By Bradley Bowman & Mark Montgomery
Friday,
February 23, 2024
With Ukraine
fighting for its life, Israel battling terrorists seeking its destruction, and
Taiwan eyeing a growing threat from the Chinese Communist Party, it remains
unclear whether Congress will act to help these three beleaguered democracies
this year or remain missing in action. MAGA members of the Republican caucus in
the House of Representatives will likely play a key role in the outcome.
The
U.S. Senate voted 70–29 last week to approve more than $95 billion
in assistance to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. Twenty-two Republican
senators supported the legislation. Despite this bipartisan
vote, the bill’s future remains uncertain in the House. When the
Senate-passed bill and a similar bill being floated in the House are examined
through the lens of the MAGA worldview, it’s clear they are both a veritable
ice-cream sundae, including lots to like.
MAGA
Republicans emphasize the importance of putting Americans first. That’s exactly
what the legislation would do.
Skeptics
might push back against such an assertion by noting that the legislation would
provide tens of billions of dollars in security assistance to Israel, Taiwan,
and Ukraine. But that analysis fundamentally misses the point: By helping these
three beleaguered democracies, we are actually helping ourselves — both our
security and our economy.
The
United States is confronting the most daunting array of national-security
threats it’s faced in decades, including China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea,
as well as continued threats from terrorist organizations. To make matters
worse, these adversaries are increasingly working together to undermine the United States and
attack its core interests. That’s the bad news.
The
good news is that Americans aren’t confronting these threats alone. The United
States enjoys an unparalleled network of allies and partners to help. This
isn’t about having friends D.C. bureaucrats can toast at cocktail parties in
Brussels or Davos. Where the rubber meets the road, U.S. allies and partners
help lighten the security burden Americans must carry against common enemies,
prevent war, and inflict damage on our adversaries.
That’s
certainly true with Israel, which is battling Hamas, an Iran-backed terrorist
organization with a cozy relationship with the Kremlin. Hamas’s original
charter makes clear that it is committed to the murder of Jews and the
extermination of the State of Israel. The horrors of October 7 should put to
rest any lingering questions about whether Hamas still harbors such goals.
Hamas
is also very happy to kill Americans, as it did on that horrible day. That’s
hardly surprising, as Hamas’s sick terrorist ideology is similar to that of
al-Qaeda and ISIS. Indeed, Israel is fighting on the front lines in the battle
between civilization and barbarism — and helping Israel in that fight helps
America. In fact, the more we can help our Arab and Israeli partners in the
Middle East take on terrorists there, the less likely those terrorists will
once again kill Americans here, as they did on September 11, 2001.
The
same logic applies to support for Ukraine.
Russia
represents one of the two most serious military threats to the United States,
and Vladimir Putin has never missed an opportunity to undermine and weaken the
U.S.
Since
February 24, 2022, when Putin launched the largest invasion in Europe since
World War II, the United States has committed approximately $44 billion in security assistance to Ukraine. To put
that number in perspective, it represents a relatively paltry 2.7
percent of what Washington spent on the Pentagon over the same period.
And
what did Americans get for that investment?
For
less than 3 percent of what we spent on the Pentagon, that U.S. security
assistance helped Ukrainians destroy more than 7,700 Russian
tanks and armored vehicles, 223 Russian fighter aircraft and helicopters, and
at least 21 naval vessels — all without putting a single American service
member in harm’s way.
This
is not a so-called endless war for American troops; there are no U.S. troops
fighting in Ukraine. This is passing a baseball bat over the back fence to your
neighbor so they can defeat the home invader who is eyeing your home next — or
at least bruise him so badly that he reconsiders his line of work.
By
providing Ukraine with the means to weaken the Russian military and
underscoring American political will to oppose aggression in Eastern Europe,
Washington decreases the chances that Putin will attack a NATO state, which
would almost certainly pull Americans into direct conflict with Russia and
result in American casualties. So, by giving Ukraine weapons now, we are saving
American lives later.
That’s
not charity; that’s a wise and sustainable investment.
And
what are the Europeans doing? A Pentagon official said last week that the United States is not even the
top donor to Ukraine. In fact, the United States ranks 16th among nations when
it comes to providing security assistance to Ukraine as a percentage of gross
domestic product. Europeans are continuing to step up their support, but
American weapons remain vital. That’s why risks will only grow if Congress
continues to dither.
As
for Taiwan, let’s be clear: Deterrence failed in both Ukraine and Israel, and
now we are paying the price. If deterrence fails in Taiwan, the security,
economic, and reputational harm to the United States could be devastating.
Investments
made by the United States, combined with Taiwan’s increasing defense spending,
will make Taiwan an unappealing candidate for consumption by the authoritarian
predator in Beijing. Investments now in specific programs and munitions for the Indo-Pacific will
improve U.S. military posture and capability there and will be much cheaper
than a future war we could have deterred.
If
a MAGA House member remains skeptical of these arguments, consider what Senator
Roger Wicker, the highest-ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services
Committee, said last week regarding the Senate-passed
legislation: “The United States’ economy also stands to gain as 75 percent of
the bill’s funding will go to Americans, including $59 billion for weapons
production.” Those investments will spur the U.S. economy, employ Americans,
and supercharge American factories and innovation centers. That will increase
American defense-production capacity and ensure our troops have the best
weapons in the world and never confront a better-armed adversary.
There’s
much to disagree on these days in Washington. But providing Israel, Ukraine,
and Taiwan with the weapons they need to fight our common adversaries, while at
the same time improving our capacity to prevent and win future wars, is one
policy everyone should be able to get behind.
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