Ukraine Aid in Peril as Senate Republicans walk out of heated Briefing
Republican Senators Deb Fischer and Mitt Romney left the classified briefing on the Biden administration defense spending package visibly frustrated. The package includes aid for Ukraine and Israel, and the senators, among others, left early, expressing dissatisfaction with the lack of answers to their questions on Ukraine. Their frustration is compounded by the Democrats refusal to address Republican demands for changes to immigration policy within the legislation.
The immigration policy dispute, seemingly unrelated to the defense package, poses a threat to the approximately $113 billion proposal, which covers funding for the U.S. southern border, Indo-Pacific security partners, and Ukraine aid. The disagreement raises concerns about the continuation of Congress providing support to Ukraine in its conflict with Russia, despite previous bipartisan Senate Republican backing for a defense supplemental package.
Senator Fischer, who has been a supporter of aid to Kyiv, voiced her discontent with the administration handling of the Ukraine aid request. She criticized the decision to seek supplemental funding rather than including it in the base budget proposal, emphasizing the longstanding issues related to Ukraine munitions.
During the briefing, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was expected to address senators via video, but the session was canceled for unspecified reasons. In September, Zelenskyy had warned that Ukraine could lose the war without continued foreign assistance.
The Biden administration is running out of funds, with less than $5 billion in presidential drawdown authority for transferring weapons to Ukraine and $1 billion to replenish already sent weapons. The director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, Shalanda Young, warned that these funds would be depleted by the end of the year.
Senator Roger Wicker, a proponent of Ukraine aid, expressed concern about the supplemental passing and found the administration answers lacking on previous issues related to munitions reluctance. He emphasized the importance of passing the supplemental to support Israel, Ukraine, deter war in the Pacific, address the southern border, and address the inadequate submarine-industrial base.
The ongoing partisan fight over immigration policy, with House Republicans linking it to Ukraine aid, has created uncertainty about the fate of the defense package. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer scheduled a procedural vote, but its success is doubtful without Republican support. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell stated that the Republican caucus would vote against it without the desired immigration policy changes.
Despite McConnell previous support for Ukraine aid, the Heritage Action lobbying wing urged House Speaker Mike Johnson to oppose the aid unless the administration provides a detailed plan for Ukraine, addressing the end goal, U.S. commitment, and the impact of presidential drawdown authority.
Senator Chris Murphy expressed frustration with the lack of seriousness from Republicans, emphasizing the critical stakes for Ukraine existence. The proposed Senate bill allocates funds for Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, military training, intelligence sharing, and support for Israel. It also includes provisions for the munitions-industrial base and funding for the trilateral AUKUS agreement.