The US has funded Kiev without defining an actual objective, Marco Rubio has told the Senate
It is unrealistic to believe Ukraine can win against Russia and the US should no longer give Kiev indefinite support, Macro Rubio, nominated to be the secretary of state in the upcoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, has said.
Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday, as part of his confirmation process, Rubio said that ending the conflict should be Washington’s priority.
“I think it should be the official position of the United States that this war should be brought to an end,” the Florida senator told his colleagues.
“There is no way Russia takes all of Ukraine,” Rubio said. “That’s not going to happen.”
“There’s no way Ukraine is also going to push these people all the way back to where they were,” he added, noting the difference in size and population of the two countries.
Ukraine’s problem is not running out of money, but “running out of Ukrainians,” Rubio noted, quoting what he heard recently.
Millions of Ukrainians now live abroad and may not come back, as the country’s infrastructure and economy have been devastated and it will take decades and hundreds of billions of dollars to rebuild it, he said.
The US Congress has appropriated almost $175 billion in aid to Ukraine since the conflict escalated in February 2022, of which about $65 billion has been direct military assistance. Yet the outgoing administration “never clearly delineated what the end goal of the conflict was,” Rubio told the senators.
“What exactly were we funding? What exactly were we putting money towards? On many occasions it sounded like ‘however much it takes for however long it takes’. That is not a realistic or prudent position,” he said.
According to Rubio, negotiating a peace will be “hard work” and require “bold diplomacy,” with concessions being made by both Ukraine and Russia.
“It’s also important that there be some balance on both sides. In essence, it will be difficult to achieve this objective of a ceasefire and ultimately a peace settlement unless both sides have leverage,” he concluded.
Ukraine has outlawed any negotiations with Russia so long as President Vladimir Putin is in office. Moscow has said it is willing to talk but its terms for ending the conflict involve ensuring that Ukraine will be a neutral, demilitarized and “denazified” state that guarantees all civil rights of Russian-speakers and recognizes territorial changes on the ground.
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