"WASHINGTON — As President Biden
tries to forge a united allied response to Russian aggression in Ukraine, unity
on the home front is strained by a Republican Party torn between traditional
hawks in the leadership and a wing still loyal to Donald J. Trump’s
isolationist instincts and pro-Russian sentiment.
Republican leaders, by and large,
have struck an aggressive posture, encouraging Mr. Biden to get tougher on Russia, through immediate
sanctions on Russian energy exports and more lethal aid to Ukraine’s military.
But that message has been undermined
by the party’s far right, which has questioned why the United States would side
with Ukraine at all, and has obliquely suggested with no evidence that the
president is bolstering his son Hunter Biden’s business interests.
Driven by a steady diet of
pro-Russian or anti-interventionist rhetoric from the Fox News host Tucker
Carlson, the Republican right has become increasingly vocal in undercutting not
only U.S. foreign policy but also the positions of the party’s leaders.
The Republican representatives Matt Rosendale of
Montana, Lauren Boebert of
Colorado, Paul Gosar of
Arizona, Thomas Massie of
Kentucky, Marjorie Taylor Greene
of Georgia; the Ohio Senate candidate J.D. Vance; and Donald Trump Jr.
have weighed in to oppose confronting Russia or to suggest nefarious intentions
on Mr. Biden’s part.
Mr. Trump told the conservative
podcast host Lou Dobbs that Mr. Biden’s reported plan to send as many as 50,000
troops to bolster Europe’s defenses was “crazy.”
Representative Michael R. Turner of
Ohio, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, went on Fox News to confront
Mr. Carlson.
“Why would we take Ukraine’s side
and not Russia’s side?” Mr. Carlson pushed. “It’s a sincere question.”
Mr. Turner responded: “Ukraine is a
democracy. Russia is an authoritarian regime that is seeking to impose its will
upon a validly elected democracy in Ukraine, and we’re on the side of
democracy.”
Such confrontations have muddied the
Republican response, but more concerning are worries that the right could
prompt U.S. allies to question Washington’s resolve. On a conference call on
Wednesday with Ukrainian Americans, Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of
Connecticut, expressed alarm about “the rhetoric of the far right.”
“Our allies are watching closely for
signs of division here,” he said in an interview after the call. “The good news
is, I detect no real traction of those messages from my Republican colleagues.”
The bad news, he allowed, is that
most Republicans are willing to disown it only in private.
Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of
Delaware, said legislation to impose sanctions on Russia and bolster Ukraine’s
military and economic position could be on the Senate floor as soon as next
week, and he hopes it will counter any message of division.
“This is a moment for us to come
together and pass a strong, bipartisan sanctions package to send an
unmistakable signal of support for Ukraine, Ukraine’s independence and for
President Biden’s leadership,” he said on Wednesday.
Publicly, Republican leaders have
been talking tough. After Mr. Biden’s gaffe last week, when he seemed to
suggest that a “minor incursion” into Ukraine would not merit a forceful allied
response, Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 2 Republican,
asked: “Do you think the strong, wonderful people of the Ukraine think it would
be a minor incursion if Putin moved tanks into Ukraine, even a piece of the
Ukraine? Of course they don’t.”
This week, speaking to reporters in
Kentucky, the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, indicated such
criticism had pushed the administration to toughen its stance.
“What I’ve been hearing since then is
encouraging, that they’re prepared to take steps before an incursion, not
afterwards,” he said, adding, “It appears to me the administration is moving in
the right direction.”
But that direction — and that
message — may not be what the most partisan Republican voters want. A Yahoo News/YouGov poll
released this week found that 62 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning
independents view President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia as a stronger leader
than Mr. Biden. But a survey released on
Wednesday by the Pew Research Center found that views of Russia’s
military buildup near Ukraine did not differ much by partisan affiliation at
all.
Representative Tom Malinowski,
Democrat of New Jersey, said on Wednesday that some callers to his district
office had begun parroting Mr. Carlson’s assertions that the United States
should be allied with Russia, not Ukraine, or that United States should be
supporting Russia’s “reasonable” demands for NATO withdrawal from Eastern
Europe.
“Most Republicans in the House are
totally solid; to the extent they want Biden to do more, that’s at least a
healthy instinct,” Mr. Malinowski said in a phone interview from Brussels,
where a bipartisan House delegation was visiting NATO after meetings in
Ukraine. “I do think some of them are slightly in denial about this other force
in their party.”
For now, Mr. Malinowski said, the
United States’ allies in Europe are united in their response to Russian
aggression. Though they remain wary of American constancy after four years of
Mr. Trump’s anti-NATO remarks, so far they trust that the Biden administration
and Republican leadership will stand by the alliance if Russian forces invade
Ukraine.
But, he warned, Republican leaders
should not be fooled into thinking their foreign policy views could survive a
resurgence of Trumpism in the White House, either with a return of the former
president or with the election of one of his acolytes. He pointed to the memo drafted
in the closing days of the Trump White House to justify the firing of Defense
Secretary Mark T. Esper. The reasons included his focus on Russia and “every
facet of competition” with Moscow, and his opposition to withdrawing U.S.
troops from Germany.
In some sense, the taunts, insults
and isolationist sentiments coming from the Republicans’ far-right flank are
consistent with the Trump era, when Mr. Trump stood beside Mr. Putin in
Helsinki, Finland, and said he trusted the Russian strongman over his own
intelligence agencies.
“Despite claims by war hawks on both
sides of the aisle, it is not in our national interest to spill American blood
and treasure in Ukraine,” Mr. Rosendale wrote in a statement.
Mr. Gosar wrote: “We have no dog in
the Ukraine fight. Not one American soldier should die there. Not one American
bullet should be fired there. We just lost Afghanistan to sandal wearing goat
herders. I assure you Russian military is no joke either.”
Others were simply insulting. Ms.
Greene again called for Mr. Biden’s impeachment. Ms. Boebert brought up
Burisma, the Ukrainian company that Hunter Biden did work for, leading to
outlandish accusations of corruption from Republicans, which were later dispelled by a Senate Republican inquiry
that found no evidence of improper influence or wrongdoing by the elder Mr.
Biden.
Just as significant, some said on
Wednesday, is the silence from Republicans, who have refused to speak out
against their fringe."
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