Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Marco Rubio (R-FL) delivered opening remarks and questioned witnesses at a hearing on countering China’s influence in the United States. Watch Rubio’s opening remarks here as well as Part I and Part II of...
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Rubio: 25 Years After The Berlin Wall Fell, We Must Remember It Took More Than Sledgehammers
When I think of the Berlin Wall, I’m reminded of how thin the barrier is between freedom and oppression. It’s been that way throughout all of world history. A river or a mountain or a fence has often made the difference between a life of despair and a life of hope. But the Berlin Wall also reminds us that physical barriers are only part of the story. Freedom is also blocked by ideas, worldviews, and tyrants.
That’s why, 25 years ago today, it took more than sledgehammers and manpower to finally tear down the Berlin Wall – it took what Ronald Reagan called “the will and moral courage of free men and women.” It took the patient cries of an oppressed people, and leaders on both sides of the Atlantic who acted on their behalf with historic conviction.
Reagan knew it would require the strength of both American arms and democratic ideals to win the Cold War and stop the spread of Soviet-style communism. So after taking office, he led America through a historic buildup of our armed forces and, I believe, of our national identity. With his iconic communication skills, he made America’s principles and intentions clear to the world. “Here’s my strategy on the Cold War,” he once said, “we win, they lose.”
The result of his assured approach transformed the world. With the fall of the Berlin Wall, Reagan proved that American strength – when working together with our partners in Europe – could crumble both the physical and ideological barriers between freedom and oppression. He demonstrated how America can and must use the lamp of liberty to bend back the shadows of subjugation that constantly push in on the world. To him, this was not just an ability, but a responsibility.
Sadly, as we mark today’s anniversary, our current administration is taking a different approach. It peeps timidly from behind an ever-thinning curtain of American strength, watching idly as new and resurgent forces challenge global order. Even as an increasingly hostile Russia threatens a new cold war, President Obama uses baby-steps and half-measures in defense of our allies, our principles, and our people, when he acts at all.
The sanctions imposed by this administration on the Putin regime following its annexation of Crimea have been delayed at every turn and consistently weaker than threatened, avoiding the key arteries of the Russian economy. Similarly, while significant support has been pledged to Ukraine, it has been late to arrive and ultimately inadequate. As President Poroshenko told Congress in September, “One cannot win a war with blankets.”
Meanwhile, Russia is racing to fill the vacuum opened up by a less active and less confident America. It is increasing its military and intelligence activities, consolidating control over Crimea, and threatening eastern Ukraine. It is attempting to block political and economic opportunity for millions, just as it was blocked for East Berliners throughout the Cold War.
Putin has made clear he will invest whatever is necessary into advancing his dubious agenda. So we have to ask ourselves today what future would be best for the world: a future that looks more like Russia, with its rampant human rights abuses and its corrupt, belligerent leadership, or one that looks more like America?
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