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McConnell says Biden should let Ukraine use US weapons across Russian border
U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell speaks Thursday to members of the Kentucky National Guard. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Jamie Lucke)
FRANKFORT — U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said Thursday that President Joe Biden should allow Ukraine to use U.S. weapons to launch attacks inside Russia.
McConnell said he’s “consistently argued” with the administration that its restriction against Ukraine launching U.S. weapons across the border into Russia “doesn’t make any sense at all.”
“I think they should be allowed to hit the Russians in Russia.”?
Later in the day, Politico reported that Biden has quietly given Ukraine permission to strike inside Russia with U.S. weapons but only in the area around Kharkiv.
McConnell was speaking to media at a Kentucky National Guard hangar after an event in which Gov. Andy Beshear and General Haldane Lamberton, Kentucky’s adjutant general, thanked the state’s longest-serving U.S. senator for his role in bringing federal funds to military projects in Kentucky.
U.S. Congress in 2024 has appropriated:
- $38M for Ft. Campbell to construct a large-scale vehicle/aerial gunnery training range.
- $5.5M for Ft. Campbell to construct a new airfield fire and rescue station.
- $3.15M for Ft. Campbell to construct an equipment staging area to support overseas deployment operations.
- $1.7M for Ft. Campbell to conduct the design and engineering of a runway extension project.
- $7.7M for Ft. Knox to construct a new fire station.
- $16.4M for the Kentucky National Guard to construct a vehicle maintenance facility in Burlington.
- $7M for the Kentucky National Guard to construct a new machine gun training range at Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center in Greenville.
- $2M for the Kentucky National Guard to complete a state administrative building in Frankfort.
- $3.3M for Blue Grass Army Depot in Madison County to conduct engineering of a new ammunition warehouse to help expand its mission following closure of the chemical-weapons demolition site.
Source: McConnell office
During his remarks to a crowd that included about 40 uniformed Guard members, McConnell renewed his warnings that Russia, China and Iran pose dangers to democracy. He likened today’s international challenges to the period before World War II.?
“We thought it would all go away if we just ignored it. That’s clearly not going to happen again this time, at least not without me making the contrary argument.”
McConnell called for increased defense spending as a deterrent to aggression and thanked the National Guard members for their service.
McConnell is stepping down at the end of the year as his party’s leader in the U.S. Senate but will continue to serve as a senator from Kentucky. He hasn’t said if he will seek reelection in 2026.
Speaking briefly to media after the event, McConnell noted that the Biden administration was considering lifting its restriction to allow Ukraine to use U.S. weapons to launch counterattacks on installations and military personnel inside Russia. The restriction was intended to reduce the risk of the war escalating into other countries.?
McConnell said the Ukranians should be free to defend themselves with U.S. weapons, calling Ukraine’s self-defense “a way to stand up to the Russians without losing American personnel.”
Hours later, Politico, citing unnamed officials and others familiar with the situation, reported that Biden has eased — but not lifted — the restriction. “The president recently directed his team to ensure that Ukraine is able to use U.S. weapons for counter-fire purposes in Kharkiv so Ukraine can hit back at Russian forces hitting them or preparing to hit them,” one of the U.S. officials said, adding that the policy of not allowing long-range strikes inside Russia “has not changed.”
In response to questions, McConnell said the rising isolationism among Republicans in Congress also is similar to before World War II and even after the war when Republicans opposed NATO and the Marshall Plan. The election of Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a general and leader of Allied forces in World War II, changed that, McConnell said.?
“What China, North Korea, Russia and Iran have in common is they are authoritarian dictators. It’s sort of a potential war between the authoritarians and the democracies. All of us who are threatened elect our leadership and so authoritarians are the people that we’re standing up to and we have to convince them the price of taking us on is too big a price for them to pay.”
McConnell said the U.S. and its many democratic allies from Europe to the Indo-Pacific are “all in this together.”
“The whole democratic world needs to stand up and they look to us for leadership.”
McConnell also said, “The cheapest way to be ready is to have your defense budget high enough and industrial base built enough that you never have the conflict in the first place.”
This story has been updated with information about action by the Biden administration.
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Jamie Lucke
Jamie Lucke has more than 40 years of experience as a journalist. Her editorials for the Lexington Herald-Leader won Walker Stone, Sigma Delta Chi and Green Eyeshade awards. She is a graduate of the University of Kentucky.
Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.