In a bizarre break from diplomatic norms, UK Foreign Secretary and former Prime Minister David Cameron is demanding the United States Congress send more money to Ukraine, writing for The Hill newspaper on Wednesday: “As Congress debates and votes on this funding package for Ukraine, I am going to drop all diplomatic niceties. I urge Congress to pass it.”
The funding package to which Cameron refers is the $95 billion ‘aid’ package for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan that passed in the Senate early Tuesday morning. It is likely dead on arrival in the House, however, as Republican Speaker Mike Johnson has signaled his unwillingness to take up the bill, and the use of a discharge petition to force a vote on the bill is unlikely to succeed, given progressive Democrat opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza.
“I want us all — U.S., U.K., European and other allies — to support Ukraine in fighting against completely unjustified aggression. It is hard to think of a clearer case of one country being invaded by another without the slightest justification,” Cameron wrote further.
Cameron’s claims that Ukraine is “fighting against completely unjustified aggression” are not strictly true, however. As Russian President Vladimir Putin explained in a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, the West repeatedly broke promises not to expand NATO, increasingly pushing the alliance closer to Russia’s borders. The precarious diplomatic situation culminated in the Maidan Revolution in 2014, in which the CIA assisted in overthrowing the pro-Russian Ukrainian government, which in turn forced Russian-speaking regions of Ukraine to declare independence and set the stage for the current conflict.