MARCH 18, 2022, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A13 Send Ukraine planes now PUBLIC SQUARE welcomes all points of view. Published submissions do not necessarily reflect the views of the Keizertimes #Keizershowsup Mayor Cathy Clark has been delivering her annual State of the City speech before various Keizer groups this month, culminating with an address before the Keizer Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, March 15. The theme of her address was that though Keizer has faced challenges over the past year, the city is doing just fine. Due to more than $8 million from the federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), our city will be able to address some pressing projects, that will relieve financial stress on the general fund budget. Last month the city council earmarked more than $1 million of those funds that will include upgrades to an important city water well, ADA-compliant street ramps and cybersecurity improvements. The mayor cited the hard work by the council and city staff to carefully plan for the needs of the city and continuing to be good stewards of Keizer’s budget. Clark said that it was due to the development of a working plan that the city’s needs will be met. It is the old must-haves versus wants discussion— paying for what is vital as opposed to paying for things it would be nice to fund. Highlighted in the speech was the result of the police and parks fees that were added to the city water bills a few Editorial years ago. The added park fee helped fund Keizer's response to the damage done after last year's devasting ice storm. Keizer Police has 42 officers on the job, a direct result of the police fee. Cathy Clark chairs the Mid- Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance and spoke of the work being conducted, including the important job of gathering data needed to address the issue of homelessness region wide. Mayor Clark is never stingy when it comes to offering kudos to all the government officials, agencies and volunteers who work each day to make life easier for those in our area who are in need. It would be hard to find another elected official who advocates for those in our community who need assistance, than Cathy Clark. One of the mayor's favorite expressions is Hashtag Keizer shows up. Keizer shows up to volunteer, to donate, to support, to get involved. Right back at you, Madame Mayor. You always show up, for that the residents of Keizer are grateful. — LAZ SHARE YOUR OPINION TO SUBMIT a letter to the editor (300 words), or guest column (600 words), email us by noon Tuesday: publisher@keizertimes.com By MARC A. THIESSEN As Russian warplanes pound Ukrainian cities with cluster bombs, President Volodymyr Zelensky has been begging the United States and its allies to make a decision: Either stop the carnage by estab- lishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine or give Ukrainians the fighter jets to do it them- selves. “If you cannot shut the sky now... then give me the planes,” Zelensky said. Last week, Warsaw answered Zelensky’s call. The Polish foreign min- ister announced that Poland was ready to give its entire fleet of Soviet-era MiG- 29 fighters to Ukraine “immediately and free of charge”—offering to send them to a U.S. air base in Germany and asking the United States “to provide us with used aircraft with corresponding operational capabilities” in exchange. The United States would then transfer the MiGs to the Ukrainian Air Force. Incredibly, the Biden administration scoffed at Poland’s offer. “We do not believe Poland’s proposal is a tenable one,” said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby. “The prospect of fighter jets . . . departing from a U.S./NATO base in Germany to fly into airspace that is contested with Russia over Ukraine raises serious concerns for the entire NATO alliance.” So let’s get this straight: On Sunday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken gave Poland a “green light” to send aircraft to Ukraine from Polish NATO bases, but sending them to Ukraine from a U.S. NATO base in Germany is not “tenable”? What is the difference exactly? The Biden administration is worried that sending fighter jets from NATO territory into Ukraine could provoke Russia to declare us co-belligerents in Ukraine. But Poland is as much NATO territory as Germany. Moreover, the United States and its allies have already acknowledged that we are providing Ukraine with Stinger anti- aircraft missiles. Those missiles have the exact same role and purpose as the MiG fighter jets: to shoot down and kill Russian aircraft. Those Stinger missiles are not magically appearing in Ukraine. They are not being teleported to Ukrainian forces. They are being sent to Ukraine by the United States from NATO bases in Europe. How is sending fighter jets to carry out the same mission any different? And with all respect, the airspace over Ukraine is not “contested” in any legal sense. It is the sovereign airspace of a sovereign nation that has been unlaw- fully invaded by an unjust aggressor. That unjust aggression does not give Putin veto power. The only permission we need to send those planes is from Zelensky. The Biden administration’s obsession with not giving Russia a pretext to declare us co-belligerents is not only weak; it is strategically pointless. As Latvian Defense Minister Artis Pabriks points out, other VOICES “If . . . the Kremlin would like to fight a war against NATO or Europe, they could always find a reason.” The fact is, after a week of shameful inaction, Poland has come to Ukraine’s aid —and exposed the Biden administration as the real obstacle to answering Zelensky’s impassioned pleas for help. NATO has plenty of planes it could provide. Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Bulgaria have doz- ens of Soviet-designed MiG-29 and SU-27 fighters, which Ukrainian pilots know how to fly. But instead of leading and finding a way to get those jets to Ukraine as quickly as possible, the Biden administration has spent the past week making excuses for inaction. When Poland—understandably concerned about giving up MiGs just as the Russian threat to their territory has grown dramatically—asked for F-16 fighter jets to replace the lost capacity, the admin- istration claimed it did not have sufficient inventory. If we didn’t have enough F-16s to give the Poles immediately, though, Biden could have offered to deploy more U.S. fighter squadrons to guard their airspace until we do. Or the Defense Department could have asked Lockheed Martin to divert some F-16s headed for other U.S. allies to Poland. If there was a will, there was a way. But the problem, it turns out, is a lack of will. Instead of finding a solution, the White House tried to blame Warsaw for the delays and told reporters it was a “sovereign decision” for Polish leaders to make. Well, now Poland has made that sover- eign decision—and put the ball entirely in Biden’s court. If those planes are not fly- ing over Kyiv as soon as possible, Biden will be to blame. He alone will be responsi- ble for denying Zelensky the vital military capability he has said he needs to save innocent Ukrainian lives. Every day that he dithers, innocent Ukrainians are being slaughtered. As Zelensky told NATO’s leaders last week, “All the people who will die from this day will die because of you... because of your weakness.” Those words should now be ringing in Biden’s ears. Sending American pilots to enforce a no-fly zone over Ukraine risks putting us in direct combat with Russia. But there is absolutely no excuse for deny- ing Ukraine the aircraft it needs to patrol its own skies. Poland’s MiGs can be flying in Ukraine tonight. If they are not, blame lies with one man: Joe Biden. (Washington Post) WHEATLAND PUBLISHING CORP. 142 Chemawa Road N, Keizer, Oregon 97303 Phone: 503.390.1051 • www.keizertimes.com PUBLISHER & EDITOR Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook Instagram Twitter NEW DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION PRICING: $5 per month, $60 per year PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 YEARLY PRINT SUBSCRIPTION PRICING: $35 inside Marion County $43 outside Marion County $55 outside Oregon POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon