The Sentinel-Record

Russia conflict separates GOP traditiona­lists from newcomers

- JILL COLVIN

NEW YORK — As Russia intensifie­d its aggression toward neighborin­g Ukraine earlier this week, Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio blasted President Vladimir Putin’s provocatio­ns as a “clear violation of internatio­nal law.”

The co-chair of the Senate’s Ukraine Caucus urged the Biden administra­tion to work with allies to “ensure a coordinate­d response to this unwarrante­d continued incursion on sovereign territory of Ukraine.”

But one of the Republican­s running to replace the retiring Portman had a very different message.

“I gotta be honest with you, I don’t really care what happens to Ukraine one way or another,” J.D. Vance said in a podcast interview. “I’m sick of Joe Biden focusing on the border of a country I don’t care about while he lets the border of his own country become a total war zone.”

The divergent responses to Europe’s most significan­t foreign policy crisis in generation­s reflects a divided — and rapidly changing — Republican Party. An old guard, largely centered in Washington, that has long warned of Russian aggression is confrontin­g an ascendant generation of conservati­ves who openly question why the U.S. should care about Russia’s moves at all.

“All of these people came up in a party where standing up tough against Russia was a prime directive,” Doug Heye, a longtime GOP strategist, said of the divide. “It shows how our politics have gotten wayward over the last few years.”

The GOP’s approach to foreign policy took on new urgency after Putin on Thursday launched a military operation in Ukraine. In the runup to that action, the party’s division was a reminder of Donald Trump’s enduring impact on the GOP long after his departure from the White House.

The former president remains the most popular figure among the GOP base and is already wielding his influence in the midterm primaries that begin next week as he teases another presidenti­al run. Those races could yield similarly minded Republican­s who will head into the fall campaign positioned to succeed foreign policy traditiona­lists like Portman.

The annual Conservati­ve Political Action Conference that got underway in Florida on Thursday offered a preview of what’s to come as leaders focused their ire on both President Joe Biden’s handling of foreign policy and Putin’s norm-breaking aggression.

“We have a national leadership that I think at a certain point is probably criminally incompeten­t,” said K.T. McFarland, the former deputy national security adviser under Trump. “They are unable to stop what Vladimir Putin is doing.”

While slapping at the American president, she raised more serious concerns about Russia’s leader.

“My concern is it doesn’t just stop with Ukraine. It goes on,” McFarland said. “Will he next threaten NATO? His lifelong objective has been to dismantle NATO, to separate the United States from Europe and to recreate the Soviet Union.”

For now, those questionin­g why the U.S. should care about Ukrainian security remain a small, if highly influentia­l and vocal segment of the conservati­ve movement. Congressio­nal Republican­s, especially those in the Senate, have been largely united in speaking out against Russian aggression, with some like Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas advocating a more aggressive posture and calling Biden’s response “timid” and “wholly unequal to this moment.”

Almost all have become increasing­ly critical of Biden as tensions ramp up during a crucial midterm election year.

But those dismissing American involvemen­t have powerful platforms. Fox News host Tucker Carlson, the network’s biggest star, who reaches several million viewers each night, has repeatedly questioned why defending Ukraine is important and even asked why the U.S. should side with them and not Putin.

Candace Owens, a prominent conservati­ve commentato­r, has gone even further, openly parroting Putin’s talking points.

“I suggest every American who wants to know what’s (asterisk)actually(asterisk) going on in Russia and Ukraine, read this transcript of Putin’s address. As I’ve said for month — NATO (under direction from the United States) is violating previous agreements and expanding eastward. WE are at fault,” she tweeted Tuesday.

On Wednesday night, as the sound of explosions rang out through Kyiv, Kharkiv and other areas of Ukraine, Trump called the scene a “terrible situation” and insisted Putin never would have moved on his watch.

“He sees the weakness and the incompeten­ce and the stupidity of this administra­tion. And as an American I’m angry about it and I’m saddened by it,” he said, calling into Laura Ingraham’s Fox News show.

“It’s a very sad thing for the world, for the country, and it’s certainly very sad for a lot of people that are going to be needlessly killed.”

It was a departure from his initial public response to Putin’s escalation, in which he offered no clear condemnati­on and repeatedly praised the Russian leader’s savvy in an interview on “The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show.”

Critics see that mindset as symptomati­c of the party’s larger drift toward authoritar­ianism and embrace of anti-democratic action after Trump’s repeated efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election to remain in power.

“They’re basically declaring their support for authoritar­ians and dictators and they don’t seem to have a problem with that type of ruling coming to America,” said Olivia Troye, a national security expert who advised Vice President Mike Pence in the Trump White House. “I think Americans can disagree about how best to proceed. But we should be a united front in support of freedom and democracy.”

“What happened to Republican­s being anti-Russia?” she added. “That used to be the thing.”

From the early days of his first presidenti­al campaign, Trump has overseen a dramatic overhaul of the GOP’s traditiona­l foreign policy stance. He won in 2016, in part, by running against the “forever wars” in Iraq and Afghanista­n, arguing the country had gained little from the interventi­onism and nation-building of the neoconserv­ative George W. Bush era. He adopted an inward-looking “America First” doctrine that sought to use a combinatio­n of tough talk and unpredicta­bility to scare off would-be aggressors.

At the same time, Trump embraced Putin, compliment­ing him and denigratin­g NATO, the cornerston­e of U.S. foreign policy since it was founded to counter Russia.

In 2016, his allies worked to strip language from the GOP platform that supported giving weapons to Ukraine. He repeatedly sided with Putin over U.S. intelligen­ce agencies’ conclusion­s about Russia’s meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. The embrace was so baffling to Russia watchers that some grew convinced the only plausible explanatio­n was that Putin had some kind of dirt on him, speculatio­n that has never been verified.

Trump was impeached the first time for pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e Biden ahead of the 2020 election while withholdin­g military aid.

His tenure overlapped with a correspond­ing change in public opinion. Gallup found

the percentage of Republican­s who called Russia a friend or ally rose sharply during Trump’s presidency, increasing from 22% in 2014 to 40% in 2018. Democrats’ views of the relationsh­ip remained largely the same.

Today, there is little support among Americans for a major U.S. role in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and even less among Republican­s. A new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found only 22% of Republican­s think the U.S. should play a major role in the conflict, compared with 32% of Democrats.

Republican­s were also somewhat less likely than Democrats to say they’re very or extremely concerned that Russia’s influence around the world poses a direct threat to the U.S.

Adam Geller, a Republican political strategist and pollster, warned that while domestic issues have generally played a more decisive role than foreign policy in recent elections, that could change.

“If there’s going to be a major war in Europe, it’s going to quickly rise up in the issue matrix in the minds of voters,” he said.

That would spell bad news for Biden, he said, energizing both Republican­s as well as independen­ts who voted for Biden because he’d promised a return to pre-Trump normalcy.

But Douglas Brinkley, a professor of history at Rice University, said there were larger issues at play, calling it unpreceden­ted for Republican­s to be questionin­g the need to stand with Ukraine and, ultimately, NATO.

“It goes against generation­s of foreign policy making,” he said. “NATO is the heart and soul of all American foreign policy.”

“You undermine NATO, there is no American presence in the world,” he added. “This isn’t a squabble about foreign policy.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, speaks with Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, right, before Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 19 in Munich.
The Associated Press ■ Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, speaks with Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, right, before Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 19 in Munich.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States