One of the senior military bigwigs remarked: "The juncture starts now and it just keeps getting worse progressively through the spring and into summer. So, this period that we are entering is … critical," especially since the Russians have successfully taken over Avdiivka in the eastern Donetsk region. There is a great possibility that they could get to other areas if more weapons, especially artillery ammunition, don't arrive soon. (Related: Kyiv is running out of ammunition as Western aid packages hit roadblocks.) Earlier in February, U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan warned that the Ukrainian troops were running out of ammunition and urged Congress to pass additional funding. President Joe Biden has blamed congressional inaction. He said that not passing the "spending bill" was what was responsible for "Russia's first notable gains in months. U.S. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby also alerted that Avdiivka was at risk of falling to Russian hands because the U.S. had "not been able to provide Ukraine with the artillery shells that they desperately need to disrupt these Russian assaults." The U.S. government also criticized Iran for supporting Russia. In a memo shared with Reuters, U.S. Deputy Press Secretary and Senior Communications Adviser Andrew Bates said that Tehran was "actively enabling Russia's war in Ukraine and its attacks against Ukrainian cities." Speaking at a virtual briefing with reporters, Kirby said that he was yet to see confirmation that Iranian missiles had been delivered to Russia, although the signs are that this is, at least, imminent. The Biden administration has meanwhile warned Tehran of a "swift and severe" response if those weapons are shipped to Russia. Putin's people had also begun to receive "hundreds” of Iranian ballistic missiles, according to reports, to bolster its dwindling ballistic missile arsenal, which has already wrought considerable destruction on Ukraine. Meanwhile, Ukrainians denied that their forces had lost control of Krynky, a bridgehead on the Russian-occupied side of the Dnipro River. The Ukrainian Armed Forces claim that Russian forces assaulted Krynky but suffered "significant losses" and retreated.⚡️ABC News: Ukraine could face 'catastrophic' arms shortage within weeks, US officials say.https://t.co/5H9RTWNbKs
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) February 22, 2024
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