[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 175 (Wednesday, December 11, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H7633-H7634]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
URGING UKRAINE TO SETTLE ITS INTERNAL DISAGREEMENTS PEACEFULLY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, the political turmoil in Ukraine demands the
world's attention.
It is now 5 p.m. in Kiev where protesters in Independence Square are
regrouping after a night of violent crashes with Ukrainian security
forces. As of now, the security forces have begun to pull back from the
crackdown; and despite intimidation and threats of violence, the
opposition has retained control of Euromaiden, the name given to
Independence Square in a clear sign of solidarity with Europe.
The United States has sided unequivocally with those Ukrainians who
are demonstrating for an independent Ukraine, for their rights to free
assembly and free speech under provisions of
[[Page H7634]]
international law, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Our Secretary of State has called upon the Government of Ukraine to
respect the rights of all people and expressed the disgust of the
United States with the use of force against peaceful protesters as
unbefitting a democracy.
As Secretary Kerry noted, the right to free assembly is ``a universal
value, not just an American one.''
The House Ukrainian Caucus, which I cochair with Mr. Levin and Mr.
Gerlach, has expressed its support for the rights of the Ukrainian
people to exercise their rights to political speech and free assembly.
Yes, these are difficult, yet hopeful, times for Ukraine, which is
trying to find its rightful place among the community of nations
despite daunting domestic challenges. The country is gripped by
uncertainty, which is exacerbating an already difficult economic
situation.
The current crisis was triggered by the decision of the current
political leadership to pursue free trade with Ukraine's eastern
neighbor, Russia, rather than neighbors to the west, the European
Union.
Regardless of the political discord in Ukraine, this Congress should
urge all parties to settle their internal disagreements peacefully and
without violence.
Ukraine's soils historically have been showered with the precious
blood of their country men and women at a higher rate than most human
beings could even imagine. The brilliantly recounted ``Bloodlands,''
written by Yale scholar Dr. Timothy Snyder, tells their story. Yes,
though Ukraine's very name means borderland, she too often has been a
bloodland. May this not happen now.
Ukraine must adapt to embrace a world in which her own independence
from interference surpasses any other priority. She should be free to
engage all directions, east, west, south, and north, without fear of
retaliation. She is a bridge to all nations, and therein will lie her
prosperity.
As Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser to President Carter
writes in today's Financial Times:
Two decades of independence, of growing pride in
rediscovering Ukrainian history, and of observing the
country's western neighbors economically benefiting from
their European connections is creating a new mindset. That
mindset is not embracing anti-Russianism, but it is asserting
Ukraine's own historic identity as culturally an authentic
part of a larger Europe.
Mr. Brzezinski believes the current political change in Ukraine is
part of an historically significant, yet inevitable, political
transformation. He believes Ukraine and Russia, too, will eventually
orient to the west. I have ultimate respect in his opinion and pray he
is correct.
Those of us who love Ukraine have longed for the day when it is no
longer a prisoner of geography, hemmed in between Germany and Russia,
but a free and willing member of the community of democratic nations.
Perhaps one day Ukraine will break free of the shackles of domination
of the past. Perhaps one day Ukraine's geographic location will be an
asset, not a liability, a day when Ukraine looks both east and west
and, in fact, in all four directions.
But as we can see from the images coming to us from Kiev, the road
will not be smooth. We know the future lies with freedom and with
democracy and with opportunity, not repression in isolation; but that
is cold comfort in the streets of Ukraine today.
The United States Congress must stand forthrightly with the liberty-
loving people of Ukraine during this difficult hour. At this time of
testing, the people of Ukraine and the people of the United States
should be inspired by the words of Ukraine's most famous poet, Taras
Shevchenko:
Then in your own house you will see true justice, strength
and liberty. There is no other such Ukraine.''
[From the Financial Times, Dec. 10, 2013]
Russia, like Ukraine, Will Become a Real Democracy
(By Zbigniew Brzezinski)
Come what may, the events in Ukraine are historically
irreversible and geopolitically transformatory. Sooner rather
than later, Ukraine will be truly a part of democratic
Europe; later rather than sooner, Russia will follow unless
it isolates itself and becomes a semi-stagnant imperialistic
relic.
The spontaneous outburst of distinctive Ukrainian
patriotism--sparked by the mendacity of a corrupt and self-
enriching leadership ready to seek Moscow's protection--
signals that commitment to national independence is becoming
the dominant political reality. This is especially the case
among the younger Ukrainians who no longer feel that they are
linguistically or historically just a slightly deviant part
of ``Mother Russia''.
Yes, linguistic divisions persist and some parts of Ukraine
still feel closer to Russia. But it is striking that even
some of the most outspoken espousers of a European vocation
have only recently embraced the Ukrainian language as their
own. Two decades of independence, of growing pride in
rediscovering Ukrainian history, and of observing the
country's western neighbours economically benefiting from
their European connections is creating a new mindset. That
mindset is not embracing anti-Russianism but it is asserting
Ukraine's own historic identity as culturally an authentic
part of a larger Europe.
That is why, one way or another, Ukraine will unavoidably
come closer to Europe. It is striking that even in
neighbouring Belarus, ruled by the authoritarian Lukashenko
regime, a similar western orientation is beginning to
surface. Neither country is motivated by hostility towards
Russia, but each senses that its independence as well as its
cultural identity points increasingly in a westward
direction.
In the next months some sort of a deal between the EU and
Ukraine can still be contrived. To facilitate it, the EU must
be more receptive to Kiev's need for economic and financial
support. Ukrainians have to realise that European taxpayers
are not enchanted by the prospect of paying for the misdeeds
and corruption of the current Kiev elite. Belt-tightening
will be the necessary precondition for an agreement as well
as a test of Ukraine's resolve in asserting its European
aspirations. Kiev will also need to show that the outcome of
elections is not determined by the imprisonment of political
rivals.
The impact of this on Russia will be felt over the longer
run. Moscow's current geopolitical goal, shaped by President
Vladimir Putin's nostalgic obsession with the country's
imperial past, is to recreate in a new guise something akin
to the old Russian empire or the more recent Soviet
``union''.
Mr. Putin seems to harbour the naive notion that the
leaders of the post-Soviet states will genuinely accept a
subordinate role in a Kremlin-led entity. Some of the leaders
do pay occasional lip service to that formula--but out of
necessity, not conviction. All prefer independence: it is
more pleasant to be presidents, prime ministers, generals,
ambassadors and economic moneymakers at home rather than to
be the provincial equivalents thereof in a larger Russian
empire. The historically proven fact is that national
statehood, once attained, is infectious and almost impossible
to undo except through massive external force.
Today's Russia is in no position to assert a violent
restoration of its old empire. It is too weak, too backward
and too poor. Its demographic crisis makes matters worse. The
fact that the newly independent Central Asian states favour
increasingly comprehensive arrangements with China is another
concern for Russia, reawakening long lingering territorial
nightmares.
It is only a question of time before it becomes evident to
Russia's social elites that Mr. Putin's heavy-handed efforts
have very limited prospects of success. Sooner or later, he
will no longer be president. And not long thereafter Russia--
and especially its emerging new middle class--will conclude
that the only path that makes sense is to become also a truly
modern, democratic, and maybe even a leading European state.
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