Biden Seeks $21 Billion for Ukraine; Polish President Says Helping Ukraine Now won’t Cost American Lives
Despite growing opposition to America’s
continued support for Ukraine as it battles russian invaders in this
predestined existential war, President Biden on Thursday asked Congress to
provide more than $13 billion in emergency defense aid to Ukraine and an
additional $8 billion for humanitarian support through the end of the year, which
constitutes another massive infusion of cash as the bloody russian
invasion wears on for 18 months and Ukraine pushes a counteroffensive against
the kremlin’s deeply entrenched forces.
A political abyss on the issue has
steadily grown, with the Republican-led House facing enormous pressure to
demonstrate support for the party’s leader, Donald Trump and other right
wingers, who have opposed helping Ukraine in the war. And American support for
the effort has been slowly softening.
White House budget director Shalanda
Young, in a letter to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, urged swift action to
follow through on the U.S. “commitment to the Ukrainian peoples’ defense of
their homeland and to democracy around the world” as well as other needs. Additionally,
the White House is seeking to put credence on the President’s commitment to will
help Ukraine “as long as it takes” to oust Russia from its borders. However,
privately, according to the Associated Press, administration officials have
warned Ukrainian officials that there is a limit to the patience of a narrowly
divided Congress — and American public — for the costs of a war with no clear
end.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY),
said in a statement there was strong bipartisan support in the U.S. Senate.
“The latest request from the Biden
administration shows America’s continued commitment to helping Americans here
at home and our friends abroad,” he said. “We hope to join with our Republican
colleagues this fall to avert an unnecessary government shutdown and fund this
critical emergency supplemental request.”
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky, who has championed of support for Ukraine, was more subdued.
“I look forward to carefully reviewing
the Administration’s request to make sure it is necessary and appropriate,”
McConnell said in a statement, “to keep America safe, secure our borders,
support our allies, and help communities rebuild after disasters.”
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) released a
statement urging Congress to swiftly pass critical funding for disaster relief
programs while separately considering military aid for Ukraine.
White House national security spokesman
John Kirby juxtaposed the dollar cost of supporting Ukraine against russian
subjugation of the entire country, stating “For people who might be concerned
the costs are getting too high, we’d ask them what the costs — not just in
treasure but in blood, perhaps even American blood — could be if Putin
subjugates Ukraine.”
The U.S. has approved four rounds of
aid to Ukraine in response to russia’s invasion, totaling about $113
billion, with some of that money going toward replenishment of U.S. military
equipment that was sent to the frontlines. Congress approved the latest
round of aid in December, totaling roughly $45 billion for Ukraine and
NATO allies. While the package was designed to last through the end of the
fiscal year in September, much depends upon events on the ground.
“We remain confident that we’ll be able
to continue to support Ukraine for as long as it takes,” said Pentagon press secretary
Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder.
On the other side of the world, among the
former captive nations of russian subjugation, support for Ukraine is very
strong. The countries of Eastern Europe and the Baltic States are adamant about
the need for Ukraine’s victory and are providing it with a variety of arms and
equipment. Furthermore, due to the mobilization of belarusian troops on its
western border, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland have responded by stepping up
their security forces deployment.
In an interview with The Washington Post,
Polish President Andrzej Duda said American elected officials that are opposed
to helping Ukraine defeat russian aggression fail to understand the genuine threat
of renewed russian imperialism.
“It is very simple,” Duda told The Post’s
Marc A. Thiessen. “Right now, Russian imperialism can be stopped cheaply,
because American soldiers are not dying.” But if we don’t put a halt to Russian
aggression now, “there will be a very high price to be paid.”
Duda reminded that Poles have experienced
600 years of Russian efforts to subjugate them and their neighbors. In the 18th
century, Russia helped partition Poland, wiping it off the map for 123 years.
In 1920, the Bolsheviks attacked “in the hope of spreading communism across the
whole of Europe” but were stopped by Polish forces in the Battle of Warsaw.
In 1939, the Soviets attacked again alongside Nazi Germany and “Stalin seized
half of Poland, bringing it under Soviet occupation” — until Hitler turned on
his Soviet allies. Then in 1945, the Red Army retook Poland and “pushed the
German occupiers out only to replace them with their own occupation,” resulting
in “an additional 44 years behind the Iron Curtain.”
Thiessen continued that now, Duda says,
we are witnessing a “resurgence of Russian imperialism” — starting with
Moscow’s 2008 invasion of Georgia, its 2014 attack on Ukraine, its full-scale
invasion last year — and its “repeated threats directed at the Baltic states,
Poland and all of Central Europe.” Vladimir Putin and his cronies “are dreaming
of power of the tsars and the restoration of czarist territory.” We must stop russia’s
advance in Ukraine now “so that it does not come to pass, as it did in World
War I and World War II, that American soldiers have to shed their blood and to
lose their lives in Europe to restore peace and liberty to the world.”
Despite the growing winds of opposition,
Theissen wrote that Duda’s bold support for Ukraine is politically courageous. However,
he didn’t state it, this bold support is echoed in the capitals of the Baltic
States. Theissen stated “unfortunately, in the United States, most of the
leading Republican presidential candidates are not showing similar courage. Is
Duda worried what will happen to American support for Ukraine if Republicans
win in 2024?
“No,” Duda told him, “I have no doubt
that the United States understands perfectly the threat posed by russian
imperialism.”
“And it is my profound belief that the
United States also understands how important it is to make sure that democracy
does not disappear from Central Europe. Everyone knows that where russia is,
there is no democracy.”
Indeed, and the leaders and peoples of
Eastern Europe know well that if Ukraine fails, if Ukraine is defeated by
russia, then they too will fail and russia will occupy them again and restore the
iron curtain. Is that the world that the Republicans and right wingers are
supporting?
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