Canada, U.S. need to draw red line on nuclear, chemical attacks in Ukraine, says former president
CBC
The former president of Ukraine is urging Canada to get behind a U.S. representative's initiative to authorize American military force to defend the embattled eastern European country if Russian forces escalate to chemical, biological or nuclear attacks.
Petro Poroshenko, who was president from 2014 to 2019, made the remarks in an interview with CBC News.
On Sunday, Republican congressman Adam Kinzinger, of Illinois, introduced a resolution that would, if passed, authorize U.S. President Joe Biden to use American forces to respond in the event weapons of mass destruction are deployed in Ukraine.
He unveiled the proposal on the CBS network political program Face the Nation. He said the measure is more about warning Moscow and signalling resolve than it is about joining the war.
Poroshenko said that would be precisely the right signal to send at this stage in the war — when Russian troops are making what appear to be limited gains on the conventional battlefield in the eastern and southern portions of Ukraine.
As one of Ukraine's earliest and staunchest backers, Canada needs to get behind Kinzinger's proposal, he said.
"I definitely need support of this initiative of Adam [Kinzinger] from the Canadian parliamentarians and Canadian government," Poroshenko said during an interview at his European Solidarity party headquarters in Kyiv.
He said that while Ukraine does not "want Canadian soldiers fighting here for us now," it does want political support to "stop a nuclear war" and prevent the use of other weapons of mass destruction.
Russia has shown no overt signs of preparing to unleash chemical, biological or tactical nuclear weapons. A U.S. defence official, speaking on background last week to Reuters, suggested a nuclear strike is not in the cards at the moment, even though Russian President Vladimir Putin has raised the readiness level of the country's nuclear forces.
But there is a persistent fear in the intelligence community and among military experts, inside and outside of Ukraine, that some kind of escalation is imminent because of Russia's limited gains in its war on Ukraine.
Canada's House of Commons last week unanimously passed a motion to label Russia's attacks in Ukraine as "genocide." Many members of Parliament said there was "ample evidence" of war crimes on a massive scale, and of crimes against humanity.
The motion listed war crimes alleged to have been committed by Russian forces: mass atrocities, systematic killings of Ukrainian civilians, the desecration of corpses, the forcible transfer of Ukrainian children, torture, mental harm and rape.
It's not clear how much support there is for Kinzinger's authorization for the use of military force (AUMF) bill.
Similar legislative mechanisms were used to enable the U.S. war on terror following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. U.S. lawmakers only recently repealed those authorizations, which gave the president broad powers to wage war.