Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said on Friday that the foreign policy vision that former President Donald Trump and Sen. JD Vance (R-OH), Trump’s running mate, espouse is “nonsense.”
McConnell has long tried to eliminate the “isolationist” wing’s increasing influence over the Republican Party.
Although he did not directly reference Trump or Vance, McConnell called the “America First” foreign policy doctrine “nonsense.”
“I mean, even the slogans are what they were in the 30s — ‘America First,’” McConnell added.
Despite McConnell’s strong support for Ukraine’s protracted war, he admitted in an interview in July that he is not sure what a Ukrainian victory against Russia looks like — after spending more than $175 billion in aid to Ukraine.
“[The Ukrainians] know they need to have some signs of success here, which will reassure the democratic countries that they can win,” McConnell said.
He asked rhetorically, “The conflict over the summer and how it is perceived to turn out is extremely important in answering the question inevitably coming up in democracies — can they win?”
Attendees at the Republican National Convention in July booed McConnell, even though he served as the Kentucky delegate for the convention.
A Pew Research poll found that 49 percent of Americans say that the country does not have a responsibility to help Ukraine with its protracted conflict with Russia, while 48 percent say it does.
WATCH — “Enough with the BS”: JD Vance Blasts Globalists, GOP Establishment Threatening WWIII over Ukraine
Matt Perdie / Breitbart News
The survey also found deep partisan divides between Republicans and Democrats regarding if the country should materially support Ukraine.
Sixty-two percent of Republicans do not believe in helping Ukraine, while only 36 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning Americans believe in Ukraine aid.
In contrast, 63 percent of Democrats and Democrat-leaning independents say the country should help Ukraine.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on Wednesday sponsored a resolution to authorize the use of military force against Iran.
Justin Logan, the director of defense and foreign policy studies at the CATO Institute, wrote, “Hear me out: a big, poorly-planned US war in the Middle East. Could be terrific.”