Houston Chronicle Sunday

As Zelenskyy said: Congress, please take the lead

Marc Thiessen says it’s time to stop worrying about Putin and give the Ukrainians everything they need.

- Thiessen is a columnist for the Washington Post.

The most important and overlooked words in President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s address to Congress on Wednesday were: “Members of Congress, please take the lead.”

Zelenskyy clearly understand­s where the momentum is in Washington for helping Ukraine — and it’s not at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. The fact is, at every step along the way President Joe Biden has been repeatedly pushed into doing more for Ukraine thanks to bipartisan pressure from Congress.

Rep. Jimmy Panetta, D-Calif., points out that Biden opposed a ban on Russian oil, but then “we came out strong for an oil embargo. Next thing you know, they backed off it and then they did it on their own through executive action.” The same was true for revoking Russia’s “most favored nation” trade status. “The administra­tion pushed back on us and said, ‘Don’t do it,’ ” Panetta says. Then bipartisan legislatio­n began gaining steam in Congress, and “next thing you know, they come out and say, ‘Oh no, we’re for removing them.’ ”

On Wednesday, Biden announced a new arms package for Ukraine, including 800 additional Stinger antiaircra­ft missiles, 2,000 Javelin anti-tank missiles, 1,000 light anti-armor weapons, 6,000 AT-4 anti-armor systems and 100 armed Switchblad­e drones. The question is: What was Biden waiting for? Ukrainians are fighting for their lives. He could have delivered every element of that package to Ukraine weeks ago and saved countless innocent lives. But he didn’t act until after Zelenskyy made his plea to Congress.

On everything since the war began — from sanctions to military support — it has been Congress in the lead. Now Zelenskyy is hoping that Congress can lead when it comes to providing MiG fighter jets.

In his address, Zelenskyy invoked the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, “when evil tried to turn your cities … (into) battlefiel­ds, when innocent people were attacked, attacked from air.” He then showed a heartwrenc­hing video of the destructio­n Russia has wreaked from the air over Ukraine — missiles hitting high-rises, buildings in flames, dead children, babies crying, bodies being pulled from the rubble. It moved many to tears.

“Russia has turned the Ukrainian sky into a source of death for thousands of people,” Zelenskyy said. “You know how much depends on the battlefiel­d on the ability to use aircraft, powerful, strong … aviation to protect our people, our freedom, our land. … You know that they exist, and you have them, but they are on earth, not … in the Ukrainian sky. … I need to protect our sky.”

How, in God’s name, can we deny him the planes he says he needs to do so?

But the Biden administra­tion continues to claim that Ukraine does not need the MiG fighter jets. Well, if that is true, why is Zelenskyy spending so much time and political capital pressing for them? Why did he make them a centerpiec­e of his address to Congress? Why did he tell the Canadian Parliament earlier this week: “Give us planes, we tell our partners. They answer: Soon. Be patient a little. Everyone is deeply concerned. They just don’t want to.”

The administra­tion says MiGs are less effective, and more provocativ­e, than Stingers. That makes no sense. If they are less effective, how can they be more provocativ­e? The fact is, Russian President Vladimir Putin doesn’t want us to send MiGs to Ukraine for a reason — because, like Zelenskyy, he knows they would help stop Russia from destroying Ukrainian cities and killing civilians.

“I cannot stress this enough,” Panetta says, “They need to provide them with those MiGs.” There is bipartisan support in Congress to do so. On Sunday, the 58 members of the Problem Solvers Caucus urged Biden to facilitate the fighter jet deal.

Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio; Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.; and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., traveled to the Polish-Ukrainian border last weekend. Afterward, Blumenthal said Biden should provide the planes. “Ukrainians can win a fair fight on the ground. Right now, they have encountere­d a reign of terror in the skies.” Klobuchar agreed, saying “I’d like to see the planes over there.”

On CNN’s “State of the Union,” Portman said of the MiGs: “What we have heard directly from the Ukrainians is they want them badly. They want the ability to have better control over the skies in order to give them a fighting chance. So, I don’t understand why we’re not doing it.”

The most likely reason is that Biden seems more afraid of provoking Putin than he is of letting Ukraine lose. He slowwalked military aid, clearly not expecting the Ukrainians to last this long. But now it looks like they could not only survive but also prevail. So, it’s time to stop worrying about what Putin thinks and start giving the Ukrainians everything they need to defeat him.

Just as they pushed Biden to impose the oil embargo, revoke Russia’s trade status and provide Ukraine with more weapons, it’s up to Congress to make that happen.

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