01/14/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/14/2026 15:45
"Putin should not achieve through negotiation what he has not managed to achieve on the battlefield," Chairman Wicker asserts
WASHINGTON - U.S. Senator Roger Wicker, R-Miss., Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, today delivered a speech on the Ukraine peace process from the floor of the U.S. Senate. In his remarks, the Chairman outlined the key principles negotiations should center around, and commended President Trump for building consensus with our allies.
Read the Chairman's speech as delivered below.
Mr. President, we live in a dangerous time. There are a number of flashpoints all around the globe. In this hemisphere, in Europe, and the Indo-pacific. But I want to remind my colleagues today that, still, the most dangerous thing going on around the world today is Vladimir Putin's war against freedom and the West in Ukraine. And I would point out that for the past year, Vladimir Putin has mocked the Ukraine peace process by steadily escalating his attacks on his neighboring country. He's recently launched the biggest air attack the conflict has ever seen and shown repeatedly that he is not interested in peace talks. He gives lip service to peace talks, but his acts show that he's not interested.
Now, by contrast, in the last few weeks, the United States, Ukraine, and our European friends have come together on a common negotiating position centered on several key principles.
Here are the key points:
In the meantime, Mr. President, the Ukrainian people should be assisted in continuing to fight for their freedom.
I commend President Trump, President Zelensky, and European leaders for continuing to come together to reach a consensus. As we seek to end this brutal, unprovoked war, I urge everyone in Washington, in Kyiv, in the great capitals of Europe to remain united and to remember who we are dealing with in the form and person of Vladimir Putin.
Vladimir Putin is unrepentant. He is ever, and will always be, the KGB agent. He is a dictator with decades of bloodshed on his hands. He is the biggest thief in the history of the world, a war criminal who should be behind bars at this moment, Mr. President. And of course, Putin is a liar. When Vladimir Putin smiles to American negotiators, he acts as our friend, and he acts as if we believe he's our friend. We have no reason to smile back at Vladimir Putin or trust him with anything but caution and contempt.
After four years, Putin knows a Russian victory is not inevitable. More and more, the American people see this and know this. A November poll found that 70 percent of Americans do not trust Putin to honor any peace agreement with Ukraine. He is cut from the same cloth as terrorists all over the world and terrorists down through history.
In Putin's attacks on civilians for example, we see parallels with the Hamas terrorists who rampaged through Israeli neighborhoods on October 7th. The terrorists are Putin's friends.
And don't forget this, and sometimes it's not publicized as it ought to be, Putin has abducted over 20,000 Ukrainian children and subjected many to brainwashing schemes. In those horrors, we see the likes of Xi Jinping and his Uyghur re-education camps.
Putin routinely locks dissidents in jail-just like his kindred spirits in other censorship regimes. This tyrant who wants to be treated as a peer in the world's great halls of democracy should be known by the company he keeps. When the brutal Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad was toppled, thankfully, where did Bashar al-Assad run? He ran for safe haven to Moscow. That's where he went to be under the protection of Vladimir Putin who seeks to make us believe that he is an honest negotiator.
Nicolas Maduro was wisely counseled to flee Venezuela. If he had run, where would he have run, Mr. President? He would have run to Moscow. For decades, Russia has been a friend to the murderous Cuban regime. And now, as the Supreme Leader in Iran considers his options, where might he go for refuge? The only place he could go is Moscow. So that's the company Vladimir Putin keeps in the current day.
But Putin even echoes the likes of Adolf Hitler. Putin routinely talks about-quote-"liberating" the Russian-speaking Ukrainians living in the Donbas, and other areas of Ukraine. This is the same vile, absurd pretext that Adolf Hitler used when he invaded the German-speaking regions of neighboring countries including Poland. That's who Vladimir Putin is.
Regrettably, the people of Russia are led brutally by Putin, this world-historical villain. Ukrainians will continue fighting against his unprovoked attacks, but not because they hate peace. The Ukrainians continue to fight because their alternative is the extinction of their country. The West needs to stand with them. We need to stand with Ukraine.
And we must keep assisting our friends. We need to send a clear message that Putin cannot wait us out. In December, I'm grateful to say to my colleagues, that Congress overwhelmingly passed and President Donald Trump enthusiastically signed the National Defense Authorization Act. That law extends the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative and our commitment to sharing intelligence with Ukraine. Good for the President, and good for our friends in the House and Senate.
Our allies across the Atlantic are taking the lead now, as my colleague from Kentucky just pointed out, in financing security assistance for Ukraine. NATO allies are buying equipment from us in the United States and giving it to Ukraine. I certainly applaud that, as all Americans should
Mr. President, the U.S. should increase the air defenses and long-range strike capabilities that we are sending to Kyiv. More than any other capabilities, these will help show Putin his military aims are not achievable. For nearly four years, Ukrainians have demonstrated their resolve. The West must continue to stand resolved with them.