RUSSIA’S
WAR ON UKRAINE
Biden’s trip to Europe: A triumph, a walk back,
and no clearer end game
The president has delivered sanctions and aid and a
united West. Still, a possible resolution to the confrontation remained hard to
define after a three day trip to Europe.
By JONATHAN
LEMIRE
03/27/2022
08:28 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/27/joe-biden-russia-policy-success-elusive-00020688
President
Joe Biden’s trip to a war-rattled Europe rallied allies and delivered a
threatening, if unscripted, message to Russia’s Vladimir Putin. But he returned
home with few, if any, concrete answers as to how the brutal invasion of
Ukraine actually would end.
Biden
closed the trip with an up-close look at the ravages of war, a stop in Poland
that followed a trio of extraordinary diplomatic summits in which the West
unveiled more sanctions on Russia and pledged more support for the resistance
fighters in Ukraine. But as Russian shells continued to bombard Ukrainian
cities, the united front the president projected gave way to a more sobering
reality. The fundamentals of the war had not changed. The conflict will likely
only end when Putin decides it does.
Putin’s
ability to withstand, at least for now, the international pressure and
vise-like economic sanctions placed on his country has left Biden and his
allies with limited leverage. The president has repeatedly stressed his
unwillingness to risk a confrontation with Russia that would escalate into
World War III, though he capped off his four days in Europe with the most
defiant and aggressive speech by an American president about Russia since
Ronald Reagan at the height of the Cold War.
“Don’t even
think about moving on one single inch of NATO territory,” said Biden, standing
in front of a castle in Warsaw.
But then,
days of carefully choreographed messaging came undone, with Biden veering off
script to finish his speech with an unplanned and dramatic escalation of rhetoric.
“For God’s
sake, this man cannot remain in power,” Biden said of Putin.
Even though
the president had, in recent days, called the Russian leader “a butcher” and a
war criminal, the seeming embrace of regime change stunned seasoned foreign
policy observers. White House aides quickly rushed to say that Biden was not
making new American policy after this team had spent weeks carefully avoiding
such a declaration.
But the
moment — those nine little words — upended the trip and threatened to undo the
careful balance Biden had tried to strike of condemning Putin without provoking
him. A former KGB officer, Putin has long held fears that the United States
would try to depose him and hearing those words from the mouth of an American
president could, officials fear, prompt him to expand the conflict or lash out
in an effort to preserve his power.
The initial
Kremlin response was predictably brusque, with spokesperson Dimitry Peskov
telling reporters, “That’s not for Biden to decide. The president of Russia is
elected by Russians.”
Even before
Biden delivered those remarks, the war seemed poised to enter a new phrase as
it began its second month—one in which an ending appeared increasingly
difficult to imagine.
A top
Russian commander on Friday signaled that Moscow was narrowing its goals,
declaring that the military would concentrate on “the complete liberation of
the Donbas”—the southeastern region that is home to a Kremlin-backed separatist
insurgency—and that the assault on major Ukrainian cities, including the
capital of Kyiv, was just a distraction to weaken the opposition forces so they
would no longer be able to defend the contested separatist territory.
That
assertion, on its face, was nonsense. Russian forces had attempted to seize
Kyiv within the first hours of the war only to be stalled by a combination of
their own tactical blunders, equipment failures and surprisingly bold
resistance by Ukraine’s military. A war that many in the Kremlin thought could
take mere days had settled into a terrible slog, with Russian forces taking
extraordinary losses.
But the
notion that the Kremlin was narrowing its war aim was met with skepticism by
Biden officials who suggested it could be a distraction while Russia continued
its assault elsewhere. Some military analysts believe Putin may soon pull out
some ground forces — avoiding taking more casualties that could hurt him
politically at home — and instead settle in to conduct a lengthy long-range
bombing campaign to shatter Ukrainian cities.
Indeed, the
day after the Kremlin’s declaration of a possible narrowing of its mission,
Russian missiles fell on the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, far from the
center of the conflict, and just 45 miles from Poland, where Biden spent
Saturday. A senior White House official likened it to a “warning shot across
the bow.”
Were
Moscow’s stated new plan to become reality, it would still leave Biden in a
bind. If the Kremlin were to settle for only claiming the separatist territory,
it would be a humiliating end to a large-scale invasion meant to restore all of
Ukraine to what Putin believes is its rightful home: part of Russia. But the
West would almost assuredly refuse to recognize that as a legitimate resolution
to the conflict. Moreover, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has flatly
declared that he would not be willing to give up any territory in a negotiated
end to the war.
Biden
himself must weigh domestic political considerations as the crisis in Ukraine
drags on. His poll numbers have not improved since the conflict began. But he
has largely received praise back home — even from some Republicans — for his
handling of the crisis.
On the
first leg of his trip, Biden announced that the U.S. would accept more than
100,000 Ukrainian refugees as the humanitarian crisis grows. He then put a face
on the pledge by visiting a camp of exiles who had fled to Poland. At one
moment, he picked up and smiled at a little girl. The president also pushed
NATO to deploy more troops to the nations on Russia’s borders and paid a visit
to thank — and eat pizza with — a division of American troops.
The war has
posed an unexpected test on one of the central premises of Biden’s
presidencies: that the globe’s democracies had to prove they could not just
effectively govern but also serve as a bulwark to rising autocracies. Biden has
steadied allies rocked by four tumultuous years of Donald Trump, even as many
European capitals quietly wonder if his foreign policy is simply an aberration
before Trump or someone like him reclaims power.
Though
Biden had reinvigorated alliances and delivered a stern warning to Putin, the
war’s end seemed no closer as Air Force One lifted off Saturday evening from
Warsaw back to Washington. A short time later, the air raid sirens went off
again in Lviv.
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