On Monday, January 10, 1994, President Bill Clinton announced the United States agreement with Ukraine and Russia to dismantle Ukraine’s entire nuclear arsenal, hailing the long-sought accord as “a hopeful and historic breakthrough that enhances the security of all three participants.”1 The United States, Russia, and Britain then committed “to respect the independence and sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine” and “to refrain from the threat or use of force” against the country. Those assurances played a key role in persuading the Ukrainian government in Kyiv to give up what amounted to the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal, consisting of some 1,900 strategic nuclear warheads.2 Doubling down on that wide-eyed blunder, Ukrainian officials then colluded in 2016 with the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign to smear Donald Trump as a Russian stooge, demonstrating again the massive miscalculation that a Democratic administration would provide better protection against Vladimir Putin’s Russia.3 The result of the 1994 Ukrainian lapse of judgement - to give up their military defense assets - reminds one of the exceptional intellectual ability of the American Founders in masterminding the Second Amendment to the Constitution [1791]: “A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” In the present light, Ukraine’s decision to give up its weapons of self-defense for so-called “security assurances” from the U.S., Russia, and the U.K. has lacked both foresight and scope. St. George Tucker [1752-1827] was one of the most influential jurists and legal scholars in early America. The lawyer, teacher, poet, essayist, and inventor taught in his spare time law at the College of William and Mary from 1789 to 1804. America’s 4th President James Madison [1809-1817] appointed George Tucker in 1813 to the United States District Court for the District of Virginia [later the Eastern District of Virginia] from 1813-1825. Judge Tucker accurately determined the essential quality of the Second Amendment as the “true palladium of liberty.”4 As to The Budapest Memorandum of 1994, Russia did not keep its commitments to Ukraine, bringing to mind Dr. Bruce K. Waltke’s [born 1930] spiritual analysis of Proverbs 14:34: “Ultimately a nation’s exaltation depends on its piety and ethics, not on its political, military, and/or economic greatness. In its external affairs a sinful nation among other things breaks treaties, propagandizes, lies, and bullies weaker nations. In its internal affairs it allows its judicial system to break down so that criminals and sluggards are rewarded, and good citizens are overtaxed and intimidated.”5 George Washington’s admonition that religion and morality are the “indispensable supports” of freedom is deemed antiquated [behind the times] by secularists. Yet, in God’s never-ending order, individuals and nations are elevated in prestige and standing by righteousness, making them a power for good.6 |
No comments:
Post a Comment