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Congress moves on Ukraine aid. Doubts about US leadership persist.

America’s allies around the world breathed a sigh of relief on Saturday when the U.S. House of Representatives finally approved $61 billion dollars in military aid to Ukraine – assistance that had been held up for months.

The delay had prompted speculation that the United States had definitively turned inward, in an isolationist tendency to pay attention more to domestic affairs than to global crises.

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America’s allies see Washington’s resumption of military aid to Ukraine as a sign that it is still ready to play a global leader’s role. But the debate before the aid vote revealed a less certain message.

The vote seemed to give the lie to that. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy lauded the decision for putting the U.S. back in its rightful place as leader of the free world. “Thank you America,” he wrote on his Telegram channel.

In fact, the congressional vote sent mixed signals about America’s place in the world and Washington’s appetite for maintaining a strong global leadership role. In the end, it went the way U.S. allies had hoped it would. But the debate was long and bitter, and reflected a growing reluctance among Republicans to play an active role in world affairs.

“American internationalism is still robust,” says Charles Kupchan, a foreign policy expert. But “the internationalism the U.S. has practiced since 1941 can no longer be taken for granted.”

Shortly after the U.S. House of Representatives approved long-stalled military assistance for Ukraine, the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, lauded the vote for putting the United States back in its rightful place as leader of the free world.

“Thank you America!” Mr. Zelenskyy wrote on his Telegram channel Saturday. “Democracy and freedom will always have global significance and will never fail as long as America helps to protect it.”

But in reality the vote sent mixed signals about America’s place in the world and Washington’s appetite for maintaining a strong leadership role, some foreign policy analysts say.

Why We Wrote This

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America’s allies see Washington’s resumption of military aid to Ukraine as a sign that it is still ready to play a global leader’s role. But the debate before the aid vote revealed a less certain message.

“American leadership in the world is not dead yet,” says Peter Feaver, director of Duke University’s Program in American Grand Strategy. “But the fact it took so long and the vote was so close is ominous and shows there’s still something of a fight.”

The Ukraine assistance – part of a larger package of $95 billion in foreign military aid that also helps Israel and Taiwan – was expected to easily win Senate approval Tuesday before President Biden signs it into law. Pentagon officials say Ukraine could start seeing fresh weaponry within days. 

Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/AP

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy inspects the fortification lines in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine earlier this month.

Allies’ relief may be short-lived

Saturday’s House vote prompted a sigh of relief among U.S. allies, who had worried for months that the aid hold-up signaled rising U.S. isolationism and the end of Ronald Reagan’s vision of America as a force for global freedom.

“America’s back, and we have our allies’ back now,” Republican Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, promised Sunday in a U.S. television interview.

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