[Pages S1568-S1576]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




     HALT ALL LETHAL TRAFFICKING OF FENTANYL ACT--Motion to Proceed

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader.


                         Trump Executive Orders

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I want to note that we just learned that 
the Trump administration is getting ready to cut nearly 80,000 
employees from the VA. Slashing nearly 80,000 VA staff is a benefit cut 
by another name. No one should think this doesn't dramatically hurt our 
veterans who have served us so well.
  This staffing cut is a betrayal of our promise to our 
servicemembers--a betrayal to the promise of our servicemembers. It is 
going to mean longer wait times, fewer appointments, and ultimately 
less healthcare for our veterans. It is outrageous.
  No one in America bargained for this, and Democrats are going to 
fight this tooth and nail, working with our veterans service 
organizations to fight these awful, unfair cuts that take out the 
desire to give tax cuts to billionaires on our veterans who served us 
so well. This is just one of the most outrageous things they have done, 
and there is a long list.


                                Ukraine

  Now, another outrageous thing that is happening with the Trump 
administration is what is happening in Ukraine.
  First, I want to thank my colleagues for bringing these five 
resolutions to the floor. I thank Senator Sanders for taking the lead 
on this issue, Senators Bennet, Van Hollen, Durbin, Blumenthal, and 
Welch. Let's start by speaking some much needed truth.
  Three years ago, Vladimir Putin brought war and destruction to the 
people of Ukraine. He started the war, not any mythology that comes 
from Donald Trump or our Republican colleagues. Vladimir Putin started 
the war. Full stop.
  His tanks and airstrikes have obliterated homes and schools. He is 
slaughtering civilians as a way to try and win territory in Ukraine. He 
has kidnapped children. The people of Ukraine did not ask for this war. 
President Zelenskyy did not start this war. Putin did. That is the 
truth of this lie after lie after lie that comes out of the Trump 
administration. This is one of the most egregious.
  The people of Ukraine have struggled. President Zelenskyy has led 
them valiantly, risking his own life, and now the nerve of Donald Trump 
and others to say Zelenskyy started the war.
  Donald Trump is trying to rewrite history and gain favor with 
Vladimir Putin. He blames Ukraine for starting the war, and now he is 
shutting off, halting, military aid that Ukraine desperately needs on 
the battlefield--desperately needs--and we need to restore it.

[[Page S1569]]

  He has frozen critical intelligence sharing between our countries. He 
has allowed Putin to launch cyber operations against us, here in the 
United States. That jeopardizes the privacy of American citizens.
  He has frozen intelligence sharing between our countries, and he has 
brought President Zelenskyy to the Oval Office, only to lecture and 
insult him in front of the whole world.
  Guess who was laughing as he watched. Vladimir Putin.
  To side with Putin is to put America at risk. My Democratic 
colleagues will make that clear over the next several hours. To side 
with Putin is to betray the values that define America, values our 
troops have died for in battlefields across the world, from Gettysburg 
to Normandy, to Iwo Jima.
  The Senate must respond. Democrats and Republicans have done so 
before. I worked with then-Leader McConnell to get Ukraine desperately 
needed aid. And today's resolutions affirm very basic bipartisan ideas 
that, hopefully, still remain with our Republican colleagues--that the 
U.S. Senate stands with democracy, stands with the great people of 
Ukraine, and against the dictator--the brutal dictator--Vladimir Putin 
and his war crimes.
  History is clear--perfectly clear. Appeasing autocrats is like 
putting out a fire with kerosene. In the long run, it will only make 
autocracy more powerful and the citizenry of America less safe. That is 
why today the Senate must speak in one voice, Democrats and Republicans 
together, and pass these resolutions.
  I hope that is what happens, and I yield the floor to my colleague 
from Vermont, who has led the charge on this so important an issue.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 109

  Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, I thank the minority leader for his 
comments.
  I am here tonight with colleagues who have worked extremely hard to 
protect the sovereignty of Ukraine and to defend democracy in that 
country and, in fact, throughout the world. And I thank all of my 
colleagues for getting on the floor this evening and for the 
resolutions that they will be bringing forth.
  I am not a historian, but I do know that, for the last 250 years, 
since the inception of our great country, despite our imperfections, 
the United States has stood in the world as a symbol of democracy. And 
all over the world--all over the world--people have looked to our 
country as an example of freedom and self-governance to which the rest 
of the world could aspire. People have long looked to our Declaration 
of Independence and our Constitution as blueprints for how to establish 
governments of the people, by the people, and for the people.
  Tragically, all of that is now changing. As President Trump moves 
this country toward authoritarianism, he is aligning himself with 
dictators and despots who share his disdain for democracy and the rule 
of law.
  Last week--just last week--in a radical departure from longstanding 
U.S. policy, the Trump administration voted against a United Nations 
resolution which clearly stated that Russia began the horrific war in 
Ukraine. That U.N. resolution also called on Russia to withdraw its 
forces from occupied Ukraine, in line with international law.
  The resolution was brought forward by our closest allies, countries 
that we have been aligned with for God knows how many years, including 
the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, and 
dozens of other democratic nations. And 93 countries at the U.N. voted 
yes on that resolution.
  Rather than side with our longstanding allies to preserve democracy 
and uphold international law, President Trump voted with authoritarian 
nations like Russia, North Korea, Iran, and Belarus to oppose the 
resolution. Many of the other opponents of that resolution are 
undemocratic nations propped up by Russian military aid.
  But it wasn't just the U.N. vote. Pathetically, President Trump also 
told an outrageous lie, claiming that it was Ukraine that started the 
war, not Russia. He also called Zelenskyy a dictator, rather than the 
leader of a democratic nation, as he is.
  As we discuss Ukraine tonight, it is terribly important that we not 
forget who Vladimir Putin is and why he is no friend of the United 
States and why we should not be in an alliance with him against 
Ukraine.
  Putin is a man who crushed Russia's movement toward democracy after 
the end of the Cold War. Putin is a man who steals elections, murders 
political dissidents, and crushes freedom of the press. He has 
maintained control in Russia by offering the oligarchs there a simple 
deal: If they grant him absolute power and share the spoils--and he, by 
the way, is one of the wealthiest people in the world--he would let 
them steal as much as they wanted from the Russian people.
  The result: While the vast majority of the Russian population 
struggles economically, Putin and his fellow oligarchs stash trillions 
of dollars in offshore tax havens.
  And so today, 26 years after he took power, Putin is the absolute 
ruler of Russia, and I think, as everyone knows, Russia's elections are 
blatantly fraudulent--a sham.
  And Putin is the man who sparked the bloodiest war in Europe since 
World War II. More than 3 years ago, on February 24, 2022, Putin 
ordered a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, in clear violation of the 
Charter of the United Nations and international law. Russian land, air, 
and naval forces have attacked and occupied territory across Ukraine.

