn’t support the House bill without stronger language on its trade status — and made clear there would be an effort to amend it.

US lawmakers expect to pass a $13.6 billion Ukraine aid package this week. Here's what is in it. 

US lawmakers are expected to pass a massive spending bill this week that would provide for a one-time $13.6 billion infusion of military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine as it fights back against Russia’s invasion.

The House of Representatives voted late Wednesday night to approve the legislation, and the Senate will need to pass it next.

The amount of money the bill includes for Ukraine increased as lawmakers negotiated over the past several days, growing from the $10 billion the White House had asked for last week.

Here’s a look at what is in the bill and how the Ukraine aid is expected to be spent:

  • About $6.5 billion in military aid so the US Department of Defense can deploy troops to the region and send defense equipment to Ukraine.
  • More than $4 billion in humanitarian aid to provide support for refugees fleeing Ukraine and people displaced within the country as well as provide emergency food assistance, health care and urgent support for vulnerable communities inside the region
  • Nearly $1.8 billion in economic aid to help respond to the financial needs in Ukraine and neighboring countries, like cybersecurity and energy issues.

The bill also calls for $25 million for the US Agency for Global Media, an independent federal agency, to combat disinformation in news broadcasts abroad.

Another $120 million would help support local Ukraine activists and journalists and promote accountability for Russian human rights violations.

Read more about the legislation here.

Mariupol mayor describes "two days of hell" after the bombing of a maternity hospital

The mayor of the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, Vadym Boychenko, has issued a furious video message, condemning Russia for its “cynical and destructive war against humanity.”

Boychenko spoke of “two days of hell” after the bombing of a maternity hospital on Wednesday in which at least three people died, including a child.

“It’s genocide that was created by the Russian army with Putin,” Boychenko said.

The mayor also said there is the “highest level of cynicism” around the evacuation corridors for civilians and humanitarian aid to pass.

“They cynically keep hostage of 400,000 Mariupol citizens that are waiting and hoping for a humanitarian corridor to open up,” he said in the video. “Humanitarian aid can’t get through to Mariupol for the sixth day now, although Russians claim it was peaceful and quiet in the occupied Mariupol. It’s the highest level of cynicism.”

Go Deeper

Russia’s bombing of maternity and children’s hospital an ‘atrocity,’ Zelensky says
Here are the companies pulling back from Russia
Why the US rejected Poland’s plan to send fighter jets to Ukraine
Here’s what’s in the $13.6 billion Ukraine aid package

Go Deeper

Russia’s bombing of maternity and children’s hospital an ‘atrocity,’ Zelensky says
Here are the companies pulling back from Russia
Why the US rejected Poland’s plan to send fighter jets to Ukraine
Here’s what’s in the $13.6 billion Ukraine aid package