âThis is a catastropheâ: Ukraine reacts to US military aid pause

Ukrainians have voiced their shock and dismay at the US pausing its military aid to the country â what one politician called a âdangerousâ situation.
âWeâll see very soon the serious consequences â dangerous consequences,â Oleksandr Merezhko, who chairs the Ukrainian parliamentâs foreign affairs committee, told BBC Breakfast on Tuesday.
Merezhko said the pause could start having an impact on the ground as soon as âin the coming daysâ.
Ukraine woke up to the news on Tuesday that the US was âpausing and reviewingâ its military aid. A White House official told the BBCâs US news partner CBS that its reason for doing so was to âensure that it is contributing to a solutionâ.
âThe President has been clear that he is focused on peace. We need our partners to be committed to that goal as well,â the White House official added.
While US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky have yet to comment, some Ukrainian MPs have come out to call the decision âdisastrousâ.
âWhen we are in desperate need of American weaponry, of American support⊠[it] looks like siding with Russiaâ to end it now, Merezhko said.
âIâm appealing to Mr Trump not to play with these dangerous issues because weâre talking about lives.â
Merezhko said the decision also shines âa new lightâ on the Oval Office spat on Friday between Zelensky and the US president and vice-president, which Merezhko called âan attempt to find justificationâ to stop the military aid.
âIt was a show, you know, deliberately played,â he added.
Close to Ukraineâs western border with Poland, there are frequent, police-escorted convoys of military aid which crawl their way to the frontlines â a lifeline of armour and ammunition for exhausted troops.
For Kyiv, the pause amounts to the blocking of a major lifeline. The last time this happened â because of political disagreements in the US Congress â Zelensky said Ukraine directly lost lives and land as a result.
One Ukrainian advocacy group said Trump was âhanging Ukrainians out to dry and giving Russia the green light to keep marching west.â
Questions also remain unanswered over whether Ukraine will still receive ammunition for American weapons already delivered, or whether Washington will continue to share intelligence with Kyiv.
Ukrainian MP Volodymyr Aryev called the pause a âvery painful blowâ. MP Oleksiy Honcharenko said it was a âcatastropheâ they saw coming, but argued that ânot all is lostâ.
Ukrainian blogger and activist Yuri Kasyanov said: âRoosevelt and Churchill are turning in their graves. America has sided with the global evil.â
Another blogger, Leonid Shvets, responded sarcastically: âThank you America! You have gone mad.â
Reactions from Ukraineâs European allies have also started coming in.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is yet to directly respond to the pause, but Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner told BBC Radio 4âs Today programme it was âa matter for the US⊠we are focused on supporting Ukraine, bringing the US around the tableâ.
She said Sir Keir would not âconduct dialogue on open airwavesâ, adding that the UK government had ramped up its support for Ukraine in recent days and is committed to peace, like she believes the US is.
Franceâs Europe minister, Benjamin Haddad, was more forward on the issue.
Speaking on French TV, he said the pause made peace a more remote idea, âbecause it would only strengthen the hand of the aggressor on the ground â Russia.â