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Cardinal asks bishops to challenge lawmakers who want to cut Ukraine aid

18.11.2022, 18:16

The suggestion, which drew applause from bishops, appeared directed at Republicans who have suggested reducing aid to Ukraine.

America’s newest cardinal called on his fellow bishops to challenge lawmakers who want to cut Ukraine aid, urging prelates to speak out against leaders of a Republican majority in the next Congress angling to reduce U.S. support for the country as it battles Russian invaders.

Cardinal Robert McElroy of San Diego, who was elevated by Pope Francis in August, offered his challenge Wednesday (Nov. 16) after bishops heard a presentation on the situation in Ukraine by Ukrainian Catholic Archbishop Borys Gudziak, who oversees the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia. Gudziak detailed the horrific devastation wrought by Russia’s invasion, telling personal stories and showing images of the destruction.

After Gudziak finished, McElroy went to the microphone on the assembly floor. Nonviolence is important regarding issues of war and peace, he said, but the situation in Ukraine “is an instance where justice requires resistance.”

He then warned that some incoming members of Congress have stoked “rumblings of cutting support to Ukraine from the United States.”

“That could be very ominous in terms of the continuity, the flow of weapons and support, that is essential to convincing the Russians that they cannot succeed,” McElroy said. “I would urge the conference to make it a very high priority to move quickly to preempt, in all the ways available to us, any moves in our national policy in that direction.”

As he finished, his fellow bishops burst into applause.

His remarks were directed at lawmakers who have called for cutting aid to Ukraine — particularly Republicans such as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California, who has signaled the possibility of cutting Ukraine aid should the GOP retake control of the House, an increasingly likely scenario as votes continue to roll in from last week’s midterm elections. The sentiment has been echoed by Republicans such as J.D. Vance, an Ohio Catholic who just won election to the U.S. Senate.

In an interview after the session ended, McElroy suggested an all-of-the-above approach that could include public statements as well as directly pressuring House leadership.

“My hope is the conference will advocate very strongly with the leadership in the House — and with specific members — to communicate to that diminishment of the aid to Ukraine, or even the perception that there might be a diminishment in aid to the Ukraine, is a lifeline to the Kremlin,” McElroy, who wrote his doctoral dissertation on morality and American foreign policy, told Religion News Service.

Reducing the flow of resources to Ukrainians, he warned, “will result in a longer war, more profound suffering overall, and threaten the whole European community that borders Russia.”

Gudziak expressed gratitude for the proposal, saying he wished he’d said it himself.

“I think it’s very important to speak to extremes of our political spectrum that tend to be very naive about President Putin, and to be tempted by kind of an isolationist view,” he told RNS.

“In general, the American people broadly support American aid to Ukraine because they understand it’s in America’s best interest,” Gudziak continued. “They also see the virtue of the Ukrainian position: It’s a position of peace, it’s a position of democracy, of freedom, (and) it’s a position that is inspired by faith.”

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