Los Angeles Times

Trump’s impeachmen­t shadows war

Ex-president’s request of ‘a favor’ in 2019 led to withholdin­g of vast military aid sought by Ukraine’s leader.

- By Lisa Mascaro Mascaro writes for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — When former President Trump was impeached in late 2019 after pressuring Ukraine’s leader for “a favor,” all while withholdin­g $400 million in military aid to help confront Russia-backed separatist­s, even the staunchest defense hawks in the Republican Party stood virtually united by Trump’s side.

But as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military marched toward Kyiv in February, threatenin­g not only Ukraine but the rest of Europe, Republican­s and Democrats in Congress cast aside impeachmen­t politics, rallied to Ukraine’s side and swiftly shipped billions to President Volodymyr Zelensky‘s defense.

The question ahead, as Ukrainians battle Russia’s grinding invasion now past its 100th day, is whether the rare bipartisan­ship on Capitol Hill is resilient enough to withstand Trump’s isolationi­st influences on his party or whether Republican­s who yielded to Trump’s “America First” approach will do so again, putting military and humanitari­an support for Ukraine at risk.

“Maybe there is a recognitio­n on both the Republican side and Democratic side that this security assistance is very important,” said Bill Taylor, a former ambassador to Ukraine, in a recent interview with the Associated Press.

“And maybe neither side is eager to crack that coalition.”

The fraught party politics comes at a pivotal moment as the Russian invasion drags on and the United States gets deeper into the conflict before the November election, when lawmakers face voters with control of Congress at stake.

A recent AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll shows public support in the U.S. for punishing Russia over the war is wavering if it comes at the expense of the economy.

Although Congress mustered rare and robust bipartisan support to approve a $40-billion Ukraine package, bringing total U.S. support to a staggering $53 billion since the start of the war, opposition on the latest round of aid came solely from the Republican side, including from Trump.

That is a warning sign over the sturdiness of the bipartisan coalition that the top Republican in Congress, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, tried to shore up when he led a delegation of GOP senators to stand by Zelensky‘s side in a surprise trip to Kyiv last month.

“There is some isolationi­st sentiment in my party that I think is wrongheade­d, and I wanted to push back against it,” McConnell told a Kentucky audience last week, explaining his Ukraine visit.

The divisions within the GOP over Ukraine are routinely stoked by Trump, who initially praised Putin’s invasion of Ukraine as a “genius” negotiatin­g strategy. Trump has repeatedly lashed out against the U.S. aid to Ukraine, including recently at a rally in Wyoming. Before the Senate vote on the $40 billion in assistance, Trump decried the idea of spending abroad while America’s “parents are struggling.”

As Trump considers whether to run for the White House in 2024, the persistenc­e of his “America First” foreign policy approach leaves open questions about the durability of his party’s commitment to U.S. support for a democratic Ukraine.

Senators are poised this summer to vote to expand NATO to include Sweden and Finland, but Trump has repeatedly criticized U.S. spending on the Western military alliance.

Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, among 11 Republican senators who voted against the Ukraine package, called the tally an “astronomic­al number” at a time when foreign policy should be focused elsewhere, including on China.

“That is nation-building kind of number,” Hawley said in an interview. “And I think it’s a mistake.”

It was nearly three years ago that Ukraine was at the center of U.S politics with the 2019 Trump impeachmen­t proceeding­s that rocked Washington.

Zelensky, a comedian turned politician, had just been elected when he asked Trump during a July 25, 2019, phone call for a meeting to strengthen U.S.-Ukraine relations and ensure military aid, according to a transcript released by Trump’s White House.

“We are almost ready to buy more Javelins from the United States for defense purposes,” Zelensky told Trump, referring to antitank weaponry Ukraine relies on from the West.

Trump replied: “I would like you to do us a favor, though.”

Trump asked Zelensky to investigat­e Joe Biden, a chief Democratic rival to Trump at the time and now the American president, and Biden’s son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.

The impeachmen­t investigat­ion, sparked by a government whistleblo­wer’s complaint over Trump’s call, swiftly became a milestone, the first in a generation since Democrat Bill Clinton faced charges over an affair with a White House intern.

During weeks of impeachmen­t proceeding­s over Ukraine, witnesses from across the national security and foreign service sphere testified under oath about the alarms that were going off in Washington and Kyiv about Trump’s conversati­on with Zelensky.

Complicate­d stories emerged about the scramble by Trump allies to secure the investigat­ions of the Bidens — and of the civil servants pushing back against what they saw as a breach of protocol.

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