[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 36 (Tuesday, March 4, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1259-S1260]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UKRAINE
Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, I am on the floor to talk about the
ongoing crisis in Ukraine. I am pleased to have Senator McCain on the
floor because it is very hard to describe the sensation both he and I
felt at the end of the last year when we got the chance to travel to
the Maidan--Independence Square--in Kiev and speak to about 1 million
people. It is even harder to describe the sensation of hearing that
group of people yelling back to us in unison:
Thank you, U.S.A. Thank you, U.S.A.
But that was the reality we were able to experience.
It is important to note that Senator McCain and I didn't go to the
Maidan that day to advocate for President Yanukovych's removal even
though the end of that process resulted in that fact. In actuality we
spent 2 hours that night meeting with Yanukovych, pleading with him to
reverse course on his decision to abandon plans to join the EU so that
he could win back the support of the hundreds of thousands of people
who had gathered on that square to support our European integration and
domestic political reforms. But President Yanukovych didn't listen, and
instead he lost his legitimacy as a ruler when he turned his security
service on his own people, resulting in the murder of over 100
Ukrainians who simply wanted to compel their leader to follow the
wishes of the Ukrainian people.
I was proud to author a resolution that passed unanimously in this
body that declared our support for the ability of Ukrainians to
peacefully air their grievances against their government and to oppose
the use of force against them. Then, I was equally proud to join
Senator McCain and some others in a bipartisan call for sanctions
against Yanukovych when he began his murderous crusade against the
protesters. I was even prouder of President Obama, who through the
State Department sent a clear, unwavering message to the Ukrainian
people that the United States stood with them in their desire to see a
better future for Ukraine, aligned with Europe and the West.
This strong bipartisan approach here in America to the Maidan
movement helped the people of Ukraine as they charted their own path
toward a new government. We didn't dictate the
[[Page S1260]]
terms of Ukraine's future; we simply supported the right of the people
to determine it for themselves.
But now, despite the success of the Maidan, the crisis in Ukraine has
changed its face. It hasn't dissipated. And today Secretary Kerry was
greeted in Kiev by Ukrainians pleading for the continued support of the
United States.
Having been so clear-voiced in our support of the Ukrainian people
thus far since the protests began last November, now is the moment when
Democrats and Republicans should stand united in this Congress so that
years from now, when a group assembles in Kiev marking the anniversary
of this grave crisis, they will celebrate Ukraine's political
sovereignty and economic rebirth with more chants of thanks to the
United States.
In what shape should this support come?
First, we need to stand together in the next week to deliver serious
financial assistance to a Ukrainian economy that is weak and is growing
weaker as this crisis persists. A $1 billion aid package is a good
start, but our real work must happen within the structures of the IMF,
which can provide potentially tens of billions of dollars necessary to
fully right the Ukrainian economic ship. While Ukraine does need to
undergo economic and budget reforms from within, I would caution the
IMF to be gentle in the timing of the conditions applied to this aid.
Difficult steps need to be undertaken to right-size gas prices and trim
budget deficits, but Ukraine should be given a long enough lease so
that these necessary reforms don't strangle a nation today dealing with
threats to its very existence.
Second, Crimea. Russia has invaded Ukraine, make no mistake. They
have done so in violation of the United Nations charter and the very
accord they signed in 1994 guaranteeing Crimea's territorial security.
No doubt Vladimir Putin was sore at losing his erstwhile ally in the
Ukrainian President's office. No doubt he didn't like the fact that the
United States voiced its strong support for the right of a sovereign
Ukraine to make independent decisions about its future partnerships. No
doubt he is infuriated that the Ukrainian people are now on their way
to getting their way. But this is not a schoolyard. You don't get to
push weaker kids around just because you don't like them. This is the
21st century.
The reason we belong to organizations such as the United Nations or
the reason we negotiate treaties such as the Budapest memorandum is
because now we understand, after centuries of European war, how
destabilizing this kind of behavior is.
The irony for Russia, of course, is that this invasion demonstrably
weakens, not strengthens, their nation's position in the world. Let's
say for argument's sake that the end result of this crisis is a Crimea
that is more closely aligned with Russia than with Ukraine. What does
that accomplish for Russia? Well, it will have won the occupation of 2
million Ukrainians while the majority of the other 43 million continue
to orient themselves permanently toward the European Union.
If the United States and Europe make good on sanctions threats, which
I hope we will, it will devastate the Russian economy, leaving millions
of Russians out of work and adding political instability to Putin's own
land at a time when he really can't afford much more instability, and
it will make Russia an international pariah, shunned by the
industrialized nations that help form the future path of global,
political, and economic values.
Given this reality, why did Putin do it? He didn't do it to protect
Russians in Ukraine because the only threat to their safety is due to
the military crisis of Russia's own making. He did it because, like the
schoolyard bully, he doesn't see past his own nose. He believes that he
wins by temporarily flexing his muscles and by capturing the world's
attention. He doesn't look to the long-term, potentially dire
consequences to his own political standing and to his own people. He
pulls punches because it feels good today no matter how bad it will
hurt tomorrow.
But that being said, no matter the irrationality of Moscow's
behavior, we need to make sure in the case that Russia does not correct
its mistake, and correct it soon, the consequences do hurt. I believe
Congress should authorize broad authority for President Obama to enact
strong sanctions on Russia through penalties to its banks, its oil
companies, and its political and economic elite. I believe the
President should only be allowed to use this authority in the case that
this illegal incursion into Ukraine continues and that we should give
Moscow the opportunity to reverse course or join with the international
community to address their concerns about the safety of Russian
citizens in Ukraine.
Let's give Russia a chance to make this better and deliver a clear
message of the consequences if they don't. This, of course, can't
happen without the support of our European allies. As chairman of the
Foreign Relations Subcommittee on European Affairs, I will be on the
phone this week with European Parliamentarians urging them to join us
in proposing new sanctions on the Russian economy.
I know there is hesitance in Europe due to the integration of Russia
into the European economies, but this crisis should, frankly, matter
more to Europe than it matters to us. Five years ago it was a laughable
proposition that Russia would invade Ukraine, but it is happening
now. It may be unthinkable today that Russia, in 5 years, is going to
move on a NATO ally, but if this aggression goes unchecked, then the
future can be very perilous, even for our friends in Europe.
Finally, a word on the politics of this crisis. I have listened to
some of my good friends on the Republican side try to score political
points in connection with the Russian move on Crimea, trying to paint
this somehow as Obama's fault. This is a ridiculous contention. Putin
marched into Georgia in 2008 under a Republican President, who many of
my Republican colleagues considered to be strong on foreign policy, and
now he is doing it with a Democrat in office. President Obama is
considering steps in response that seemingly weren't even considered in
2008.
What has me feeling even more suspect of the criticisms of President
Obama is there doesn't seem to be any real difference between what the
Republicans want the President to do and what he is actually doing. It
is easy to say it is Obama's fault, but history tells us otherwise, and
these political attacks mask the fortunate fact that there is pretty
solid bipartisan agreement on what to do next.
Ukraine can remain whole and free and it can stay on a path to join
Europe. When that day emerges from the smoke and the fire of the
crisis, if we play our cards right, then they will have America and our
European allies to thank, in part, for that new day.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
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