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Best thing GOP can do for Trump: OK aid to Ukraine

- Marc A. Thiessen is an author, political appointee, and weekly columnist for The Washington Post.

Donald Trump says that, if elected, he will negotiate a deal to end the Ukraine war. “I’ll have that done in 24 hours,” he has said.

If Republican­s want to give him the leverage to deliver on that promise, they need to approve military aid to Ukraine — and fast.

Last year, thanks to U.S. weaponry, Russia made no military gains on the ground while Ukraine succeeded in wiping out nearly one-third of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet. But as aid has stalled in Congress, Ukrainian fighters have been forced to ration artillery, allowing Russia to start taking territory again and launching new offensives on five lines of attack.

Republican­s should be helping put Trump in the strongest position to negotiate a peace agreement when he takes office. If Republican­s cut off weapons for Kyiv, and Russia makes major battlefiel­d advances over the coming months, it will be impossible for Trump to negotiate that stable, lasting peace. Without U.S. arms, Vladimir Putin’s forces could break through Ukraine’s defenses, march on Kyiv again, and potentiall­y reach NATO’s borders. Ukraine could be so weak in 11 months time that Putin wouldn’t see any need to negotiate.

Trump has threatened to increase U.S. aid. “I would tell Putin: If you don’t make a deal, we’re going to give [the Ukrainians]

a lot,” told Fox News’s Maria Bartiromo last July.

But that threat will be empty if Putin has already all but won on the battlefiel­d by the time Trump takes office. For Trump’s warning to be credible, Ukraine needs to hold the territory it has taken back.

Unlike the anti-interventi­onist right, Trump has shown that he will flex American muscle against Russia. During a 2019 Oval Office interview, he told me that he ordered U.S. military forces to kill hundreds of Russian Wagner Group fighters in a February 2018 firefight in eastern Syria, and authorized a covert cyberattac­k against Russia’s Internet Research Agency, the St. Petersburg-based troll farm that spearheade­d Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

And don’t forget: Trump provided Ukraine with lethal aid while he was in office. “I sent a massive number of antitank busters,” he told me. “I sent them military equipment and [President Barack] Obama sent them nothing” but nonlethal aid. He’s right. After Putin’s 2014 invasion of Crimea, the Obama-Biden administra­tion refused Ukraine’s request for weapons, instead sending blankets, Humvees and night-visions goggle. (“One cannot win a war with blankets,” Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko complained to Congress at the time.) In December 2017, however,

Trump approved the transfer of $47 million in Javelin antitank missiles.

Those weapons might have saved Ukraine when Russia invaded again on Biden’s watch, helping Zelensky stave off Putin’s attempt to march on Kyiv in 2022.

Now, some Republican­s want to cut military aid to Ukraine, which would allow Putin to finish that march on Kyiv.To be clear, I’d like to see the United States do everything in its power to help the people of Ukraine, and it doesn’t matter who gets the credit. But House Republican­s might consider the narrative Trump will have if he successful­ly negotiates a peace deal, as he has vowed to do: Russia would have never invaded if Trump had been reelected in 2020. It was Biden’s weakness on the world stage (including his disastrous withdrawal from Afghanista­n) that emboldened Putin to try to take Ukraine. Biden then slow-rolled weapons to Ukraine, with no strategy for victory, allowing Putin to run roughshod over the country — until Trump potentiall­y returns to the White House to set things straight. It would be a diplomatic triumph and foreign policy vindicatio­n.

But for that to happen, the GOP needs to give Ukraine weapons now. If they don’t, they — not Biden — will own Ukraine’s military collapse, and they would leave Trump with a weak hand if he retakes the Oval Office.

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Marc A. Thiessen

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