SRES-109-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S1583)
Sponsored by Bernard Sanders (I-VT)
What it does
This resolution would express the formal sense of the Senate that Russia must immediately, completely, and unconditionally withdraw all military forces from Ukrainian territory within its internationally recognized borders and cease all attacks on Ukraine. It is a "sense of the Senate" resolution, meaning it carries no binding legal force, imposes no penalties, authorizes no spending, and does not require the President's signature to take effect.
Who benefits
Ukrainian civilians and the Ukrainian government, who would receive a formal statement of U.S. legislative support. U.S. allies in NATO and Eastern Europe who favor a strong American diplomatic posture toward Russia. Advocacy organizations and displaced persons groups supporting Ukrainian sovereignty. Members of Congress who wish to signal a legislative position distinct from executive branch diplomacy.
Who is hurt
The resolution carries no binding legal effect, so direct material harm to any group is limited. However, Russian government officials and state-aligned interests would face reputational and diplomatic pressure. U.S. officials or factions pursuing negotiated settlements that involve territorial concessions may find their diplomatic flexibility constrained by a formal Senate position. American businesses with remaining Russian market exposure could face indirect pressure if the resolution contributes to a harder diplomatic line.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Senate has a constitutional role in shaping foreign policy and that a formal, unified legislative statement reinforces U.S. commitment to Ukrainian sovereignty under international law, including the UN Charter, which Russia's 2022 invasion violated. They contend that congressional silence risks being interpreted as ambivalence, and that clearly expressing the Senate's position strengthens the hand of U.S. diplomats and allies who are pressing for a full Russian withdrawal rather than a negotiated partition of Ukrainian territory.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution demanding unconditional Russian withdrawal sets a maximalist public position that could undermine ongoing diplomatic efforts to end a conflict that has already caused hundreds of thousands of casualties. They contend that effective diplomacy often requires flexibility and back-channel negotiation, and that a formal Senate declaration of this kind may harden positions on all sides, making a negotiated ceasefire or peace agreement more difficult to achieve without producing any concrete change on the ground.