  Since that terrible day, more than a million people have been killed 
or injured because of Putin's war. Putin's forces have massacred 
civilians and kidnapped thousands of Ukrainian children, bringing them 
back to Russian reeducation camps.
  These atrocities led the International Criminal Court to issue an 
arrest warrant for Putin in 2023 as a war criminal--a war criminal. 
That is who we are aligning ourselves with.
  And still today, Russia continues its attacks, raining down hundreds 
of missiles and drones on Ukrainian citizens. Russian forces illegally 
occupy about 20 percent of Ukraine's sovereign territory.
  This war could end today, right now. If Putin gave up his outrageous 
effort to conquer a neighboring country, the war could end today. The 
killing could stop right now if Putin gave that order, and that simply 
is what my resolution says to Vladimir Putin: Stop the killing. Obey 
international law. Withdraw your forces and cease your attacks on 
Ukraine. And I, honestly, just don't know how anybody in the U.S. 
Senate could object to that simple demand.
  Now, more than at any time in recent history, it is imperative that 
the Senate come together in a bipartisan manner to make it clear that 
we stand for democracy, not authoritarianism; that we stand for 
international law, not conquest by force; and that we stand with 
Ukraine and fellow democracies throughout the world, not with the 
murderous dictator of Russia.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the 
consideration of S. Res. 109, which was submitted earlier today; 
further, that the resolution be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, 
and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the 
table with no intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I rise to 
object to this. Senator Sanders has brought us a resolution which very 
simply states that Russia must immediately and completely and 
unconditionally withdraw from the territory of Ukraine. This isn't even 
a law. It isn't even a bill. It is only a resolution.
  Now, there isn't anybody that disagrees with this. I certainly agree 
with the substance of this, but this is going to have absolutely zero 
effect of any kind. If my good friend Senator Sanders believes that 
Vladimir Putin is watching this show on TV and says, ``Huh, they passed 
a resolution saying I should get out of Ukraine; so I guess I will pack 
up and go,'' you are delusional if you think it is going to have any 
effect of any kind on Vladimir Putin.
  However, having said that, I don't think it is a secret to anyone 
that there are very delicate negotiations going on. There are four 
entities involved. Obviously, Ukraine is involved,

[[Page S1570]]

the United States is involved, Russia is involved, and our European 
allies are involved. There is constant conversation going on.
  I think a lot of people were upset when they saw the exchange this 
weekend, understandably. But, look, what you are looking at is the tip 
of the iceberg. Everybody wants the same outcome and that is to have 
peace in Ukraine.
  There is one man on this planet--one man--that can make that happen, 
and that is Donald J. Trump. He promised he would do that in the 
election. He is making very significant strides in that regard.
  And to my good friend Senator Sanders, this is not helpful to the 
activities that are going on to try to get this resolved. You may think 
you know what is going on, but I can guarantee with absolute certainty, 
you do not know what is going on as far as the negotiations are 
concerned to get this over with. What you are looking at is the tip of 
the iceberg, and this is not going to be helpful to getting to the 
point that you want to get to, that I want to get to, that everyone 
wants to get to, and that is to get peace in Ukraine.
  On that basis, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
  The Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. SANDERS. Let me respond to my friend from Idaho. I think he said, 
to paraphrase him a bit, there is one man who can stop the war. You are 
right. But that man doesn't live here in Washington, DC. That man 
happens to live in Moscow, and his name is Vladimir Putin. He is the 
one who started the war. And, in my view, when we ally ourselves with 
Putin, when we threaten and, in fact, cut back on military support or 
intelligence support for Ukraine, do you know what we are telling that 
one man? We are saying you have got a green light. The United States is 
withdrawing. You do what you want. You continue the war. You continue 
to pummel the people of Ukraine, who have already suffered so terribly.

  So I think it is true that there are many approaches to how we can 
end this war, and I agree with my friend that we all have the common 
goal of wanting to end this war. But I think the fastest way forward is 
in a bipartisan way. You have 100 U.S. Senators and hopefully 435 
Members of the House who stand up and say: Mr. Putin, you started this 
terrible war. You are acting illegally. You are acting barbarically. 
Stop that war.
  That, in my mind, would be a major step forward to ending the 
atrocities we are currently seeing.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. McCORMICK). The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, I respect my friend, but I vehemently 
disagree that this resolution is going to cause Vladimir Putin to end 
this war.
  My good friend says that Vladimir Putin could end this war. He does 
not have the ability to end this war. This war is going to end when 
there is an agreement by the four entities involved: Ukraine, Russia, 
the United States, and our European allies. When those four reach an 
agreement, there will be an end to this war. That can be done by Donald 
J. Trump.
  I guarantee you, Vladimir Putin does not have the ability to bring 
those four entities together to end this war.
  Again, this is not helpful. You don't know what the negotiations are 
that are going on, and this is going in the wrong direction, and that 
is the reason I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. SANDERS. One brief remark because I strongly disagree on this 
issue with my friend.
  You think it takes Trump to end the war. You think that Putin alone 
can't end the war. Well, who do you think started the war? Who do you 
think runs Russia with an iron fist? If, tomorrow, Putin thought it was 
to his advantage to end this war, he would do it, and as a dictator, he 
can do it.
  So, with that, Mr. President, I would--I don't want to yield the 
floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. RISCH. Again, to my good friend Senator Sanders I would say that 
Putin does not have that ability. He simply does not have the ability. 
You talked about how he started this and how he could end it. He could 
have ended it shortly after he started it. He is in so deep in this, he 
cannot end it. It is going to take an agreement between the four 
entities to end it. That is how it is going to end.
  Mr. SANDERS. Could I ask my friend--I mean this sincerely--Senator 
Risch, would you agree with me that he is a dictator who runs Russia?
  Mr. RISCH. I don't--the answer to that is yes, but I don't want to do 
a quiz here.
  Mr. SANDERS. All right. The point is, he is a dictator, and he can 
end the war unilaterally, in my view.
  I yield the floor.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 110

