Since the beginning of 2024, the United StatesFootnote 1 and twenty-three other countries have entered into bilateral security agreements with Ukraine.Footnote 2 Additional pacts are under negotiation.Footnote 3 The agreements, which are with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member countries as well as Japan and the European Union,Footnote 4 realize a G7 leaders’ pledge (subsequently endorsed by twenty-five other states) made on the margins of the July 2023 NATO summit in Vilnius.Footnote 5 The pacts comprise political commitments to provide Ukraine with security assistance and economic aid in its fight against Russia. They are part of a series of steps that more closely align and integrate Ukraine into Euro-Atlantic institutions, including the European Union and NATO, without yet offering it membership in those organizations. “Our goal is to strengthen Ukraine's credible defense and deterrence capabilities for the long term,” President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. said shortly after he and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signed the U.S.-Ukraine accord during the 2024 G7 summit.Footnote 6 Zelensky remarked that it was “very important for all Ukrainians and for all Europeans to know that there will be no security deficit in Europe, which tempts the aggressor to war and makes the future uncertain.”Footnote 7 The U.S.-Ukraine agreement's success in the coming years will depend on the continued commitment of the Executive Branch and sustained financial support from Congress.
At the Vilnius summit, NATO leaders agreed that “Ukraine's future is in NATO,”Footnote 8 and they took steps to accelerate Ukraine's pathway for joining the organization and provide for its security in the meantime. NATO exempted Ukraine from having to complete the usual Membership Action Plan process, replaced the NATO-Ukraine Commission with a Council (an upgrade meant to “demonstrate[] the strengthening of political ties and Ukraine's increasing integration with NATO”),Footnote 9 and agreed to develop the Comprehensive Assistance Package (in place since 2016 and bolstered in 2022) into a multi-year military assistance program that would “help rebuild the Ukrainian security and defence sector and transition Ukraine towards full interoperability with NATO.”Footnote 10 Still, a specific timetable for Ukraine's accession (a promise that was first made in 2008) was not set.Footnote 11 The summit communiqué only indicated that the alliance would be “in a position to extend an invitation to Ukraine to join [the organization] . . . when [the] Allies agree and conditions are met.”Footnote 12 Taking a more cautious position on Ukraine's membership than many NATO allies,Footnote 13 President Biden reportedly believes that Ukraine is not yet ready for membership, citing concerns about governance, including corruption.Footnote 14 He also apparently fears that accession during the current conflict would, under the North Atlantic Treaty's mutual defense guarantee, commit the United States to war with Russia.Footnote 15
With NATO membership not in the offing, G7 leaders vowed “to formalize—through bilateral security commitments . . . —[their] enduring support to Ukraine as it defends its sovereignty and territorial integrity, rebuilds its economy, protects its citizens, and pursues integration into the Euro-Atlantic community.”Footnote 16 The G7 declaration outlined the contents of the contemplated agreements, including commitments to: “[e]nsuring a sustainable force capable of defending Ukraine now and deterring Russian aggression in the future”; “[s]trengthening Ukraine's economic stability and resilience,” “[p]roviding technical and financial support for Ukraine's immediate needs stemming from Russia's war”; “[i]n the event of future Russian armed attack, . . . immediately consult[ing] with Ukraine to determine appropriate next steps”; and “provid[ing] Ukraine with swift and sustained security assistance, modern military equipment across land, sea and air domains, and economic assistance.”Footnote 17 Similar bilateral security agreements had been entered into in 2022 between Finland and Sweden and many NATO countries, including the United States, pending their accession to NATO, though those agreements were made after Finland and Sweden were offered and had accepted membership and no membership offer has yet been made to Ukraine.Footnote 18 A Kremlin spokesperson called the G7 declaration “a mistake . . . [that] can be very dangerous,” and he warned G7 members that, “by providing security guarantees to Ukraine, they are encroaching on Russia's security.”Footnote 19
The U.S.-Ukraine agreement, which is modeled in part on the Comprehensive Security Integration and Prosperity Agreement entered into between the United States and Bahrain,Footnote 20 focuses predominantly on defense and security cooperation, though it also includes provisions on economic recovery and cooperation to promote Ukrainian institutional reforms.Footnote 21 An executive agreement under U.S. law, the text does not establish specific performance obligations, except the one described below concerning consultations in the event of future Russian aggression. Instead, the agreement embodies political commitments (explicitly, on occasion, referring to the “policy of the United States”).Footnote 22 Nonetheless, the White House described the text as “sending a powerful signal of our strong support for Ukraine now and into the future” and, together with the other bilateral security agreements, “a key part of Ukraine's bridge to NATO membership.”Footnote 23
