The Daily Telegraph

Cameron warns US of ‘weakness’ against Putin

Foreign Secretary insists the West has ‘resources and economic might’ to halt Russian war machine

- By Nick Gutteridge Whitehall Correspond­ent

LORD CAMERON has warned the US Congress not to repeat the mistakes of the 1930s by blocking a multi-billion pound aid package for Ukraine.

The Foreign Secretary said the West must not “show the weakness displayed against Hitler” in an unusually blunt interventi­on into American politics.

In an article for The Hill, an influentia­l Washington DC newspaper read by Capitol Hill policymake­rs and insiders, he warned that approving support for Kyiv was “a matter of global security”.

But his overtures were immediatel­y rejected by a Donald Trump-supporting Republican, who last night told him to “kiss my a--”.

Marjorie Taylor Green, a fierce ally of the former president, who is urging his party to block Ukraine funding, said: “We’re all sick of the absurd name calling, it isn’t going to bully me into funding the war in Ukraine.”

Lord Cameron wrote his article as he embarked on a three-day tour of EU nations yesterday to drum up extra financial and military backing for Ukraine.

A proposed US aid package worth $95billion (£75 billion) passed the Senate, the upper chamber of Congress, by a 70-29 vote on Tuesday. But the bill now all but doomed in the House of Representa­tives where the Republican speaker, Mike Johnson, has refused to bring it to the floor.

Republican members, backed by Mr Trump, have refused to support the legislatio­n until action is taken to boost security at the Us-mexico border.

Lord Cameron’s article will be seen as a direct challenge to supporters of the former president who are bolding up the package for domestic reasons.

In it he said the West faces “a simple test” of will against Vladimir Putin, who thinks he can outlast the US and its allies as “he believes we are weak”.

“As Congress debates and votes on this funding package for Ukraine, I am going to drop all diplomatic niceties. I urge Congress to pass it,” he wrote.

“I believe our joint history shows the folly of giving in to tyrants in Europe who believe in redrawing boundaries by force. I do not want us to show the weakness displayed against Hitler in the 1930s. He came back for more, costing us far more lives to stop his aggression.”

Lord Cameron said the West had displayed the same “weakness” when it failed to act after Russia’s invasion of Georgia in 2008.

Meanwhile, the “uncertaint­y of the response” to the annexation of Crimea in 2014 had seen Putin “coming back to cost us far more with his aggression in 2022”.

“I want us to show the strength displayed since 2022, as the West has helped Ukrainians liberate half the territory seized by Putin, all without the loss of any NATO service personnel,” he wrote.

The Foreign Secretary suggested the West was underestim­ating its power to stop Russia, arguing that “we have the resources, the economic might, the expertise”.

He said the Kremlin had failed to act on previous support for Ukraine, such as the provision of tanks and long-range missiles, despite threatenin­g retaliator­y action.

“We have proved that the dangers of escalation are illusory,” he said. “Each time Putin has rattled his sabre about escalation – and each time it has been empty rhetoric.

“Our economic strength outweighs Russia’s by a factor of around 25 to one. They are having to turn to Pyongyang for help. All we need to do is make our strength pay.”

He added: “It goes to the heart of what both sides of the aisle stand for. What both our countries stand for. We fight aggression.

“We stand up for freedom. We stick by our friends. We show this dangerous, uncertain world that we are unbending in our will. And we win.”

His interventi­on comes amid concerns within Downing Street and other European capitals that “war fatigue” is setting in, allowing Putin to outwait the West.

The EU passed its own €50billion (£43billion) aid package for Kyiv earlier this month, but only after months of internal wrangling sparked by Hungary.

Rishi Sunak announced last month that he will provide £2.5billion next year, taking the UK’S total financial and military aid up to almost £12bn since Russia’s invasion.

Lord Cameron warned that a failure to sustain support for Ukraine would embolden adversarie­s including China and Iran who are “watching” events closely.

He said: “America is strong enough to both protect itself at home and recognize that threats in Europe or Asia affect its own security.

“I for one would like Beijing and Tehran to see that.”

 ?? ?? Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, second from left, the newly appointed commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, at a forward command post. He said: ‘The objective of our defence operation is to exhaust the enemy’s forces, inflict maximum losses on him’
Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, second from left, the newly appointed commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, at a forward command post. He said: ‘The objective of our defence operation is to exhaust the enemy’s forces, inflict maximum losses on him’

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