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I am going to ask unanimous consent on a 
resolution concerning one aspect of this conflict in Ukraine that is 
particularly compelling, from my point of view. It is a little 
different than the Senator from Vermont's, but I think it is very 
important that it be raised and part of our consideration.
  War brings out the worst in humans, there is no doubt about it. 
Russia, under the bloody leadership of Vladimir Putin, has been guilty 
of some of the worst wartime atrocities the mind can imagine--murders, 
mass murders, rapes, torture, deliberate targeting of hospitals and 
civilians. That has been the 3-year strategy of Vladimir Putin to bring 
Ukraine to its knees.
  But one of the most horrific atrocities is Russia's kidnapping of 
Ukrainian children. I cannot even imagine the reality of this. Since 
Russia's full-scale war of aggression started in 2022, the Government 
of Russia has abducted, forcibly transferred, facilitated the illegal 
deportation of at least 20,000 Ukrainian children--20,000 children 
forcibly taken from their homes, families, and communities to a place 
they have never known.
  The depravity of this Putin strategy is hard to imagine, but Putin 
and his government know no humanity, no morality. It is not surprising 
that Putin would stoop to such a repulsive strategy. That is why today 
I am asking unanimous consent to pass a resolution condemning Russia's 
abduction of Ukrainian children.
  I am calling on Russia to work with the international community to 
return all of these children to their families. There is no tactful way 
to violate the sovereignty of a nation, but Putin takes depravity to a 
new extreme with his kidnapping of Ukrainian children. This barbaric 
act must be condemned.
  It should be easy for Members on both sides of the aisle to just 
imagine for a moment if this had happened to American children. It 
should be clear to everyone that President Trump cannot side with this 
grotesque child-kidnapping by President Putin. I am sure he does not.
  But it has to be a priority of any peace process to acknowledge 
Putin's responsibility for the invasion and the terrible policies in 
Ukraine.
  So I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the 
consideration of S. Res. 110, submitted earlier today; further, that 
the resolution be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, and that the 
motions to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table with 
no intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there an objection?
  The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, to my good 
friend from Illinois, I say I am going to object to this, and it is not 
because of the substance of the resolution. You correctly stated what 
the resolution states, but, again, I think you, along with myself and 
every Member of this body, want to see the fighting stop in Ukraine. 
That is a necessity. It has to happen.

  The things that are happening are going on right now. There are 
discussions going on right now. As I said to my good friend Senator 
Sanders, you may think you know what is going on on this because you 
watched what happened this weekend. I can tell you with absolute 
certainty that you do not know the discussions and what is happening as 
the train moves forward to try to resolve this.
  This isn't a resolution that is going to happen with a whole bunch of 
people getting involved and trying to lay out different things that 
they want to get to resolution. It is going to be complicated. It is 
going to be complex.
  Again, I come back to the fact that there is one person who is in the 
center

[[Page S1571]]

of this that can make this happen, and that is Donald J. Trump.
  Our passing resolutions here is not helpful to the efforts that are 
trying to be done to resolve this. So as a result of that, I am going 
to object to it, and as a result of that, I do object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
  The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I would just like to say briefly, I 
respect my friend from Idaho. We have a difference of opinion on this.
  I cannot imagine any resolution of this conflict on Ukraine that does 
not take into consideration these 20,000 kids who have been kidnapped 
by the Russians. They are going through this terrible indoctrination 
where they are being punished if they won't sing the Russian national 
anthem, where they are demanding that they learn a new language and 
develop a new loyalty to Russia. This is outrageous.
  The international courts have branded Vladimir Putin as a war 
criminal, and this is one of the reasons.
  I cannot imagine there will be any resolution of this peaceably 
without bringing these children back home to their families, and for us 
to be on the record saying that does not seem to me to be intrusive or 
a radical point of view. It just reflects the reality of where America 
should be.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, I agree with my good friend from Illinois 
that this is amongst many, many facts that are going to be taken into 
consideration as the parties negotiate in what is going to be a very 
complex negotiation to get to the end point. There are going to be a 
lot of things that do need to be considered.
  The difficulty is that when this institution, the U.S. Senate, puts 
something out like this, it does have an effect on the parties that are 
sitting at the table. And you don't really get to a resolution by 
prodding on these kinds of things. You talk about what it takes to stop 
the fighting, not what it took to get into it, not the actions that 
were taken during the fighting. But if you want to stop the fighting, 
you have to talk about where we are and where we need to get to.
  This simply, I can assure you, Senator, is not helpful to those 
negotiations that are going on.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 111

  Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, I want to join this conversation and 
broaden it a little bit. In my view, we are witnessing the great 
betrayal during these last 44 days. We have the great betrayal here at 
home of the American people because the President promised certain 
things that he was going to deliver on, and we haven't seen those. We 
see the great betrayal of our Ukrainian friends and our allies around 
the world and freedom-loving people around the world.
  Here at home, Candidate Trump, of course, promised that on day one, 
he was going to cut prices, that he was going to help working families. 
Last night, we witnessed the longest speech in American history to a 
joint session of Congress, and no plan was presented for lowering 
prices.
  Grocery prices are going up, rent prices are going up, and home 
prices are going up.
  We did see Elon Musk in the Gallery--the guy who said he wanted to 
take a chain saw to important services that benefit every American 
family. This is all part of a plan to cut taxes for very wealthy people 
like Elon Musk at the expense of everyone else.
  So in these 44 days, we have seen that great betrayal, but we have 
also seen the other betrayal. We have seen President Trump throw the 
Ukrainian people under the bus. I don't think any of us could have 
imagined a day when the United States sided with Russia and North Korea 
on a U.N. General Assembly resolution that condemned Russian 
aggression, where we voted with them and against our allies--against 
Ukraine, against all of our European allies, against all of our friends 
in Asia. Heck, even North Korea abstained. Even China abstained.
  So here we are throwing our allies under the bus. The folks that are 
openly cheering are the Russian leadership. I mean, this isn't just 
rhetoric; we have actually seen them expressing glee over the U.S. 
position. And of course they were very happy with the terrible 
spectacle in the Oval Office of the President and Vice President of the 
United States bullying President Zelenskyy.
  We have all met with President Zelenskyy. Nobody wants peace more 
than President Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people. They have lost 
thousands of people. They have sacrificed a lot. But they want a 
durable peace, and they want a peace that will recognize their 
sovereignty and their freedom and their independence. That is what they 
want.
  We have all heard President Zelenskyy repeatedly thank the American 
people for our support. In fact, on one occasion, he brought an 
American flag signed by Ukrainian soldiers expressing gratitude for all 
our help. And what he has gotten in exchange for that great sacrifice--
a sacrifice that helps support freedom-loving people everywhere--is the 
back of a hand he received in the Oval Office.
  So I think this is a moment where we need to speak with moral 
clarity, and we should do it together as a Senate. We are not directing 
the negotiations; we are expressing simple truths here on the Senate 
floor.
  The simple truth that I want to express here through the resolution 
that I will ask to be considered is that the Russian armed forces 
committed crimes against humanity and war crimes in Ukraine. It is 
pretty simple, and I would just draw my colleague's attention to a 
resolution that was considered by this Senate back in 2022. I have it 
right here in my hand, S. Res. 546, authored by Senator Graham, 
cosponsored by then-Senator Rubio, now-Secretary of State Rubio.

  What this resolution that the Senate considered just 3 years ago 
says--and I am going to read it--is:

       [The Senate] strongly condemns the ongoing violence, 
     including war crimes, crimes against humanity, and systematic 
     human rights abuses carried out by the Russian Armed Forces 
     and their proxies and President Putin's military commanders, 
     at the direction of President Vladimir Putin.

  That was the resolution we considered just 3 years ago. This 
resolution passed unanimously. Not a single Senator objected. Now, of 
course, we have new Members of the Senate, but every single Senator who 
was here at that time supported this simple statement of moral clarity.
  Two things have happened since then. In February of 2023, the 
Department of State determined that members of the Armed Forces of the 
Russian Federation and officials of the Government of the Russian 
Federation have committed crimes against humanity and war crimes in 
Ukraine. And in September of 2022, the Independent International 
Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine concluded that war crimes have been 
committed in Ukraine by the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation.
  So the Senate adopted a resolution with the simple truths a number of 
years ago. Those truths were reaffirmed by the Department of State in 
2023 and by the Independent International Commission of Inquiry in 
September 2022.
  Regardless of the state of negotiations, I would think that we would 
be able to reaffirm today the same truth that we expressed unanimously 
just a few years ago.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the 
consideration of S. Res. 111, which was submitted earlier today; 
further, that the resolution be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, 
and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the 
table with no intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. WICKER. Reserving the right to object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, my friend in Maryland and I participated 
in a bipartisan delegation on Friday morning last where we met with the 
President of Ukraine before what we hoped was going to be a signing 
ceremony. There were a number of Democrats that met with President 
Zelenskyy.
  As chairman of the Armed Services Committee, I participated and 
chaired that meeting. The distinguished chairman of the Budget 
Committee was also

[[Page S1572]]

there and the President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate was also there, 
along with quite a number of Democrats. We were wishing for the very 
best because we thought a significant agreement was about to be signed 
that would move us toward a reconciliation of this terrible war.
  I was distressed--I was devastated, even--when I saw the conversation 
that took place later on that day. I wondered if the damage could ever 
be repaired. Thankfully, the damage is being repaired, and we have had 
very hopeful signs of progress being made.
  I made the statement to the public and to members of the Armed 
Services Committee at a hearing just yesterday. It is time for those of 
us in the political realm who are not part of this negotiation to be 
silent; to take a deep breath and not do anything that could interfere 
with the excellent news that we saw coming yesterday with a very fine 
statement from President Zelenskyy, with the quoting of that statement 
with approval by the President of the United States last night.
  This is not the time for elected Members of the House and Senate to 
be passing resolutions. Take a deep breath. Let the negotiators do 
their work. And for Heaven's sake, not do anything that might, in some 
way, be interpreted as being belligerent or counterproductive. For that 
reason, I do object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Maryland.
  Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, I want to thank the Senator from 
Mississippi, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, for his 
commitment to this issue to working to end the war in Ukraine but to do 
it in a way that preserves the freedom and sovereignty of the people of 
Ukraine and as a durable peace.
  It escapes me how reaffirming truthful statements that the Senate has 
made in the past can possibly get in the way of a resolution of this 
crisis. I would argue that it is the President of the United States who 
has gotten in the way of a resolution of this crisis in the sense that, 
No. 1, he has clearly embraced Vladimir Putin in so many of his 
comments. And he went into this discussion by unilaterally giving away 
important leverage that is needed to result in a resolution that is a 
just resolution.
  You don't go into a negotiation by giving up the issue of American 
participation and security guarantees, however that might look. You 
don't go into a negotiation by unilaterally giving up on territorial 
concessions.
  This is why it is important, in my view, for the Senate simply to 
reconfirm the truths that we have already stated in the past. This 
seems to be a simple one--that war crimes have been committed by the 
Russian Army and that they have committed crimes against humanity. That 
is all this resolution says.
  I hope that we can, at some point, come back and revisit this because 
it is going to be very important to achieve not just a peace but a just 
peace.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. WICKER. I am simply responding and not attempting to prolong 
this. The negotiation process is underway.
  It may be that the negotiators are in different cities and in 
different continents at this point. But the matter is very sensitive. 
We should be very careful not to interfere with something that may make 
us all proud and give relief to thousands of millions.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 112

  Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I greatly respect the representation 
made by my colleague and friend from Mississippi, the chairman of the 
Armed Services Committee, and Senator Risch, our colleague, chairman of 
the Foreign Relations Committee about timing.
  I want to talk about timing because we have just passed the third 
year of this war. This moment is crucial.
  Thank you to Senator Sanders, Senator Van Hollen, Senator Durbin--
soon we will hear from Senator Bennet. We have resolutions that support 
Ukraine at a critical moment in its history.
  I have been there six times. I have come to know President Zelenskyy 
not only from meetings there, but in Paris, Munich, a number of times 
here in Washington, DC, and I will never forget my first meeting with 
him shortly after he was offered an escape. Do you remember what he 
said to President Biden when he offered a helicopter to exit the 
country: Don't send me a helicopter; send me ammunition--that courage 
and determination in the face of Russia coming within just a few miles 
of his bunker.
  I visited him and I then went to Bucha where I saw the remnants of 
the Russian tanks that came within a 10-minute drive of killing him and 
taking Kyiv. I also saw the mass graves where women and children were 
buried after the Russians shot hundreds of them in the back of their 
head, committing those war crimes that became so despicable in the eyes 
of the world and resulted in criminal charges against Vladimir Putin. 
It is the reason why I have urged that we regard the Putin regime as a 
terrorist organization.
  I recognize we are at a critical moment in these negotiations, as 
well as in Ukraine's 3-yearlong fight. Actually, it is well longer than 
3 years because the invasion first occurred in 2014, not long after 
Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons on the assurance that the free 
world would come to its aid if its security was ever threatened.
  It is that history that Volodymyr Zelenskyy tried to remind President 
Trump and Vice President Vance about last Friday--betrayal of 
agreements by Vladimir Putin. He is a thug. He understands force. He 
will assure the security of Ukraine only if force is guaranteed to meet 
another invasion if this one is stopped.
  On these negotiations and the timing, Senator Van Hollen said it 
well. You don't have to be an expert on the art of the deal to know you 
go into negotiations from a position of strength. Strength never hurts; 
it only helps in a negotiation.
  We are not dictating an outcome. We are not prescribing what the 
result of the negotiation should be. We are not telling the President 
or President Zelenskyy what their positions would be. We are saying to 
Ukraine: We have your back. We are going to be your backstop.
  And at that meeting, which I attended along with the Senator from 
Mississippi and Senator Van Hollen on that bright, sunny Friday 
morning, President Zelenskyy was asking us to assure that he had a 
security backstop. Of course, his preference is to be in NATO--no 
secret there. But security, as I suggested to him, through some 
bilateral agreement might be an acceptable outcome.
  We are not prescribing what that security should be, but only that 
Ukraine has support from the American people. That is the purpose of 
these resolutions. That support strengthens his position.
  We are not saying a specific amount of military aid should be 
provided or a specific negotiating position should be dictated for 
anyone. But only that--and I read from my resolution--we reaffirm the 
support of the United States for the sovereignty and territorial 
integrity of Ukraine in the face of the illegal invasion of its 
territory by the Russian Federation and the bonds of friendship and 
shared values between the people of the United States and allied 
fighting forces.
  Now, by any measure of military success, Ukraine has done the 
impossible. I am not giving away classified information when I tell you 
that in the days right after the invasion, we were assured by our 
military that the Russians would be in Kyiv within weeks. They weren't. 
The only reason they weren't was because of the ingenuity and 
inventiveness and just plain guts and grit of the Ukrainian people.
  Their success will go down as one of the most important feats of 
modern warfare in this century, and their accomplishments in the use of 
drones--an inventive use of drones--in their use of intelligence--our 
intelligence and their intelligence--in their success in the 
destruction of half or more of the Russian fleet in the Black Sea. They 
have developed techniques of warfare and platforms with our help that 
are absolutely remarkable.
  On every one of those six trips--in fact, in every meeting that I 
have had with President Zelenskyy--he has begun by declaring his 
gratitude for the aid from the United States. On

[[Page S1573]]

March 3, the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, which is their Parliament, 
expressed its ``profound gratitude to President Donald Trump, Congress, 
and the American people for their firm and consistent support of 
Ukraine's independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, as well as 
for the security assistance packages provided to Ukraine, which have 
helped stabilize the situation on the frontline.''
  The people of Ukraine are beyond grateful. If you walk through the 
streets of Ukraine and you are identified as an American, people will 
come up to you and thank you. In the Ukrainian community here in the 
United States, supporters of Ukraine have been thanked again and again 
and again. I wear a pin--and have done so for some years--with the 
American and Ukrainian flags. I have a bracelet that has the Ukrainian 
colors. The people of Ukraine thank me for those insignias of my 
support.
  We all know that Ukraine's fight is our fight and that our national 
security is at stake because Putin will keep going. If he swallows 
Ukraine, if he has dinner in Kyiv, he will want to have dinner in 
Finland and Sweden and Poland. They are NATO allies. We will be 
obligated to put troops on the ground. The soldiers of Ukraine are 
saving our soldiers from a fight where they will be in harm's way. They 
are bleeding and dying for our national security.
  So, when we talk about timing, let's recognize that now is the moment 
to make clear that Ukraine must be as strong as possible for our 
security if it enters these negotiations.
  Let me just finish with this thought: You know, I think it is 
difficult to describe what it is like to be in Ukraine in the midst of 
an air attack. On a couple of my visits, we were forced into bunkers 
when the sirens started. Obviously, we were never injured, and I want 
to avoid any misrepresentation. I never felt like I was going to be 
bombed right then and there. But if I had been there 365 days in a year 
and the apartment house next to me or my school or hospital were bombed 
and I came out of it and saw the bodies and realized how close I had 
come and how near death was--day after day after day, the Ukrainian 
people are living with this nightmare, not to mention the blackouts of 
electricity, the impacts of their quality of life, the loss of their 
loved ones, the injuries, and the maiming of young men, whom I have 
visited.
  The Ukrainian people want peace. The Ukrainian people want peace more 
than any of us. They certainly want peace more than Vladimir Putin, who 
has no respect for the lives of his people or the Ukrainians. They have 
fought for 3 years to stay free, to stay independent, to stay 
sovereign, and they have fought for years before that. The history of 
their people is one of fighting for their independence. They will 
continue fighting as long as peace threatens their sovereign and free 
status. They believe in peace. They want Donald Trump to succeed in 
achieving peace. We should support them in their goals, in their quest 
for peace with freedom and sovereignty for their people.
  I want to offer my resolution. So I ask unanimous consent that the 
Senate proceed to the consideration of S. Res. 112, which was submitted 
earlier today; further, that the resolution be agreed to, the preamble 
be agreed to, and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and 
laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, the Book of Ecclesiastes, in the Old 
Testament, has provided mankind with some of the greatest words of 
wisdom ever imparted.
  In chapter 3 of Ecclesiastes, the words say:

       For everything there is a season, and a time to every 
     purpose under heaven.

