Secretary of State Antony Blinken stressed Thursday the "urgent" need for the US Congress to pass a new military aid package for Kyiv as he met Ukraine's foreign minister.

Blinken held talks with Dmytro Kuleba during a meeting of ministers from the Group of Seven countries -- Italy, France, Germany, the UK, the US, Japan and Canada -- in the Italian island of Capri.

They are due to discuss support for Ukraine at a session later Thursday.

"At this moment, it is urgent that all of the friends and supporters of Ukraine maximise their efforts to provide... Ukraine with what it needs to continue to effectively defend itself against the Russian aggression," Blinken said.

An Italian diplomatic source, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the G7, said the aim was to accelerate the delivery of air defence systems to Kyiv.

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The US House of Representatives is expected to vote Saturday on new military aid, including some $61 billion in long-delayed support for Ukraine.

"Virtually all of the supplement budget requests that are being asked will go into defence production in the United States, building our own defence industrial base and helping to provide good jobs in the United States," Blinken said.

He highlighted the "profound stakes that the United States has in Ukraine's success. If (Russian President Vladimir) Putin is allowed to proceed with impunity, we know he won't stop at Ukraine".

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Zelensky said he had met Burns on multiple occasions throughout the war, but their meetings had been undisclosed.

Kubela underlined the necessity of agreeing an aid package "that will literally, without exaggeration, help save Ukrainians from Russian missile slaughter".

"This is a matter of death and life for thousands of people, and in a broader sense, it’s a matter of Ukraine’s survival in this struggle against much stronger enemy."

He noted the Russian missile strike on Ukraine's historic city of Chernigiv on Wednesday, killing at least 18 people.

"The tragedy is that these kind of attacks happen almost every day in Ukraine. This is the reality that we live in," Kuleba said.

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Germany at the weekend announced it was sending an additional Patriot air defence system to Ukraine after pleas from Kyiv for its Western backer to urgently help foil Russian attacks.

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