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    HomePoliticsUkraine war divides Republicans heading into first GOP debate

    Ukraine war divides Republicans heading into first GOP debate


    President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits the Kharkiv region for the first time since Russia started attacks against his country, on May 29, 2022.

    Ukrainian Presidency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    WASHINGTON — The Republican primary debate in Milwaukee Wednesday is expected to showcase the deep divisions within the party over America’s role in the Russian war on Ukraine.

    Reflecting the diverse views of Republican voters, several of the party’s would-be presidential nominees support sending more lethal aid to bolster Ukraine’s war effort. These candidates also tend to view the conflict as a proxy war in defense of democracy around the world.

    But a roughly equal portion of the GOP field wants the United States to pivot away from Europe, and would press Ukraine to surrender its sovereign territory to Moscow, if that meant a quick end to the war.

    Members of this group want the United States to focus on confronting China’s global ambitions, containing North Korea’s nuclear program and further isolating Iran.

    A recent New York Times/Siena poll of Republican primary voters found that 53% opposed sending additional U.S. military and economic aid to Ukraine, while 44% of respondents supported it.

    What all the Republican candidates seem to agree upon, however, is that President Joe Biden has mismanaged the U.S. role in the war.

    As the Kremlin’s botched invasion drags into its 600th day, below is a primer on where each candidate stands on the bloodiest conflict on European soil since the Second World War.

    Donald Trump

    Former President Donald Trump claims without evidence that he could have prevented Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine by brokering a deal between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    During a January campaign speech in South Carolina, Trump fantasized about an “easy” peace deal, albeit one that hinged on Ukraine agreeing to surrender territory to Russia.

    “I could have negotiated. At worst, I could’ve made a deal to take over something, there are certain areas that are Russian-speaking areas, frankly, but you could’ve worked a deal,” Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity in March.

    The former president was impeached in 2019 for withholding U.S. foreign aid to Ukraine as leverage to coerce Zelenskyy into launching an investigation of the Biden family.

    Trump, who regularly dressed down the NATO alliance during his presidency, has also said that European countries should take the leading role in providing the majority of the financial and humanitarian support to Ukraine.

    Mike Pence

    Vivek Ramaswamy

    Nikki Haley

    The former governor of South Carolina and onetime ambassador to the United Nations has criticized Biden for not doing enough to support Ukraine, but she has not said what she would do differently as president.

    Biden has been “too slow and weak in helping Ukraine,” she said during a June speech at the American Enterprise Institute.

    “I don’t think we should be sending Ukraine money. I don’t think we need to put troops on the ground,” Haley said at a recent campaign stop. “But what we do need to do is get with our allies and make sure they have the equipment and ammunition they need to win.”

    “If Ukraine wins this war, it will send a message to China and Taiwan. It will send a message to North Korea testing ballistic missiles, and it will send a message to Iran,” she added.

    Tim Scott

    Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina has slammed Biden for doing “a terrible job explaining and articulating to the American people” why the U.S. needs to support Ukraine.

    “As president of the United States, I would clearly state America’s national, vital interest includes degrading the Russian military,” Scott told NBC News.

    “The more we degrade the Russian military, the less likely there is to be an attack on our sovereign territory. And it protects our NATO partners,” he added.

    Last year, Scott wrote in an op-ed that the conflict in Ukraine was a “fight for the heart of Europe and for the principles that America has always championed — democracy and freedom for all.”

    “If the United States is to live up to its reputation as a beacon of democracy, now is the time to stand with president Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people as their courage galvanizes the fight for freedom around the world,” wrote Scott.

    Ron DeSantis

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis believes America’s military support for Ukraine is not in the best interests of the United States.

    DeSantis has called the conflict, in which 9,000 civilians have been killed and six million displaced, a “territorial dispute” during an interview with Fox News earlier this year. He later walked back his remarks amid pushback from fellow Republicans.

    “NATO needs to do more,” DeSantis said in June. “They should really be taking the lead in ensuring the security of the continent.”

    Chris Christie

    The former New Jersey governor was the second Republican candidate to visit Ukraine after Pence.

    Christie’s August trip included a visit to Bucha, a village whose residents gave some of the first large-scale accounts of torture, rape and executions under Russian occupation.

    “I don’t think there’s anyone in our country who would come here and see this and not feel as if these are the things that America needs to stand up to prevent,” Christie told reporters in Bucha.

    “I think the way we need to look at this as a proxy war with China. The Chinese are supplying the Russians with money by buying their oil. The Chinese are providing drones to the Iranians, and the Iranians are using those drones to kill soldiers in Ukraine,” Christie said during a June CNN town hall.

    Francis Suarez

    Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has called for NATO allies to do more in Ukraine, but has yet to detail what that means.

    In March, he slammed fellow Floridian Ron DeSantis over his position on the war, writing in the National Review, “it doesn’t take a Harvard lawyer to see that the war in Ukraine is not a territorial dispute.” DeSantis has a law degree from Harvard.

    Evoking his Cuban American heritage, Suarez framed the conflict in Ukraine as war against authoritarianism, a “moral and geopolitical struggled between two competing visions of the world.”

    “I know firsthand about the tactics and methods of communist regimes,” wrote Suarez.

    Will Hurd

    Doug Burgum

    Asa Hutchinson

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchison has leveled criticism at the Biden administration for not supplying weapons quickly enough to Ukraine, like F-16 fighter jets and Abrams tanks.

    “If we stand by and let this nation falter, it leaves a hostile Russia on the doorstep of our NATO allies,” he tweeted on the one year anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.





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