Texarkana Gazette

Echoes of WWII isolationi­sts among Republican­s

- Carl Leubsdorf

The pointed exchanges among Republican presidenti­al candidates and lawmakers about the U.S. commitment to Ukraine is a reminder that some policy debates never end. Like the one over U.S. overseas commitment­s.

This renewal comes a year before President Joe Biden will preside over the 75th anniversar­y of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the alliance that has protected the West since the aftermath of World War II is helping Ukraine resist the Russian invasion.

And it echoes the domestic debate that took place in 1951 when the United States was considerin­g sending U.S. ground troops back to Europe to bolster the nascent military-political organizati­on.

Recurrent disagreeme­nts over U.S. overseas commitment­s haven’t always followed the same partisan lines. A generation ago, liberal Democrats were calling for U.S. restraint abroad, while Republican­s generally favored a more muscular U.S. role.

More often, however, it’s been the Republican­s urging the United States to concentrat­e on its own borders, as many current House Republican­s — and the two principal GOP 2024 presidenti­al hopefuls — are doing.

“While the U.S. has many vital national interests … becoming further entangled in a territoria­l dispute between Ukraine and Russia is not one of them,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote in a questionna­ire response Fox commentato­r Tucker Carlson posted on Twitter.

Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called for auditing U.S. funds being spent in Ukraine, declaring, “There’s not bipartisan support among the American people for fighting a war in Ukraine that does nothing for Americans except force them to pay for it.”

Now, look at what key figures were saying back in 1951, when President Harry S. Truman was considerin­g sending ground troops back to Europe to counter the Soviet threat.

“Our first considerat­ion must be defense of America,” contended Ohio Sen. Robert A. Taft, a leading post-World War II Republican.

“Operations on the continents of Europe and Asia, if any, should be undertaken only with the greatest care and under careful limitation,” Taft added, calling air and naval forces a sufficient deterrent and opposing the Truman administra­tion’s plans to send additional U.S. ground troops to Germany.

A month later, Secretary of State Dean Acheson gave the administra­tion’s counter argument.

Air power alone is insufficie­nt to deter a potential Soviet attack, he told a joint hearing of the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees.

“Our own security, as well as the security of our allies in Europe, requires vigorous efforts to build an effective defense force in Europe at the earliest possible moment,” he added.

To be sure, no one is seriously suggesting sending American ground troops to Ukraine. However, since last year’s Russian invasion, the Biden administra­tion has steadily increased the U.S. military and political commitment.

On his recent trip to Ukraine and Poland, Biden made clear the United States intends to maintain that support as long as necessary.

“There should be no doubt,” he told leaders of the coalition in Warsaw. “Our support for Ukraine will not waver. NATO will not be divided. And we will not tire.”

Biden has also argued the defense of Ukraine represents a defense of democracy everywhere.

Tthe argument for creating NATO was to strengthen Western Europe’s democracie­s to protect them from both a Russian invasion and the internal threat from their local Communist parties at a time Europe was struggling to overcome World War II’s ravages.

At present, the extensive U.S. role in helping Ukraine repel the Russian invaders has retained the majority support among Americans, according to recent polls. But the number has drifted downward over the past year, and outright opposition is growing, especially among Republican­s.

The GOP is split, in Congress, among its presidenti­al candidates and in the country as a whole.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, a staunch supporter of helping Ukraine, has even urged the president to increase U.S. military support. Also supportive are likely GOP presidenti­al hopefuls Mike Pence, the former vice president; Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state; Nikki Haley, formerly U.S. ambassador to the United Nations; and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

But the two GOP presidenti­al poll leaders, former President Donald Trump and DeSantis, are both campaignin­g as skeptics of the U.S. role. Trump accused Biden of risking World War III.

And Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy noted before his election there was increasing reluctance in House GOP ranks for a “blank check” for Ukraine.

That current Republican opposition not only echoes Taft’s views when NATO was formed, but also those of the GOP isolationi­sts in the years before World War II.

Hopefully, they’ll again lose the debate.

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