Progressive Democrats retract Biden Ukraine letter after furious debate
Dramatic U-turn from progressive caucus, withdrawing letter sent to US president urging talks to end war in Ukraine
Pramila
Jayapal, pictured here in December 2021 with other members of the
progressive caucus, said: ‘The letter was drafted several months ago,
but unfortunately was released by staff without vetting.’ Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
Tue 25 Oct 2022 13.12 EDTFirst published on Tue 25 Oct 2022 12.16 EDT
The
chair of the progressive caucus of the US House of Representatives,
Pramila Jayapal, has retracted a letter sent by 30 of the members urging
Joe Biden
to engage in direct talks with Russia to end the war in Ukraine
following a heated debate within the Democratic party about future
strategy over the conflict.
We need direct talks with Russia and a negotiated settlement
In
a statement issued on Tuesday afternoon, Jayapal made a dramatic
U-turn, scrapping the letter that had been sent to the White House the
previous day and implying it had all been a mistake. “The letter was
drafted several months ago, but unfortunately was released by staff
without vetting,” she said.
Jayapal went on to regret what she said was conflation of the progressive Democratic call for a diplomatic end to the Ukraine
war with a recent statement by the Republican leader in the House,
Kevin McCarthy, which threatened an end to aid for the stricken country
should the Republican party take back the House in next month’s midterm
elections.
Jayapal said: “The letter sent
yesterday has been conflated with GOP opposition to support for the
Ukrainians’ just defense of their national sovereignty. As such, it is a
distraction at this time and we withdraw the letter.”
Jayapal’s
retraction is the latest twist in a strange 24 hours of Democratic
politics, which has seen the progressive caucus apparently lend its name
to a call for direct talks with Moscow to end the war in Ukraine,
followed by a fierce backlash and then staged walking back of the
position.
In the original letter, sent to the White House on Monday and first reported by the Washington Post,
the progressive Democrats called on Biden to make “vigorous diplomatic
efforts” towards a “negotiated settlement and ceasefire”. They
highlighted the global hunger and poverty that could ensue from Russia’s
illegal invasion of Ukraine as well as “elevated gas and food prices at
home”, concluding that America’s top priority should be to seek “a
rapid end to the conflict”.
Perhaps the most
controversial aspect of the letter was the proposal that Biden should
explore “incentives to end hostilities, including some form of sanctions
relief” for Russia.
The
letter provoked fierce pushback from several Democratic lawmakers –
including one of its own signatories – and elicited a frosty White House
response. It was interpreted as the first sign of friction over Ukraine
within the Democratic party, which has until now stood firm behind
Biden’s unconditional backing of Kyiv in its battle to defend and
retrieve its sovereign territory from Moscow.
The
timing of the correspondence was also criticised, coming at a crucial
stage in the war and just a week after Kevin McCarthy, the top
Republican in the House, said that Congress was “not going to write a blank check to Ukraine”.
The blowback from Democrats was so intense that within hours of the letter being dispatched, Jayapal was forced to issue a “clarification”.
“Let me be clear: we are united as Democrats
in our unequivocal commitment to supporting Ukraine in their fight for
their democracy and freedom in the face of the illegal and outrageous
Russian invasion, and nothing in the letter advocates for a change in
that support,” she said.
The original letter
was signed by several of the most prominent leftwing Democrats in the
House, including the so-called “Squad” of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley and Rashida Tlaib. Jamie Raskin, a member
of the House committee investigating the January 6 insurrection at the
US Capitol, was also among the 30.
The White
House responded by repeating Biden’s central approach – that Ukraine
will decide for itself when and how to negotiate with Russia. The press
secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, reiterated that there would be “nothing
about Ukraine without Ukraine”.
Individual
Democratic lawmakers were more pointed in their reaction – including
signatories. Mark Pocan, a congressman from Wisconsin who signed the
letter, said it had first been drafted in July and indicated that he had
been caught off guard by its publication.
“I have no idea why it went out now. Bad timing,” he said.
Joe Biden speaks by phone to Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in the Oval Office in December last year. Photograph: Leah Millis/Reuters
A
second signatory, Mark Takano of California, put out a statement after
the letter was revealed saying he remained “steadfast in support of the
Ukrainian people”.
Ruben Gallego of Arizona, a member of the progressive caucus who declined to sign the letter, posted an acerbic response on Twitter. He wrote: “The way to end a war? Win it quickly. How is it won quickly? By giving Ukraine the weapons to defeat Russia.”
The sharpest comment from any Democrat came from the former marine and representative from Massachusetts, Jake Auchincloss. He condemned the letter
as “an olive branch to a war criminal who’s losing his war. Ukraine is
on the march. Congress should be standing firmly behind [Biden’s]
effective strategy, including tighter – not weaker! – sanctions.”
After
the initial eruption of criticism, some of the progressive signatories
defended their action. Ro Khanna of California, who pointed out that he had voted for each of the aid packages to Ukraine, said: “Our nation should never silence or shout down debate.”
Congress
has so far approved about $66bn for Ukraine since the Russian invasion
began in February, including military, humanitarian and economic help.
With Ukraine stepping up its advance on Russian positions as a
potentially punishing winter approaching, and with the US midterm
elections looming on 8 November, the progressives’ letter could not have
landed at a more sensitive time.
Russia
specialists warned that the intervention could embolden Putin and loosen
US commitment to lead the international coalition in support of
Ukraine. Yoshiko Herrera, a political science professor at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, said, “The biggest problem in the
letter is that it may weaken US support for Ukraine by fostering the
appearance of divisions among those who support Ukraine.”
Cracks,
albeit fine ones, are already clearly visible on the Republican side.
The largest aid package for Ukraine, amounting to $40bn, was passed in
May with 57 Republicans in the House and 11 in the Senate voting
against.
Supporters of the letter said that it
reflected a desire to end the war through diplomacy – an aspiration
which Biden himself has championed. He was explicit about that goal in a speech he made in Delaware in June.
Biden
said: “It appears to me that, at some point along the line, there’s
going to have to be a negotiated settlement here. And what that entails,
I don’t know.”