  It goes on to say there is ``a time to speak and a time to be 
silent.''
  Now, I have spoken, perhaps, not as eloquently but, perhaps, as often 
as my friend from Connecticut about this war--about who is to blame and 
about what should happen. I have been disappointed, over a 3-year 
period, at the previous administration for what I viewed as a slow-
walking of aid which might have given us a different situation 
currently on the ground in this European country.
  But we are at a point where there are delicate negotiations going on 
which might save lives, which might lead to peace--and lasting peace--
with a backstop by the United States and our allies in Europe. This is 
the Ecclesiastical time to be silent and let the negotiators do their 
work if they possibly can.
  For that reason, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I want to make clear, first--
absolutely clear--that I deeply respect my colleague from Mississippi, 
my friend and fellow Member, the leader of the Armed Services 
Committee, for his commitment to Ukraine. There should be no question 
that Senator Wicker is committed to Ukraine's freedom and independence. 
I have traveled with him. I have worked with him. I sat with him just 
Friday. We have a difference of view. He has access to different facts 
that I don't. I am going on basic principles, and I must confess I 
can't cite Scripture for my position. But I think common sense tells 
me, although he has more knowledge about the negotiations, that 
supporting Ukraine at this moment--simply saying we have your back; we 
are your backstop; we are supporting you--can't help but aid their 
position.
  But let me just say, what is most important about this conversation 
is that we will continue together on both sides of the aisle, in a 
bipartisan way, to support Ukraine. It isn't about their being less 
strong, at least in the case of Senator Wicker. I am absolutely sure, 
and I respect his views on this topic even though we differ, and I hope 
that this cause will continue to be bipartisan.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 114

  Mr. BENNET. Mr. President, I am sorry. The Presiding Officer seems to 
have the misfortune of being out here every time I come to the floor to 
speak. I regret that, and I feel sorry for him.
  I am glad to be out here with my colleagues, today, on both sides of 
the aisle. We have heard the Senator from Mississippi refer to what he 
described as the greatest words of wisdom that came from Ecclesiastes. 
Those were words of wisdom.
  I think another set of great words of wisdom came from Ronald Reagan, 
who said, ``Peace through strength.'' Peace through strength is what 
Ronald Reagan represented.
  I know the President, last night, had a less clear message to the 
American people. I know that he said that he was the greatest President 
in American history. George Washington, I think, was second on his 
list.
  For most of us in this Chamber, I think we probably would say Ronald 
Reagan earned a place there, even those of us who disagreed with him. 
One of the reasons was that he did what he said when it came to the 
national security interests of the United States of America. Because we 
have been following that path of peace through strength in a bipartisan 
way, the American people have been extremely generous in their support 
of the Ukrainian people since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia.
  The American people have earned a profound debt of gratitude from 
free people all over the world, including in the United States. Their 
courage and our weapons and the weapons of our allies have held Putin's 
army at the gates of Europe. Nothing else has. They have shown that 
democracies will stand up to defend themselves and will not roll over 
to dictators, whether they are in Moscow or Beijing.
  But unlike us and unlike the rest of the world, the Ukrainians 
actually have paid a huge human toll. They have had almost 400,000 
casualties. They have had over 40,000 deaths in this war. Their 
cemeteries are bulging with new graves that are piled high with flowers 
that testify to the sacrifice of the Ukrainian people in every 
community in Ukraine. Anybody who has been there has seen them. It is 
impossible to avoid the cemeteries that have piled up with soldiers who 
have been willing to pay the ultimate sacrifice on the frontlines of 
this war in Ukraine.

[[Page S1574]]

