[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 17 (Tuesday, January 30, 2024)]
[House]
[Pages H277-H278]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




          THE FUTURE OF UKRAINE AND ISRAEL AND BORDER SECURITY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
California (Mr. Costa) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, it has been 112 days since Hamas' horrific 
attacks against Israel on October 7. It has also been 1 year and 11 
months since Putin launched his brutal invasion against Ukraine.
  The world is on fire with conflict, and democratic countries are 
under attack. For months, Ukraine and Israel aid has been held hostage 
by a significant number of my Republican colleagues who appear to have 
taken the side of Russia. Putin and Iran's Ayatollah are enjoying these 
political fights, which is only giving them an advantage.
  These war criminals--I am talking about Putin and the Ayatollah--are 
seizing on opportunities regardless of the cost. Just as Iran has 
enabled their terrorist proxies, the Houthis are attacking our 
military.
  Our actions today will determine the future success of democracies 
and free societies around the world. That is really what is at stake.
  I have been to Ukraine twice in the last year. I have been to Israel 
many times. Democracy is critical in those parts of the world. They 
share our values and freedoms that we cherish.
  I have been to Gaza where Hamas has oppressed the Palestinian people 
with poverty, violence, and a lack of opportunity. They have used them 
as human shields. We must help the Palestinian people out of this 
horrific situation starting with humanitarian aid. The Palestinians 
have a right to determine their own future under a two-state solution.
  We need to pass a supplemental aid package to provide immediate 
assistance as we have before in a bipartisan effort. We need to equip 
Ukraine and Israel with critical security and military needs to defend 
their sovereignties. By the way, when we do this, we defend our 
democracy and democracies around the world. We do this in our own 
interests. We need humanitarian aid for the Palestinians and Armenian 
refugees removed from their historical home in Nagorno-Karabakh.
  These are all part of what the supplemental package does. By the way, 
it provides assistance for Taiwan.
  All this costs the United States less than 1 percent of our GDP 
without any U.S. troops on the ground. Let me repeat that: It costs 
less than 1 percent of our GDP. No U.S. troops are being impacted 
directly.
  Ukraine has regained 50 percent of the land Russia originally took, 
and they have reopened the Black Sea to export grain.
  These are the impacts on Russia: Russia has lost over 315,000 troops 
and two-thirds of their pre-invasion tanks. Mr. Speaker, this has been 
a very good deal for our adversary, Russia.
  For us, the Ukrainian President has said in this Chamber 2 years ago 
that

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this was an investment in global security and democracy.
  We need to get the hostages released by Hamas. Israel has been 
working on that, and there are negotiations taking place right now.
  We know that with the recent election in Taiwan, as a prime example, 
there is a new chapter in their future democracy. Be that as it may, we 
must send a strong message to Putin of Russia, to Xi of China, and the 
Ayatollah of Iran and its terrorist proxies, like Hezbollah and Hamas. 
These are adversaries of the United States, and, therefore, we must be 
together as a country and as Americans in a bipartisan fashion.
  So House Republicans who are demanding border security in exchange 
for this package, it has been put on the table. We are negotiating it.
  Nevertheless, if they are serious about border security, I think they 
would want to work and see the final language on the product that the 
Senate is working on before condemning it and criticizing it.
  Democrats have put forth dozens of bipartisan bills, like the 
American Dream and Promise Act and the Farmworker Modernization Act, 
none of which have been brought forth for a vote, and many of them are 
bipartisan.
  As the bipartisan group of Senators finalize their border deal, 
unfortunately, extreme MAGA Republicans and Donald Trump want to 
torpedo it; for what?
  It is for political reasons.
  The border is a problem. We agree; and we have a legislative solution 
before us.
  It is the height of hypocrisy to say: No. We are not going to do 
anything right now. It really is a problem. It really is a problem, but 
we are going to wait 10 months.
  What is wrong with us?
  The American public gets this. President Biden is ready to sign this 
deal in its current form to address the surge of migrants, hire more 
Border Patrol agents, and combat the flow of fentanyl and human 
trafficking. He is willing to do that now. We ought to be working 
together and not waiting for an election after November.
  Congress cannot lose sight of what is at stake. We can walk, talk, 
and chew gum at the same time. We can get assistance to Ukraine and 
Israel along with border security. That is our job. That is what we are 
supposed to do.
  By the way, we can get a budget, too. This Congress is doing nothing, 
absolutely nothing. So let's stop with the politics. Our national 
security depends upon it. Let's get a deal done.

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