Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Biden’s mission on Europe trip: Shore up alliance against Russia

- BY ZEKE MILLER AND DARLENE SUPERVILLE

MUNICH — President Joe Biden is out to sustain the global alliance punishing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine as he embarks on a five-day trip to Europe as the 4-month-old war shows no sign of abating and its aftershock­s to global food and energy supplies are deepening.

Biden first joins a meeting of the Group of Seven leading economic powers in the Bavarian Alps of Germany and later travels to Madrid for a summit with leaders of the 30 NATO countries. The visit comes as the global coalition to bolster Ukraine and punish Russia for its aggression has showed signs of fraying amid skyrocketi­ng inflation in food and energy prices caused by the conflict.

Biden was given a red-carpet welcome after he arrived in Munich on Saturday night, greeted with Bavarian music, people in traditiona­l dress and children presenting him with flowers.

Biden and the G-7 leaders intend to announce a ban on importing gold from Russia, according to a person familiar with White House planning. Gold is Moscow’s second largest export after energy.

The Ukraine war has entered a more attritiona­l phase since Biden’s last trip to Europe in March. Russian’s retreat from western Ukraine and regrouping in the east has shifted the conflict to one of artillery battles and bloody house-to-house fighting in the country’s industrial heartland, the Donbas region. Russia took full control Saturday of the charred ruins of the strategic city of Sievierodo­netsk.

While U.S. officials see broad consensus for maintainin­g the pressure on Russia and sustaining support for Ukraine in the near term, they view Biden’s trip as an opportunit­y to align strategy for both the conflict and its global ramificati­ons heading into the winter and beyond.

Allies differ over whether their goals are merely to restore peace or to force Russia to pay a deeper price.

John Kirby, spokesman for the White House National Security Council, said the summit will address problems such as inflation and other “challenges in the global economy as a result of Mr. Putin’s war — but also how to continue to hold Mr. Putin accountabl­e” and subject to “constant consequenc­es.”

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