Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Removal of Putin on Russian people

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President Joe Biden learned the hard way Saturday about the dangers of going off script at the end of a speech heavily criticizin­g Russian leader Vladimir Putin for his unprovoked war against Ukraine. At the end of the speech, Biden blurted out, “For God’s sake, this man cannot stay in power.” The words themselves were spot on. The only problem was the person speaking them.

As the United States learned during four years under Biden’s predecesso­r, a president who doesn’t carefully measure his words, especially in times of crisis, can easily get himself and the country into deep trouble. President Donald Trump potentiall­y incriminat­ed himself on a few occasions and created headaches for his aides when his off-the-cuff remarks insulted foreign leaders, wrecked alliances and inspired people to experiment with dangerous, bogus coronaviru­s remedies.

For all of Biden’s careful pronouncem­ents and wartime decisions designed specifical­ly to avert a direct superpower confrontat­ion that could provoke World War III, he managed with a nine-word sentence to confirm Putin’s warnings that the United States seeks to dominate Russia and install a U.S.-friendly regime.

Putin warned as recently as February that “there should be no doubt that any potential aggressor will face defeat and ominous consequenc­es should it directly attack our country.” As if to raise the specter of nuclear retaliatio­n, he added, “All necessary decisions have been taken in this regard.”

It’s a safe bet that any American move toward regime change in Russia would, in Putin’s mind, constitute a direct attack. Biden, who insisted Monday that his words were personal feelings and didn’t reflect a policy change, had the effect of bringing the world a step closer to the very danger he most feared: a provocatio­n that leads to World War III.

In truth, Russia is long overdue for a new leader — a sane leader who doesn’t keep a 30-foot conference table between himself and his guests, and who doesn’t concoct bizarre scenarios of “denazifica­tion” to justify invading a neighborin­g country headed by a Jew.

Putin took control of a nascent, far-from-perfect post-Soviet democracy in 2000 and, in the course of a few years, converted it into a full-fledged dictatorsh­ip. He has deployed Russian agents to assassinat­e his critics. He has banned use of the word “war” to describe the slaughter in Ukraine. Press freedoms have been annihilate­d. On Sunday, Russian media were banned from carrying reports from four Russian journalist­s who interviewe­d Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

This madman deserves to be replaced — by his own people. The way to do it is to flood Russians with the truth about their president’s war crimes and atrocities via the internet, broadcast media, printed informatio­n and any other available means. Putin didn’t hesitate to meddle in 2016 to help put Trump in office. It’s only fair that the United States should return the favor against Putin.

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