The Polish Foreign Minister Told Speaker Johnson, ‘The Credibility of Your Country is at Stake’ About Ukraine!
CNS News– On Sunday, Poland’s foreign minister said he would tell House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) that the “fate” of the war-torn country and the “credibility” of the United States are at stake if the US doesn’t help Ukraine. If Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski could talk to Johnson, he would tell him, “Mr. Speaker, it is the fate of Ukraine, it is the tortured people of Ukraine that beg you, and it is also the credibility of your country that is at stake.”
Sikorski was asked by CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS what he would say to Johnson if he had the chance to do so. “During the war, the president of the United States made a historic trip to Kyiv and raised the American flag in downtown Kyiv. He said, ‘You are an ally, we will do whatever it takes to help you for as long as it takes,'” Sikorski said.
There has been a speech from the United States. After that, there needs to be action and delivery.” Johnson is under more and more pressure to pass a foreign aid package that has been stuck for a while. The plan includes $60 billion in aid for Ukraine’s fight against Russia. Early this month, the Senate passed a bill to spend $95 billion on emergency defense.
This happened almost four months after President Biden asked Congress to give money to Kyiv. The bill may not go through the House, though, because Johnson has said he won’t put it on the floor for a vote because it doesn’t include the border security steps that House Republicans want. Help for the Eastern European country has been in limbo for almost a year because lawmakers are becoming more divided.
Congress hasn’t passed a bill with money for Ukraine since the end of 2022 when a Democratic majority passed its fourth package for the country. On Sunday, Sikorski talked about how important it is for Ukraine to keep fighting Russia.
He said that the Ukrainians are “now in defense mode” because their wins over Russia have cost Russia’s forces more men and materials. “In December, I was in Kyiv, and I talked to my Ukrainian colleagues all the time.” They had eight times as much artillery as they did around Avdiivka, he said on Sunday.
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“So they’re fighting close up, which is why more people are dying than should be because there aren’t enough weapons. There aren’t enough weapons because the supplemental hasn’t been passed yet.” Poland, which is next to Ukraine, has been a strong supporter of that country’s fight against Russia for almost two years now, ever since Russia began its attack.