RUSSIA’S
WAR ON UKRAINE
Biden calls Putin a 'war criminal'
It was a notable shift for the president and the first
time he has labeled his Russian counterpart’s actions in Ukraine in such a way.
By MYAH
WARD
03/16/2022
03:45 PM EDT
Updated:
03/16/2022 05:24 PM EDT
President
Joe Biden on Wednesday called Vladimir Putin a “war criminal.”
It was a
notable shift for Biden and the first time he has labeled his Russian
counterpart’s actions in Ukraine in such a way. The president, who has skirted
questions on whether Russia has committed war crimes in Ukraine and often
refers to ongoing investigations, didn’t mince his words on Wednesday.
“I think he
is a war criminal,” Biden told reporters.
The comment
followed Biden’s announcement earlier on Wednesday that the U.S. would send an
additional $800 million in military aid to Ukraine. His commitment to more aid,
which brings the total to $1 billion allocated to the country this week, came
after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered an emotional address to
Congress. Zelenskyy pleaded with the U.S. and its NATO allies to do more to
help his country, whether by enforcing a no-fly zone over Ukraine or sending jets
to aid in its war against Russia.
Biden,
during Wednesday’s speech, addressed the nature of the “difficult battle”
Ukrainians have faced in the three weeks since Russia launched its assault. The
Ukrainian death toll has continued to climb as Russian bombing expands toward
the country’s west. More than 700 civilians have been killed the past few
weeks, according to the United Nations, and dozens of children have been
confirmed dead as of March 15, though these numbers are difficult to track and
are likely considerably higher.
“The
American people will be steadfast in our support of the people of Ukraine in
the face of Putin’s immoral, unethical attacks on civilian populations,” Biden
said. “We are united in the abhorrence of depraved onslaught, and we are going
to continue to have their backs as they fight for their freedom, their
democracy, their very survival.”
White House
aides confirmed that Biden had not planned in advance to declare that Putin was
a war criminal. The president had taken aides’ advice and not taken questions
at his Wednesday morning event when he signed the authorization to send the
additional resources to Ukraine.
But at the
end of his afternoon event, in which he reauthorized the Violence Against Women
Act, Biden worked the crowd in the East Room for nearly half an hour before he
ended up next to group of gathered reporters. He took one question from a
reporter who asked whether Putin was a war criminal. Biden answered no and kept
walking.
He returned
a moment later and indicated that he realized that he might have misheard the
question. When it was repeated, the president answered in the affirmative,
becoming the first member of his administration to assign that label to Putin.
Horrifying
images have been seen across the world this month. Just this week, it was
confirmed that a pregnant woman and her baby died after a maternity hospital
was bombed in the southeastern port city of Mariupol last week. Multiple
journalists have now been reported dead. Millions of Ukrainians have fled the
country, while millions of others are facing a humanitarian crisis within
Ukraine’s borders.
Russia is
already at the center of multiple investigations opened in recent weeks,
including a probe by the U.N., which announced it would open a commission to
investigate alleged human rights abuses. U.N. Ambassador Linda
Thomas-Greenfield was the first Biden administration official to call Russia’s
attacks war crimes last week, as world leaders ramp up calls to hold Putin
accountable and the U.S. weighs its role in international investigations,
particularly when it comes to the International Criminal Court.
ICC Prosecutor
Karim Khan announced his court’s probe on March 2, after dozens of member
states called for him to take action. The U.S. is not a member of the ICC and
has long had a complicated relationship with the court, though the Biden
administration is reviewing its policy on the ICC, Foreign Policy reported.
White House
press secretary Jen Psaki was asked about Biden’s directness, and what changed
his assessment of Putin’s attacks. Psaki acknowledged that there is a legal
process underway at the State Department, where the agency is documenting and
compiling information about the attacks on Ukrainian civilians to reach a
conclusion.
“He was
speaking from his heart and speaking from what he’s seen on television, which
is barbaric actions by a brutal dictator through his invasion of a foreign
country,” Psaki said.
Vice President
Kamala Harris last week, while in Poland, accused Russia of committing
“atrocities,” though stopped short of leveling the accusation as Biden did on
Wednesday. She also said the U.S. would participate in investigations by the
U.N. to determine whether Russia has committed war crimes.
“Just limit
it to what we have seen,” Harris said last week, discussing potential Russian
war crimes. “Pregnant women going for health care? Being injured by, I don’t
know, a missile? A bomb? In an unprovoked, unjustified war?”
“Absolutely,
there should be an investigation,” she added. “And we should all be watching.
And I have no question the eyes of the world are on this war and what Russia
has done in terms of this aggression and these atrocities. Have no
doubt.”
Jonathan Lemire contributed to this report.
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