Texarkana Gazette

Nation needs a few good Republican­s

- John M. Crisp

During his testimony before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Nov. 13, Ambassador William Taylor described our diplomatic relations with Ukraine in terms of two channels. The first emanates from the Department of State and is managed by diplomats and staffers under the oversight of the ambassador and secretary of state.

The second, as described by Taylor, Russia expert Fiona Hill, Ambassador Gordon Sondland and other witnesses, was a “highly irregu- lar” channel operated by an ad hoc team comprised of Ambassador­s Sondland and Kurt Volker and Secretary of Energy Rick Perry, all under the guidance of President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani.

But, asked Stephen Castor, the lawyer charged with questionin­g the witnesses on behalf of the Republican­s, “In fairness, this irregular channel of diplomacy, it’s not as outlandish as it could be. Is that correct?”

Well, yes, the irregular channel could have been more outlandish. Volker, Sondland and Perry, “The Three Amigos,” might have actually attended embassy dinners dressed in black mariachi outfits and sombreros. Now, that would be outlandish!

Instead, all The Three Amigos did was jeopardize the fledgling, reform-minded government of an important ally, undermine that nation’s effort to defend itself from an aggressive adversary and strengthen the hand of internatio­nal bad actor Russia, all in an effort to gain a domestic political advantage for Trump.

Certainly any outlandish scheme can be more outlandish. But the peculiar weakness of this argument exemplifie­s the transparen­cy of the defense that the

Republican­s gamely mounted during more than 30 hours of testimony.

Mostly the Republican­s made the same arguments over and over. The Democrats, they asserted, began their campaign to impeach Trump even before his inaugurati­on; some testimony was taken in closeddoor sessions; the military aid eventually reached the Ukrainians so there can’t have been anything fishy going on; Chairman Adam Schiff isn’t being fair; where’s the whistleblo­wer?; and so on.

All of these claims are either irrelevant or highly disputable. Neverthele­ss, they were stubbornly repeated virtually every time the Republican­s had the stage.

As the hearings wore on, Republican­s tried to pick away at the case against the president by attacking the witnesses themselves. Without evidence they impugned the loyalty of foreign-born Lt. Colonel Alexander Vindman. They even questioned why he, a full-time officer and combat veteran, was wearing his military uniform.

Without evidence, Republican­s suggested that David Holmes, the political counselor at the U.S. embassy in Ukraine who overheard the awkward phone conversati­on between Sondland and Trump, had mishandled sensitive informatio­n. They as much as accused him of perjuring his testimony — again, without evidence — even though, in large part, it was corroborat­ed by Sondland’s testimony.

If the Republican­s had better arguments they wouldn’t have to rely on flimsy ones such as these, nor would they have to repeat them constantly.

Did Trump withhold a White House meeting and military aid from Ukraine, at a time when it desperatel­y needed both, in exchange for help with his re-election? The evidence against Trump is overwhelmi­ng. I cannot summarize the many hours of testimony any better than Chairman Adam Schiff did on the last day: “He did it.”

What now? Impeachmen­t in the House seems inevitable; so does acquittal in the Senate. But what our nation needs more than anything right now is a few good Republican­s willing to place principle over party.

I had a fleeting hope for Rep. Will Hurd, a soft-spoken, moderate Republican from Texas who had the courage to serve as an undercover C.I.A. officer in Afghanista­n, as well as to stand up to Trump on his border wall and other issues. Alas, on the last day of testimony he hewed close to the party line.

But it’s not too late for Hurd and other Republican­s to weigh carefully the competing interests of their own political futures versus the acknowledg­ement of the truth and the primacy of the rule of law in our country.

Courage is contagious. The public integrity of only a few Republican­s could change the arc of this sorry episode back toward the stringent accountabi­lity required by the Constituti­on of those in public office.

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