  I delivered a speech just a few days ago, which the Presiding Officer 
may have had the misfortune of hearing, discussing President Trump's 
false accusation that Ukraine started this war with Russia.
  To my colleagues who say it doesn't matter what the President says, 
that it is only the outcome that matters--be patient about this great 
negotiator who learned everything at the heels of Mr. Cohen while he 
was doing commercial real estate in New York--some of us are worried 
about it because words do matter, especially the words that the 
President utters.
  Could you imagine anybody on this floor defending a President who 
said that Taiwan had invaded China when China had invaded Taiwan? That 
would be ridiculous. That would be absurd. But that is the situation 
that we face today. It is no different than that. It is identical to 
that.
  He has called President Zelenskyy a dictator--the freedom fighter who 
is leading this battle and who has led this battle at Ukraine.
  Ronald Reagan would turn over in his grave if he knew that the 
President has invited Russia to rejoin the G7, which is a group of the 
world's most powerful democracies--democracies--that suspended Russia 
after Putin invaded Ukraine for the first time in 2014. By the way, are 
we supposed to believe that he didn't invade Ukraine then; that he was 
invited in somehow to Crimea? Is President Trump really fooled by the 
little green men that Vladimir Putin sent there after his 
administration held supposed peace talks in Saudi Arabia without even 
the decency to include Ukraine, which has had more than 400,000 
casualties?
  Every single one of these statements and decisions have emboldened 
Putin. You can see it in the newspapers in Russia. You can see it on 
TV. And they have weakened Ukraine's negotiating position, profoundly 
undermining our own national security.
  How this war ends will determine whether Putin sets his sights on our 
NATO allies, like Poland and the Baltics; whether dictators like 
China's Xi Jinping test our resolve by invading their neighbor, Taiwan; 
whether the post-World War II international order that the United 
States built and is today frittering away under this President's 
leadership remains intact; whether the United States can continue to 
provide the leadership on behalf of free nations all over this world 
and democracies all over this world that our parents and grandparents 
had the decency to sacrifice and build for us; whether we are going to 
face another conflict in this world that is actually started by a 
tyrant but ended by democracies.
  The last thing we should be doing is undermining Ukraine's 
negotiating position and ours when we have this much at stake.
  I know the Presiding Officer has spent his life in negotiations in 
the private sector. I have spent time--not as much as the Presiding 
Officer. I certainly have spent time in these negotiations as well. Our 
discipline, when I was in the private sector negotiating these deals, 
was that we would let every deal die at least three times because our 
theory was no deal worth doing could be done the first time or the 
second time. I can see the Presiding Officer probably--he probably said 
it is five times before you can do it. But the point is, you wouldn't 
undermine your own negotiating leverage while you are going into a 
deal.
  Today--today--the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency went on 
FOX News and told the world that we had shut down our intelligence-
sharing with Ukraine. We met--I don't know if I can say. I am on the 
Intelligence Committee, let me be careful what I say. Today, the United 
States of America has said we have cut off Ukraine.
  I don't know what anybody is doing in this Chamber if they are not 
coming here saying the United States of America should not be cutting 
off Ukraine's intelligence in midstream, in the ramp-up to a 
negotiation. If you come out here on this floor and say it is the right 
thing to do; that you, in the private sector, would make an equivocally 
idiotic, compromising, self-defeating move in a negotiation like this, 
come and defend it out here. Come and tell us how that is peace through 
strength.
  We shut off our offensive cyber with respect to Russia and got 
nothing back from them. Ronald Reagan is turning over in his grave at a 
national security strategy that, I guess, has been concocted in the 
realm of social media and cable television but has nothing to do with 
the national security interests of the United States. It can't be 
defended.
  I want to also say, while I have the floor and for the record--and I 
hope people will look it up--I have never met President Zelenskyy where 
he hasn't started the meeting by thanking the American people and ended 
the meeting by thanking the American people. He has done it in every 
meeting that I have been in. But I don't want us to lose sight of the 
fact that we also hold a profound debt of gratitude to him and to his 
soldiers and to the Ukrainian people.
  The President doesn't seem to understand that. The President seems to 
think: Oh, my gosh, they are doing us a favor by using our weapons.
  You are in tough shape; your country is in tough shape, he stated the 
obvious in that embarrassing interaction in the Oval Office the other 
day, where he couldn't even keep his temper for 5 minutes on the global 
stage.
  The Ukrainians are not just fighting for Ukraine; they are fighting 
for democracy. They are fighting for Europe. They are fighting for 
freedom. They are fighting for the international order that we created, 
that we led after the Second World War.
  Should NATO pay its share? Yes, it should. But we are not some 
charity case. We have benefited from the casualties that Ukraine has 
suffered. We have benefited from the exposure of the weakness of 
Putin's corrupt army. We have benefited from Xi Jinping's new knowledge 
that if a dictator tries to invade another country, the free world will 
stand together, until Donald Trump became President of the United 
States.
  I want to say again, Mr. President, to you and to all of my 
colleagues here today, the United States has turned off our 
intelligence to the Ukrainian people. They are not in retreat. They are 
on the frontlines of this war today, in the middle of winter, on the 
steps of Europe, where 16 million people were killed by Hitler and 
Stalin, when my mother was born in Warsaw--a Polish Jew in 1938, the 
year before Hitler invaded Poland. And we turned off their 
intelligence.

  They are killing more Russians there every month than they were 6 
months ago. This is a catastrophe.
  The other night when we had the budget reconciliation, I had a 
request for an amendment that simply would have said that it was the 
sense of the Senate that Russia invaded Ukraine; that Russia had 
started this war. I wanted to ask my colleagues just the basic 
question: Can we agree that Russia started the war in Ukraine? That 
seems like a shocking question to ask. I hope every schoolchild in 
America knows that that is true. Yet the President of the United States 
has said that Ukraine started this war. There are people around this 
city these days who are suggesting that Russia didn't start the war; 
that Ukraine started the war.
  And I am not even talking about people like the new head of 
Intelligence for the Trump administration who has taken the view that 
Ukraine had what was coming to them, who tweeted out at 11:30 the night 
that Putin's tanks invaded Ukraine, a peaceful country--for the first 
time in Europe since World War II, a dictator invading a peaceful 
country--who took to social media to say that Ukraine had it coming to 
them. I am not even saying that; I am saying people who are unwilling 
to say that Russia invaded Ukraine when it launched an unprovoked, an 
unjustified, full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, following 
their already illegal annexation of Crimea and their illegal occupation 
of parts of the Donbas. So that is all my resolution says, and that is 
it.
  That may seem like a basic and remedial task. I am sorry it is 
necessary.
  I want to remind every schoolchild in America who started this war 
and whose side we are on and what the legacy of Ronald Reagan's peace 
through strength is all about.
  This is a measure that will not in any way disrupt the progress in 
negotiations. I think quite the opposite. I think quite the opposite. I 
want us to assure ourselves that we are all clear here about who 
started this war.
  I want us to fulfill our responsibility to the American people. We 
are not

