“The people of Ukraine will be most grateful if this support is delivered as fast as it is necessary and it continues as long as it is necessary,” Mr. Kuleba said. “Time really matters.”
Millions of Ukrainians face the prospect of a winter without heat, and the aid discussion is focusing as much on transformers, circuit breakers and surge arresters as on tanks, artillery and air-defense systems. On Tuesday, American officials pledged to give Ukraine $53 million to repair the electrical grid, and sought to rally other allies to make similar offers.
Russia’s military has sent wave after wave of missiles and drones to hit Ukraine’s transmission grid, including high-voltage transformer stations, which are more vulnerable than power plants. One senior American official estimated that 25 to 30 percent of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure had been damaged, though Ukrainian officials have put the figure much higher in recent days.
Western officials say the Ukrainian energy reconstruction campaign should be considered a second front in the war. The American pledge on Tuesday came from Mr. Blinken at a meeting of Group of 7 nations and a few other partner countries, on the sidelines of the NATO conclave.
Diplomats from more than 30 nations gathered in Bucharest, Romania, where the NATO secretary general made clear that the alliance might one day expand to include Ukraine — a stance opposed by Mr. Putin.