Detroit Free Press

Putin calls out ills of US society in response

Russia’s ambassador pulled after remark by Biden

- Vladimir Isachenkov

MOSCOW – President Vladimir Putin responded Thursday to U.S. President Joe Biden’s descriptio­n of the Russian leader as a killer by citing America’s past and present troubles, from slavery and the slaughter of Native Americans to racial injustice.

Biden was asked in an interview this week whether he thought Putin was a killer, and he replied, “I do,” a remark that prompted Russia to recall its ambassador in Washington for consultati­ons and warn about further retaliatio­n.

Biden has taken a tough stance on Russia, saying that the days of the U.S. “rolling over” to Putin are done, contrastin­g his style with the approach of former President Donald Trump, who avoided direct confrontat­ion and frequently spoke about Putin with approval.

Putin pointed at the U.S. atomic bombing of Japan during World War II, as well as its history of slavery and slaughteri­ng Native Americans, noting the painful legacies weighing on the United States.

“Otherwise, where would the Black Lives

Matter movement come from?” he said, citing racial injustice and the killing of African Americans.

The exchange of tough statements follows a declassifi­ed report from the U.S. national intelligen­ce director’s office that found Putin authorized influence operations to try to help Trump in his failed bid to win reelection in November. The Kremlin has dismissed the report as baseless.

“(Putin) will pay a price,” Biden said in the interview, asked about the report.

Biden’s administra­tion warned that Russia would face sanctions soon over its attempt to influence last year’s U.S. election and the massive Solar Wind hacks.

The spiraling tensions have brought U.S.Russian relations to the point where they were at the end of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, a chilly strain that differed markedly from Trump’s efforts to court Putin.

Asked what he would tell Biden in response to his remarks, Putin said: “I would tell him: ‘Be well.’ I wish him health, and I say that without any irony or joking.”

Recalling his youth, Putin said that he and his friends would respond to insults with the taunt: “The names you call are what you are yourself ” – a Russian version of the childhood riposte, “I’m rubber, you’re glue; what you say bounces off me and sticks to you.”

 ?? AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting on social and economic developmen­t of Crimea and Sevastopol, via video conference in Moscow, Russia, Thursday.
AP Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting on social and economic developmen­t of Crimea and Sevastopol, via video conference in Moscow, Russia, Thursday.

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