[[Page S1575]]

here to repeat untruths from the Oval Office. We all have a patriotic 
responsibility to live up to. The President does as well.
  I want us to demand, on behalf of the American people, that the 
United States lead for the sake of the Ukrainian people and for our 
national security and for the security of the world.
  That is why this is not just a matter of how worried people in NATO 
are; it is how worried people in Southeast Asia are because they know 
if we don't get our act together here and support Ukraine, support our 
allies in Europe, the same thing could happen there. And China could 
invade Taiwan, and we could have an American President who claims he is 
the best President in American history, with George Washington second, 
saying that Taiwan invaded China.
  I want us to avow, as Ronald Reagan proclaimed 40 years ago, that 
``freedom is America's core'' and ``[w]e must never deny it nor forsake 
it.'' That is what we risk today by withdrawing our support for 
Ukraine, allowing the President to promulgate falsehood after falsehood 
about who started this war and what is going on with this war.
  If we abandon Ukraine, we are going to abandon the core of who we 
are.
  This is a simple question. It is not a partisan one. And the answer 
couldn't be clearer.
  So, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to 
the consideration of S. Res. 114, which was submitted earlier today; 
further, that the resolution be agreed to and that the motion to 
reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table with no 
intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Curtis). Is there objection?
  The Republican whip.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, the 
American people want to see this war end. We want to see the killing 
and the bloodshed stopped.
  President Trump shares those views. He wants peace. He wants to end 
the war. President Trump and the administration are negotiating right 
now, today, to achieve that peace. He addressed it last night in his 
address to Congress and to the Nation.
  I think that President Trump is the very best hope to achieve lasting 
peace in Ukraine. He has my full support as the negotiations continue. 
The entire Senate should support those efforts, and therefore, Mr. 
President, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Colorado.
  Mr. BENNET. Mr. President, let me say--I know my colleague from 
Vermont is here, so I am not going to go on, but I would just like to 
respond to my friend from Wyoming by saying that it is shocking to me 
that tonight, in the Nation's Capital of the wealthiest country in the 
world, the place that we think of as the freest country in the world, 
our intelligence sharing with Ukraine, which has been one of the most 
effective means of their ability to prosecute the war in Ukraine 
against Russia, has been shut off by the United States of America. And 
our arms have been shut off to some degree as well, in the middle of 
winter, while they are sacrificing on the frontlines for freedom and 
for democracy.
  It is shocking that we are in the position that we are in, and I 
hope, for the sake of our kids and for our grandkids, for the sake of 
the allies that we have all over the world, for the sake of democracy 
and freedom in this world, that we pull together as a Senate and 
articulate the importance of pursuing this negotiation out of a 
position of strength and not of weakness.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.


                 Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 113

  Mr. WELCH. Mr. President, last week, the U.N. General Assembly voted 
overwhelmingly in favor of a resolution that acknowledged that Russia 
brutally invaded Ukraine. Among those voting in favor were all our 
friends and allies. Among those voting against it were most of our 
adversaries--Russia, Iran, North Korea, Nicaragua--and the United 
States.
  Of course, no Americans that we represent want to see our country on 
a team with some of the world's most brutal dictators, but what made 
that vote remarkable was that the Trump administration voted against 
something so unquestionably true: It was Russia that was the invader; 
that Russia's invasion has been devastating; that too many have died, 
too many have suffered; that peace is long overdue; and that Ukrainian 
territory is Ukrainian territory.
  The bottom line: This was a very simple resolution asserting that one 
country has no right to invade another country.
  Americans know from experience that peace in the world depends on 
adhering to a core principle: Countries cannot change their borders by 
force. One country cannot steal the sovereign territory of another 
country. Over the years, many Americans have died to uphold this 
principle for our national security.
  World War I, World War II, and the gulf war sent a clear message: 
America will support its friends and allies who are fighting to defend 
their own freedom and sovereignty.
  Of course, the U.N. vote last week was followed by last week's 
meeting in the Oval Office between Ukrainian President Zelenskyy and 
President Trump. Just hours before that very disastrous meeting, right 
across from the White House, I, along with many of our colleagues, 
joined in a bipartisan group of Senators who met with President 
Zelenskyy. He told us he was extremely grateful for America's help. He 
told us how thankful he was for the help President Trump gave in his 
first administration with the delivery of Javelin missiles and what he 
was doing in his second administration. There was not a hint of 
anything other than support and respect, and he told us how 
enthusiastic he was about meeting with the President and signing the 
minerals deal.
  It blew up, and, of course, the press will debate whether President 
Zelenskyy derailed the meeting because he didn't wear a suit or he said 
a provocative thing or he was rude and not grateful enough, and others 
will say that it was a setup by the President to derail the meeting.
  My view: I don't know the answer to that, and I don't really care 
because that is not the question. The one question that is profoundly 
important is the one that affects our national security: Whose side are 
we on? Do we continue to side with Ukraine against Russia and its 
invasion--with our NATO allies, with the principle we have fought for 
since the beginning of the last century--or do we flip sides and go 
with Putin?
  There is every reason for many of us to be concerned about that being 
a question actively under consideration by the Trump administration, 
starting with his affection for Putin and with his assertion that it 
was Ukraine, not Russia, that started the war.
  We are suddenly confronted with this unthinkable question of whether 
our President is realigning whose side we are on. That, in my view, is 
why all of us in the U.S. Senate--and there has been tremendous 
leadership on the Republican side of the aisle, and I would like to 
particularly acknowledge the leadership of Chairman Wicker and Chairman 
Risch--for us to stand with Ukraine and with our NATO allies.
  This year, we are going to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the end 
of World War II. In the eight decades since that devastating war, 
America's global alliances and our leadership have been anchored on the 
principle--anchored on the principle--that no country should seize and 
occupy the territory of another country by force. That matters. It is 
anchored on the elementary principle that might does not make right--
something that in the Putin invasion, where he thought he would be in 
Kyiv in days, was desecrated.
  So my hope is that we in the U.S. Senate will reaffirm those 
principles of territorial integrity and do that on behalf of the 
American people.
  I have introduced a resolution that does just this. It commits to the 
principle that the United States remains totally in favor of upholding 
and defending the proposition that no state shall threaten or use force 
against the territorial integrity or the political integrity of any 
other state. I think all of us know that is among the most fundamental 
propositions holding together the world's very fragile peace. It is 
also a fundamentally American principle that we have advocated for and 
defended. It is a principle that we must

[[Page S1576]]

uphold today on behalf of the people and the sovereignty of Ukraine--
not just for their benefit but for our national security.
  Therefore, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate 
proceed to the consideration of S. Res. 113, which was submitted 
earlier today; further, that the resolution be agreed to, the preamble 
be agreed to, and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and 
laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, and for 
the reasons I have given previously, we want the killing to end. We 
want the bloodshed to stop. There are active negotiations going on 
right now, and I think the best hope to achieve lasting peace in 
Ukraine is the efforts of President Trump today. For that reason, I 
object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
  Mr. WELCH. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.

                          ____________________