A Ukrainian counteroffensive may conclude by the end of the summer if Ukraine receives the weapons it needs, Major General Dmytro Marchenko of the Ukrainian Armed Forces told Radio Liberty on Wednesday.
“I am just a realist… but the fact is that it will not end quickly,” Marchenko said in response to a question about when ongoing hostilities might end. “In some places we will lose time, let [the Russians] dig in more, so [the fighting] will be longer,” he added.
The Major General also stressed that a "point of no return" had been reached on the issue of peace agreements with Russia. “Why this pile of deaths?... At the very beginning, it was possible to stop all this at the stage of negotiations. But after what [the Russians] did, we passed the point of no return,” Marchenko said.
He added that Ukraine has the pace and desire to finish the war. “Just give us some weapons and we will do it.”
With the U.S. announcing $1 billion more in military aid on Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was quick to thank President Joe Biden during a phone conversation on the same day. Zelenskyy expressed gratitude to Biden for his leadership position in supporting Ukraine's struggle for freedom and for his unwavering backing of Ukraine's independence and territorial integrity.
"The security support from the United States is unprecedented. It brings us closer to a common victory over the Russian aggressor," Zelenskyy said, noting the importance and timeliness of the new military aid package.
"We also appreciate the significant financial and macroeconomic support for Ukraine from the United States. It helps us endure this war," the Ukrainian president said in reference to the $225 million in humanitarian assistance Biden pledged to Ukraine on Wednesday.
"We must win this war and return our occupied territories. This will be our common victory," Zelenskyy concluded.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also thanked the U.S. for its leadership in mobilizing and coordinating international security support for Ukraine that addresses the country's urgent needs for military equipment.
Speaking at the meeting of the U.S.-led Ukraine Defence Contact Group at the NATO Headquarters in Brussels on Wednesday, Stoltenberg welcomed the new round of military aid to Ukraine announced by NATO Allies. On top of the U.S. package, Germany has promised to provide Ukraine with 3 MLRSs while Slovakia pledged to deliver several helicopters and rocket launcher ammunition. Canada, Poland and the Netherlands all promised to boost the short-handed Ukrainian artillery.
“NATO as an organization is stepping up its support,” Stoltenberg said. He added that NATO Allies are committed to continue providing Ukraine with the military equipment it needs to prevail, including heavy weapons and long-range systems.
The Secretary General said that the Allies will agree on a new comprehensive assistance package for Ukraine at the Madrid Summit in late June. This will help Ukraine in the longer-term to transition from Soviet-era equipment to modern NATO weaponry and to enhance interoperability with NATO, Stoltenberg pointed out.
President Zelenskyy confirmed his attendance at the Madrid Summit in a tweet from Wednesday.
-ABC News' Edward Szekeres, Max Uzol, Yuriy Zaliznyak and Yulia Drozd