[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 22 (Tuesday, February 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S887-S888]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UKRAINE
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, it is ironic that the Senator from Ohio is
presiding because I am going to speak about the situation in Ukraine.
For the record, the Senator from Ohio, Mr. Portman, the current
Presiding Officer, and I have now initiated a bipartisan caucus in the
Senate concerned with the future of Ukraine, and my remarks will
address that during the next minute or two.
We are approaching the 1-year anniversary of a dark chapter in modern
history, the forcible Russian seizure of sovereign territory in
Ukraine. Perhaps the world shouldn't have been surprised by Russian
President Putin's brazen attack on well-established international
norms. We have seen this movie before when it comes to Mr. Putin, in
Georgia in 2008, using military force to seize the territories of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia.
What we are facing in Ukraine is a threat to the foundation of
European security agreements and norms of the last several decades. We
are facing the use of military force by Putin to undermine a democratic
sovereign nation's aspirations to join the international democratic
community. These ugly threats and actions by Putin must not go
unchallenged.
That is why this week I wrote a bipartisan letter, along with the
Presiding Officer, Senator Portman, as well as Senators Brown,
Barrasso, Blumenthal, and others to President Obama urging the United
States and NATO to work together to ensure Ukraine has the defensive
capabilities and equipment to halt and reverse further Russian
aggression.
Thousands have been killed, thousands more displaced. A civilian
airliner was shot down, murdering hundreds of innocent people, and
nationalistic fervor and Soviet-style propaganda have been used to
further rob the Russian and Ukrainian people of their own political
freedoms.
Let's recall how we got to this awful situation. In March of last
year, Russian President Putin used manipulation and military might to
annex the sovereign region of Crimea--not because Ukraine was about to
join NATO, not because Ukraine was about to join the European Union,
not because Ukraine was about to cut economic or historical ties to
Russia, even if it did sign an association agreement with the European
Union, and not because Russian-speaking Ukrainians were in any danger.
No, Putin took this brazen and destabilizing action because he needed
to rally nationalist sentiment in his own country for his own political
survival--to protect his own kleptocracy. He did so because he needed a
war to distract Russians from the frustrations they had over a weak
national economy, domestic political repression, the elimination of
Russia's free press and civic organizations, and increasing Russian
exasperation with the heavyhanded rule of Mr. Putin.
He did so because his ally and former Ukrainian President Yanukovych
was democratically removed from office by a unanimous vote of the
Ukrainian Parliament after he squandered negotiations for closer trade
ties with the European Union and then presided over the murder of more
than 100 of his own citizens. Apparently Putin did so because he felt
aggrieved by the West.
Instead of inspiring his own people to share the many talents and
accomplishments of the Russian nation as part of the larger global
community, Putin has spread a message of victimhood and the West is
really still the enemy.
What a waste. What an insult to the proud and talented Russian
people. Putin's tactics are from the old Soviet playbook, tired and
dated tactics of propaganda, military power, and domestic repression.
The resulting destruction and human misery in Ukraine has been
significant and has been increasing by the day. Thirteen innocent
Ukrainian citizens, including pensioners and little children, were
killed in a horrific bus attack last month in Volnovakha.
The city of Mariupol recently came under shelling, killing 30 and
injuring another 100 civilians--part of a likely attempt to militarily
seize another strategic coastal area.
Ukrainian Government forces and civilians have come under mounting
fire in the strategic city of Debaltseve, where residents are fleeing
by the busload. Russian heavy weapons and military personnel continue
to brazenly flow into eastern Ukraine, despite Putin's refusal to
acknowledge the obvious. Nearly 750,000 Ukrainian citizens are now
living as displaced persons within their own country because of this
offensive action by the Russians.
The World Health Organization estimates that 5 million Ukrainians
living in areas where the fighting is fiercest are in dire need of
basic health care services. People trapped in the cities of Luhansk and
Donetsk are essentially without any medical assistance. The Ukrainian
officials say January was one of the bloodiest months in eastern
Ukraine since the conflict started. All the while, Russia and its
proxies in eastern Ukraine continue to balk at peace talks and even
deny their military actions.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States and Europe
have worked to strengthen ties with Russia, to help it become a partner
in the global community. Of course, our interests didn't always
overlap, and there were disagreements. That is the nature of any
international relationship. But to whip up anti-Western propaganda on
state-controlled media and insult Russian people--they deserve more.
The West didn't lock up Western opposition leaders whose only so-
called crime was to disagree with Putin. The West didn't shut down all
the independent media in Russia to deny the Russian people a free flow
of ideas. The West didn't shut down Russian groups whose sole purpose
was to ensure fair elections. The West didn't conduct a Russian
Presidential election in 2012 that was loaded with fraud and
irregularity. The West didn't create a system of corruption around
Putin that enriches a lucky few oligarchs and tarnishes Russia's
economy and international reputation. The West certainly didn't focus
on creating false enemies, both domestic and international, to distract
from the real work of diversifying Russia's economy.
Let me be clear. The West did not cause the protests in Ukraine, in
the Kiev, Maidan Square. The protesters were Ukrainians fed up with
endless corruption and political malfeasance. I met with several of
those leaders in Ukraine, and I can assure everyone they were Ukrainian
patriots, not Western proxies.
While I have been giving the speech, my friend and colleague Senator
McCain has come to the floor, with whom I visited Ukraine several
months ago. He was there during the Maidan demonstrations and has
firsthand knowledge of how this was a homegrown effort to bring real
change to Ukraine. I am glad to see him on the floor at this moment.
New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize winner Tom Friedman
called what is happening in Ukraine under Putin ``the ugliest
geopolitical mugging happening in the world today.''
Perhaps you have seen the recent excellent episode of the PBS
``Frontline'' documentary entitled ``Putin's Way.'' It meticulously
laid out the web of corruption and destruction around Putin's rise to
power. It showed how each contrived crisis at home has been used to
consolidate Putin's grip on power, and it left little doubt the lengths
Putin will go to to protect the web of corruption that is ensuring his
future. What a waste.
I commend the President for working with our European allies to
impose severe economic sanctions on Russia for its actions in Ukraine.
These sanctions have some impact. In fact, Russia's credit rating is
now reduced to junk bond status. But Putin and his proxies have only
doubled down, launching new offensives in eastern Ukraine, leading to
more death and human misery.
I have concluded, and I believe the Senator reached a similar
conclusion because of a letter we cowrote this week, that the United
States has to do more to protect the Ukrainian people. I know it is a
debating point with some of our European allies as to whether we are
escalating the conflict. But to leave Ukraine poorly prepared to defend
its own territory--to leave the civilians in Ukraine so open to the
aggression of the Russian invaders--is
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wrong. We can provide lethal defensive weapons to help the Ukrainians
defend their own homeland, their own country, from this Russian
invasion. I think we should, and I encourage the administration to move
forward. I have reached the conclusion we eventually have to deal with
this bully with force. Force must be met with force. We must give the
Ukrainian people the means to defend themselves and to build a modern
democratic nation.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona is recognized.
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