Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden is insulting Ukraine

- By David J. Kramer and John E. Herbst

The Kremlin has embarked on a massive buildup of troops along Russia’s border with Ukraine. Vladimir Putin and his entourage have been spouting belligeren­t rhetoric, openly calling into question Ukraine’s continued right to exist. Moscow has resorted to military action against its neighbors, including Ukraine, before. Yet the results this time could be even more catastroph­ic.

Given this dire situation, one might assume that having a Senate-confirmed U.S. ambassador on the ground in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, would be useful. But there is no U.S. ambassador in Ukraine, nor is there any indication of when one might be arriving. This failure is not the responsibi­lity of the Senate, which has been slow in confirming a slew of nominees of the Biden administra­tion. No, in this case the Biden administra­tion has only itself to blame. So far the president hasn’t even managed to nominate someone for the position.

Failing to arrange for an ambassador in Kyiv is not just a bad way to conduct foreign policy. It also indicates the administra­tion’s disrespect - however unintentio­nal - for Ukraine. That country already endured enough during the final two years of the Trump administra­tion. It was expecting better from the Biden administra­tion, especially given Biden’s familiarit­y with the country. When he served as vice president during the Obama era, one of his duties included serving as the administra­tion’s point person to Ukraine.

The last Senate-confirmed ambassador in Kyiv was Marie Yovanovitc­h, a highly respected career Foreign Service officer. She, readers might recall, was unceremoni­ously and unfairly removed by then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at White House insistence, egged on by President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani as part of the politiciza­tion of U.S.-Ukrainian relations that led to Trump’s first impeachmen­t.

That was in the spring of 2019. William Taylor, who had once served with distinctio­n as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine during the George W. Bush administra­tion, was soon afterward asked to return to Kyiv and temporaril­y fill the vacancy until his departure seven months later. Kristina Kvien has done a most admirable job leading the embassy as deputy chief of mission during a very challengin­g time, but she is not the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine - i.e., the chosen representa­tive of the president, confirmed by the Senate.

After almost one year in office, the Biden administra­tion has nominated dozens of ambassador­s and people for senior positions at the State Department. Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) blocked confirmati­on of many of these individual­s - mostly due to Cruz’s unhappines­s with the administra­tion’s decision in May not to sanction the Nord Stream 2 pipeline running from Russia to Germany and Hawley’s displeasur­e with the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

In the case of Ukraine, however, the Senate is not to blame - the White House bears full responsibi­lity. The State Department has not sought agreement from the Ukrainian government, the initial step in securing the host country’s assent to the intended nominee. Among the names apparently being considered by the White House is a career Foreign Service officer who is currently an ambassador elsewhere. That means the person already has been vetted and approved by the Senate for the person’s current posting and would likely gain quick approval if ever nominated for the Kyiv position.

In a readout following Biden’s most recent phone call with Putin on Dec. 30, a senior administra­tion official noted the extensive contacts the United States has had with European counterpar­ts at the presidenti­al and ministeria­l levels. “Our newly confirmed ambassador­s to both NATO and the OSCE have begun active outreach to their counterpar­ts,” the official added. Notice that no such outreach was mentioned for Ukraine - because there is no ambassador in place there.

Ahead of the various negotiatio­ns the administra­tion has agreed to with Russia, it should start the new year with the announceme­nt of the nominee to be ambassador to Ukraine. The Senate, in turn, should act quickly on that nominee so that the United States is properly represente­d in Kyiv and returns the U.S.Ukraine relationsh­ip to a sense of normalcy.

David J. Kramer is director of European and Eurasian studies at Florida Internatio­nal University’s Steven J. Green School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs and served as an assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor in the George W. Bush administra­tion. John E. Herbst, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, is senior director of the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center.

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