Letters from an American - April 11, 2024
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April 11, 2024.
When Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida addressed a joint meeting of Congress today,
he tried to remind lawmakers of who Americans are.
The U.S. shaped the international order in the post-war world through economic, diplomatic,
military, and technological power, he reminded them.
It championed freedom and democracy.
It encouraged the stability and prosperity of nations, including Japan. And when necessary, it made noble sacrifices to fulfill its commitment to a better world.
He explained the bigger picture.
The United States policy was based on the premise that humanity does not want to live
oppressed by an authoritarian state, where you're tracked and surveilled and denied from
expressing what is in your heart and on your mind, he said.
You believed that freedom is the oxygen of humanity.
Keenly aware that MAGA Republicans have rejected the nation's role in protecting freedom and
democracy and are standing between Ukraine and USAID, Kishida said, the world needs the United
States to continue playing this pivotal role in the affairs of nations.
Freedom and democracy are currently under threat around the globe, he said. Climate change has
caused natural disasters, poverty, and displacement on a global scale. In the COVID-19 pandemic,
all humanity suffered. Rapid advances in AI technology have resulted in a battle over
the soul of AI that is raging between its promise and its perils. The balance of economic power is
shifting. The global south plays a greater role in responding to challenges and opportunities
and calls for a larger voice. China's current external stance and military actions
present an unprecedented and the greatest strategic challenge,
not only to the peace and security of Japan,
but to the peace and stability of the international community at large.
In the midst of all this dramatic change, Kishida said,
the leadership of the United States is indispensable. Without U.S.
support, how long before the hopes of Ukraine would collapse under the onslaught from Moscow,
he asked. Without the presence of the United States, how long before the Indo-Pacific would face even harsher realities. We'll continue to stand with the vulnerable
country. In this fraught hour, he said, the democratic nations of the world must have all
hands on deck. I am here to say that Japan is already standing shoulder to shoulder with the United States. You are not alone. We are with you.
As Kishida gently warned lawmakers that the United States is abdicating its role in world
affairs by its apparent abandonment of Ukraine, Russian forces last night destroyed the largest
power plant in the Kiev region. U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, Bridget A. Brink, reported
that Russia last night launched more than 40 drones and 40 missiles into Ukraine. The situation
in Ukraine is dire. There is not a moment to lose, she wrote. House Speaker Mike Johnson,
a Republican of Louisiana, surely knows the situation in Ukraine is dire.
He has held up U.S. aid for six months. The Senate passed a national security supplemental
bill that would provide aid to Ukraine back in February. But while Johnson has said he would
bring the supplemental bill to the House floor, where it will certainly pass, somehow it has never been the right time.
American refusal to support Ukraine is causing global concern. When British Foreign Secretary David Cameron came to the U.S. this week, he not only met with lawmakers and State Department
officials, but also traveled to Florida to meet with former President Trump at Mar-a-Lago in hopes of persuading him to support additional
U.S. military aid to Ukraine. That Johnson refused to meet with Cameron when he returned
to Washington, D.C. the next day suggests that Cameron's effort achieved little.
Johnson is facing pressure from extremists in his conference, like Georgia Representative Marjorie
Taylor Greene, who oppose aid to Ukraine and who are threatening to challenge his speakership if
he brings the bill to the floor of the House. Those extremists fired another shot across his
bow today when they blocked a law to extend a section of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act after Trump urged them to kill it. When the measure failed,
security expert and former Trump administration official Miles Taylor wrote,
the House's failure to renew FISA is bad. If these powers lapse, it would be like blindfolding U.S.
spies and tying their hands behind their backs as they try to protect Americans from China,
Russia, terror groups, and beyond. Get it together, Congress.
To enable Johnson to ignore the extremists, if it means getting aid to Ukraine, Democrats have
thrown Johnson a lifeline. If only he will use it. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a Democrat of New York,
suggested today that Democrats would vote against a challenge to Johnson's speakership,
keeping him in place. Jeffries said, if the Speaker were to do the right thing and allow
the House to work its will with an up or down vote on the national security bill,
then I believe there are a reasonable number of Democrats
who would not want to see the Speaker fall as a result of doing the right thing.
But instead of actually doing the people's business and passing a measure the White House,
Pentagon, and a majority of Congress think is vital to our national security,
MAGA Republicans appear to be consumed by the effort to get Trump
back into the presidency. Today, the House Rules Committee got a new chair as Michael Burgess,
a Republican of Texas, took the reins from Tom Cole, a Republican of Oklahoma. Burgess will
oversee his first hearing on Monday as the committee meets to examine six bills that appear
to be designed to feed the Republicans' culture wars by denying the Secretary of Energy's power
to establish new energy conservation standards. Those bills are the Hands Off Our Home Appliances Act, the Liberty in Laundry Act, the Closed Dryers Reliability Act, the Refrigerator
Freedom Act, the Affordable Air Conditioning Act, and the Stop Unaffordable Dishwasher Standards Act.
Johnson is also in on the act. He is scheduled to visit Mar-a-Lago tomorrow to promote a bill to prevent non-citizens from voting.
This is purely political theater.
It is already illegal for non-citizens to vote in federal elections.
Trump seems eager to push the idea of election integrity to bolster his lie that the 2020 election was stolen
and the 2024 election will be too, evidently trying to
chum up distrust of American elections. Under its new co-chairs, Trump's daughter-in-law,
Lara Trump, and Trump loyalist, Michael Whatley, the Republican National Committee last week
sent out a robocall to voters' phones saying that Democrats committed massive fraud in the 2020 presidential election
and that if Democrats have their way, your vote could be canceled out by someone who isn't even
an American citizen. This is a straight up lie, of course. Trump and his loyalists have never
produced any evidence for their accusations and lost more than 60 court cases over it.
But Trump clearly intends to make it a centerpiece
of his campaign.
While Republicans are pushing the big lie,
in the bulwark today,
conservative commentator Mona Charan
noted that Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky
this week warned the US
that Ukraine will lose the war against Russia's
aggression if it does not get U.S. aid. Putin seems to have pulled off the most successful
foreign influence operation in American history, Charon wrote. If Trump were being blackmailed by
Putin, it's hard to imagine how he would behave any differently. And though it
started with Trump, it has not ended there. Putin now wields more power over the Republicans than
anyone other than Trump. They mouth Russian disinformation without shame. Putin, she said,
must be pinching himself. Thank you.