The agreement's security provisions “are intended to support Ukraine's efforts to win today's war and deter future Russian military aggression.”Footnote 24 Avoiding any specific commitments pertaining to the current armed conflict between Ukraine and Russia, the agreement provides that “[a]ny future aggression or threat of aggression against the sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity of either” Ukraine or the United States would be considered “a matter of grave concern [by] the other Party.”Footnote 25 If, under such circumstances, there were an “armed attack or threat of armed attack against Ukraine,” the parties commit to “immediately meet, where possible within 24 hours, at the most senior levels to determine appropriate next steps and additional defense needs.”Footnote 26 The agreement identifies ten forms of cooperation, including “[p]rovision of defense articles and services,” “[c]ombined military maneuvers and exercises,” and “[i]ncreased defense industrial cooperation.”Footnote 27 An annex to the agreement elaborates upon implementation of defense and security cooperation, particularly in the three areas just noted.Footnote 28 The agreement does not, however, “give rise to rights or obligations under domestic or international law,” and its implementation is explicitly made “subject to the availability of appropriated funds.”Footnote 29
Beyond security, the agreement promotes economic recovery and reform, including through calls for cooperation in identifying strategic investment opportunities and strengthening Ukraine's civilian nuclear energy sector.Footnote 30 Other provisions identify areas in which the United States and Ukraine will cooperate to reform Ukrainian institutions in line with requirements for accession to the European Union and NATO membership.Footnote 31
The conclusion of the U.S.-Ukraine agreement followed the passage in April 2024 of the delayed Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, a $61 billion aid package.Footnote 32 The agreement's announcement took place concurrently with the G7's decision, at its 2024 summit in Italy, to issue a $50 billion loan to Ukraine that would be repaid from the interest and profits on the hundreds of billions of dollars of Russian frozen assets held by the West.Footnote 33 Previously, the European Union had agreed only to use the assets’ interest to support Ukraine, not as security for a loan.Footnote 34 The unveiling of the agreement was also coordinated with the expansion of U.S. sanctions against those supporting Russia's war effort, including against foreign financial institutions that conduct transactions with designated Russian banks and other sanctioned entities.Footnote 35
A year after the NATO meeting in Vilnius where the G7 had called for the bilateral security agreements, leaders gathered in Washington, DC to mark the alliance's seventy-fifth anniversary. There, they affirmed that “Ukraine's future is in NATO” and that the country was on an “irreversible path to full Euro-Atlantic integration, including NATO membership.”Footnote 36 They announced the creation of a new command, the NATO Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine (NSATU), which will take over some of the responsibilities of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a coalition of NATO and other states, led by the United States, that has been coordinating military aid since the beginning of the war.Footnote 37 The NATO leaders' Washington Declaration was quick to explain that NSATU “will operate in Allied states [to] . . . support Ukraine's self-defence in line with the UN Charter” and “will not, under international law, make NATO a party to the conflict.”Footnote 38 NATO members also announced a Pledge of Long-Term Security Assistance for Ukraine, “affirm[ing] [their] determination to support Ukraine in building a force capable of defeating Russian aggression today and deterring it in the future.”Footnote 39
The day after NATO's Washington summit, President Biden launched a new initiative—the Ukraine Compact—marking the year since the G7 called for the negotiation of bilateral security agreements. Signed by Ukraine, the European Union, and the twenty-four countries that have concluded agreements with Ukraine to date, the compact, according to the White House, “fulfills the promise . . . made in Vilnius in 2023 . . . to support Ukraine as it defends itself now, and to deter aggression against Ukraine in the future as part of its bridge to NATO membership.”Footnote 40 President Biden remarked at the compact's announcement that it establishes a “unified, coordinated, and comprehensive architecture to support Ukraine not just for now but for years in the future.”Footnote 41 The document contains no new commitments, including with regard to accession to NATO, but the signatories collectively avowed that “the security of Ukraine is integral to the security of the Euro-Atlantic region and beyond, and that [they] intend to support Ukraine until it prevails against Russia's aggression.”Footnote 42