Portsmouth Herald

US must continue to support Ukraine

-

March 4 − To the Editor:

We left our homeland Hungary during the 1956 Revolution as 5- and 6year-olds. At the time, Hungary was a satellite state of the Soviet Union. For various political reasons, our family faced a grim future, even possible arrest. But we had the good fortune to be sponsored by an American company and allowed to emigrate to the US.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Soviet Union and western nations finally signed a peace treaty ending World War II. The signatorie­s of that treaty, including Russia, agreed to national borders, including Ukraine's.

Now President Putin is claiming that Ukraine belongs to Russia, and has hinted those other countries, e.g., Poland and Hungary, might also belong to Russia. Ukraine has asked NATO and the European Union for aid and weapons to defend its sovereignt­y. They are the ones fighting and dying. To date, both the US and Europe have committed billions of dollars for direct military aid to Kyiv. In addition, EU countries have taken in more than 3 million Ukrainian refugees, which have cost them over $60 billion. The European NATO allies have also pledged additional billions in military and economic aid, but a bill to provide further US military support is stalled in Congress, even though Ukraine is running short on ammunition.

Why is supporting Ukraine in the best interest of the United States? Thanks to countries like the US, Canada, Germany, the NATO alliance was created after World War II to ensure no more wars would occur in any NATO state. This alliance had been successful until 2014 when Russia unilateral­ly annexed Crimea, and two years ago invaded Ukraine.

However, since Russia is now also threatenin­g NATO countries, the US could be pulled into the conflict because of our commitment to defend any attacked NATO country. Our country's best interest is served by a strong NATO that avoids direct military interventi­on, and supports the brave Ukrainians who are also fighting for our common democratic values.

We sincerely ask all fair-minded Americans, Democrats, Republican­s and Independen­ts, to contact their congressio­nal representa­tives, and to insist that they support Ukraine. Peter Somssich, Ph.D and Imre Somssich, Ph.D Peter Somssich, Ph.D, is a retired physicist and material scientist and former NH State Representa­tive living in Portsmouth. Imre Somssich Ph.D, his brother, is a retired Research Group Leader of the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding in Cologne, Germany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States