Zelensky takes weapons push to Congress — and the defense industry

Image credits: Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had spoken to Congress before on 16 March 2022. [Fox News]

While many countries hire lobbyists to help them buy U.S. arms, Ukraine has taken an unusually direct approach.

By Connor Echols

Ukrainian officials gave members of Congress a wish-list of weapons that Kyiv says it needs in order to support its ongoing counter-offensive, according to the Wall Street Journal.

That list, which Politico published yesterday, includes several long-range weapons that President Joe Biden has so far considered to be a red line, citing the risks of escalation to a wider war if Ukraine is able to strike deep inside Russian territory.

The congressional effort highlights Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s “somewhat unprecedented” approach to getting weapons from Washington, according to Bill Hartung of the Quincy Institute. While it’s become commonplace for U.S. allies to hire lobbyists to push their interests in Congress, other countries have balked at the idea of pressuring a president by openly lobbying lawmakers.

“It’s understandable from Zelensky’s point of view. He wants the most sophisticated weaponry possible, and he’s going to push for that in some fashion,” said Hartung. “But he’s been very open about it, which is not always how foreign governments do this.”

In another unusual step, Zelensky has reportedly agreed to give a keynote speech next week at the annual conference of the National Defense Industrial Association, a leading defense industry trade group. He is expected to make a plea to arms dealers for more weapons, adding another unusual point of pressure on Biden.

The speech may be the first by a foreign head of state at such a major U.S. defense conference, Hartung said, adding that it creates concerns that the event will be a “PR coup” for weapons makers.

“The industry can wrap itself in the flag or the notion that they’re the arsenal of democracy, which is not really what they do in reality, given their sales to places like Yemen and Egypt and other human rights abusing countries,” he added.

Ultimately, Hartung says, decisions about whether to send longer-range weapons will have to come from the White House.

“I think it’s really up to the Biden administration to decide whether there’s a line to be drawn about systems that might be escalatory,” he added, noting that it’s “ultimately the U.S. that’s supplying the weapons.”

Source: Responsible Statecraft

 

The Liberum

Vox Populi, Vox Dei
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Pygmalion’s eyeball – Hitchcock and the male gaze, revisited

Disclaimer: It seems I’m going to have to eat some of my words as regards […]

UAE seeks to build on Lebanese President Joseph Aoun’s Election as it lifts all bans

The United Arab Emirates announced on Thursday that it will lift a travel ban on […]

Trilateral Format Emerges in the South Caucasus

Amid ongoing regional challenges and a history of failed external initiatives, the countries of the […]

Putin’s migration paradox

In anti-establishment circles in the West, Russian President Vladimir Putin is widely portrayed as a […]

NATO’s Secretary General Mark Rutte’s incomprehensible logic: Losing is the new Winning

“Ukraine is not losing, but the front is moving in the wrong direction.” These words, […]

The Great Reorientation – Ammar al-Masry’s new pivot strategy

I made a concerted decision not to buy too much SF during the Cairo International […]