Biden and Putin exchange warnings during phone
call amid rising Ukraine tensions
Talks represent pair’s second conversation this month
Russia massing tens of thousands of troops near border
David Smith
Washington bureau chief
@smithinamerica
Thu 30 Dec
2021 22.32 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/30/biden-putin-call-russia-us-ukraine-tensions
Joe Biden
and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin have exchanged warnings over the crisis
in Ukraine during a 50-minute phone call that did little to lower the political
temperature, according to their governments.
Russia has
alarmed the US and its allies by massing tens of thousands of troops near its
border with Ukraine over the past two months. This follows its seizure of
Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in 2014 and its backing of separatists in eastern
Ukraine.
Thursday’s
talks, requested by Putin, were the leaders’ second conversation this month
but, the White House said, consisted of both men restating their positions –
including Biden warning of severe consequences if Putin decides to invade.
“President
Biden urged Russia to de-escalate tensions with Ukraine,” said Jen Psaki, the
White House press secretary, in a statement. “He made clear that the United
States and its allies and partners will respond decisively if Russia further
invades Ukraine.”
In a
conference call with reporters, a senior administration official added that
Biden had laid out “two paths”: one of diplomacy and deescalation, the other of
deterrence “including serious costs and consequences” such as economic
sanctions, strengthening Nato’s force posture and military assistance to
Ukraine.
The
Kremlin, meanwhile, insisted that Putin had used the call to issue a threat of
his own, telling Biden that new sanctions could totally rupture ties between
Russia and the US and represent a colossal mistake.
Yuri
Ushakov, Putin’s foreign policy adviser, was quoted by the Reuters news agency
as saying: “Our president immediately responded that if the west decides in
this or other circumstances to impose these unprecedented sanctions which have
been mentioned then that could lead to a complete breakdown in ties between our
countries and cause the most serious damage to relations between Russia and the
west.”
Ushakov
added: “Our president also mentioned that it would be a mistake that our
descendants would see as a huge error.”
Biden, who
is spending the week in his home state of Delaware, spoke to Putin from his
home near Wilmington. The White House distributed a picture of the president
speaking to the Russian leader from a desk lined with family photos.
The call
came ahead of a US-Russia security meeting in Geneva on 9 and 10 January,
followed by a Russia-Nato session on 12 January, and a broader conference
including Moscow, Washington and other European countries on 13 January.
In the
media conference call, a White House official described the conversation as
“serious and substantive” but focused on setting the tone and tenor for the
diplomatic engagements to come rather than breaking new ground.
The
official also acknowledged that Putin offered little clarity as to whether he
plans to invade or back down. “We’re not going to draw conclusions and there
were certainly no declarations as to intentions from this conversation.
“But
regardless, our focus is really on actions and on indicators, not on words at
this point, so we’re going to continue to monitor very closely the movement and
build-up of Russian forces on the Ukraine border and prepare ourselves for
whatever decision ultimately is made by the Russian president.”
Putin, who
held a video call with Biden on 7 December, has compared the current tensions
to the cold-war era Cuban missile crisis in 1962. He denies planning to attack
Ukraine and insists that Russia has the right to move its troops on its own
soil.
Moscow has
called for legally binding guarantees that Nato will not expand further
eastwards and certain offensive weapons will not be deployed to Ukraine or
other neighbouring countries. Washington regards some of the demands as
non-starters.
Antony
Blinken, the US secretary of state, spoke on Wednesday with Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskiy. State department spokesperson Ned Price said Blinken
“reiterated the United States’ unwavering support for Ukraine’s independence,
sovereignty, and territorial integrity in the face of Russia’s military buildup
on Ukraine’s borders”.
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