Analysis
Republicans’ topsy-turvy take on aid for Ukraine
reveals party in thrall to Trump
Lauren
Gambino
in
Washington
Defense hawks such as Lindsey Graham who once demanded
greater backing for Kyiv are now toeing the America First line
Tue 13 Feb
2024 21.02 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/feb/13/republicans-ukraine-aid-analysis-trump
Nearly a
decade ago, as Russian troops entered the Crimean peninsula, congressional
Republicans were in uproar, blaming Moscow’s land grab on what they claimed was
a retreat from American leadership by then president Barack Obama. Loudest
among the Republican critics was the South Carolina senator Lindsey Graham, who
assailed Obama as a “weak, indecisive leader”.
In a
pre-dawn vote on Tuesday, Graham joined the majority of Senate Republicans in
opposing a foreign aid package that would rush wartime assistance to Ukraine as
it approaches the second anniversary of Russia’s full invasion.
It was a
shocking – if not entirely surprising – turn for one of the chamber’s leading
defense hawks and a steadfast Russia critic. But these days Graham has another
distinction: he is one of Donald Trump’s most loyal allies on Capitol Hill,
where the former president – and likely Republican nominee – has been whipping
up opposition to Ukraine’s war effort.
Just 22
Republican senators broke with Trump to approve the aid package for Ukraine,
Israel and other US allies – yet another sign of how thoroughly the former
president’s America First vision has supplanted the party’s consensus toward
internationalism and interventionism.
There has
long been an isolationist strain among hardline Republicans who contend that
investment in foreign entanglements risks bringing the US closer to war and
diverts money away from domestic challenges. But then Trump came to power and
sidelined the defense hawks, ushering in a dramatic shift in Republican
sentiment toward America’s allies and adversaries.
Nearly half
of Republicans and right-leaning independents said the US was providing too
much aid to Ukraine, according to a survey by the Pew Research Center conducted
late last year. This share rose sharply from the early stages of the war
following Russia’s invasion in February 2022.
In his
statement on Monday night, Graham insisted that he still supported Ukraine but
said unless and until lawmakers turn the $95bn military assistance package into
a “loan instead of a grant”, he would oppose it.
It echoed
comments Trump made over the weekend, in an all-caps social media post
addressed to the US Senate, in which he said foreign aid should be structured
as a loan, not a “giveaway”. Later in a campaign speech, Trump rattled American
allies in Europe when he claimed that he would encourage Russia to attack Nato
allies who did not pay enough to maintain the security alliance.
But in
Washington, most Republicans dismissed or downplayed the remark.
“I was here
when he was president. He didn’t undermine or destroy Nato,” senator Marco
Rubio, a Florida Republican who sponsored legislation to block a US president
from unilaterally withdrawing from Nato, told reporters. The senator, who built
a reputation as a defense hawk, voted against the military assistance measure
on Tuesday.
The bill,
which includes $60bn for Ukraine, divided the Senate Republican leadership.
From the Senate floor, Senator Mitch McConnell, the top Republican, delivered
increasingly urgent pleas for his conference to rise to the occasion and
support America’s allies, even after his plan to tie border security to foreign
aid collapsed, torpedoed by Trump’s opposition.
“This is
about rebuilding the arsenal of democracy and demonstrating to our allies and
adversaries alike that we’re serious about exercising American strength,”
McConnell said. “American assistance with these efforts is not charity. It’s an
investment in cold, hard US interests.”
McConnell’s
deputy, John Thune of South Dakota, voted for the measure, while John Barrasso
of Wyoming, the No 3 Senate Republican, opposed it. Barrasso has endorsed Trump
for president.
In a floor
speech, Senator Rand Paul, who led the effort to delay the measure, accused
McConnell, a fellow Republican from Kentucky, of collaborating with Democrats
to “loot the Treasury”. He panned McConnell’s argument that bolstering
Ukraine’s defense was critical to American national security as “ludicrous”.
The Ohio
senator JD Vance, another Trump loyalist, claimed the effort to replenish
Ukraine’s war chest was a “plot” by the Republican establishment to “stop the
election of Donald Trump”. Meanwhile, some arch-conservatives suggested it was
time for McConnell to step down.
Now the
bill goes to the House, where the speaker, Mike Johnson, must tread carefully
not to meet the same fate as his prematurely deposed predecessor. Johnson
indicated that he was unlikely to bring the measure to the floor for a vote
because it lacks border enforcement measures. But just last week he announced
that he would refuse to bring a version of the bill that included a border
security deal because the Trump-allied hardliners who hold outsized power over
his thin majority were wary of handing Joe Biden anything that resembled a
political victory.
House
Democrats and the remaining pro-Ukraine House Republicans are casting about
behind the scenes for a solution. But there are many political and logistical
hurdles to overcome before a majority bloc not accustomed to working together
in the tribal House comes together to circumvent Johnson – and by extension
Trump.
“If it were
to get to the floor, it would pass,” congressman Andy Biggs, a member of the
hardline House Freedom caucus and a staunch opponent of the aid package, told a
conservative radio host on Tuesday morning. “Let’s just be frank about that.”
But until
the bill reaches Biden’s desk, Biggs’s admission is cold comfort to American
allies waiting for Congress to act.
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