The Morning Call

Jill Biden was president’s eyes, ears on Ukraine trip

- By Darlene Superville

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — The first telephone call Jill Biden made from her black SUV after an unannounce­d meeting with her Ukrainian counterpar­t inside the embattled country was to her husband, President Joe Biden.

Biden and Olena Zelenska, who had not been seen in public since President Vladimir Putin sent Russia’s military into her country nearly 11 weeks ago, had just spent about two hours together at a school in Uzhhorod in western Ukraine.

With her visit to the Ukraine war zone, the U.S. first lady was able to act as a second pair of eyes and ears for the president, who has been unable to visit the country himself.

“Sometimes the first lady is able to do things and get into places where the president can’t,” said Myra Gutin, author of “The President’s Partner: The First Lady in the Twentieth Century.”

Jill Biden wrapped up her four-day trip to Eastern Europe on Monday after meeting in Bratislava with Zuzana Caputova, Slovakia’s first female president. Her trip over the border Sunday to meet with Zelenska and refugees from elsewhere in Ukraine was a high point of the visit.

Seated across from Caputova, Jill Biden said she told her husband in their phone call “just how much I saw the need to support the people of Ukraine” and about “the horrors and the brutality that the people I had met had experience­d.”

Ever since Russia opened war on Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been open about wanting Biden to visit him in Kyiv, just like many other world leaders have done, including Canada’s Justin Trudeau on Sunday.

The closest President Biden has been to Ukraine was a stop in Rzeszow, Poland, in late March after he went to Brussels to discuss the war with other world leaders.

At the time, he publicly lamented that he was not allowed to cross the Polish border and go into western Ukraine.

“Part of my disappoint­ment is that I can’t see it firsthand ... they will not let me,” Biden said, likely speaking about the ever-present security concerns associated with presidenti­al travel that are heightened by any talk of sending him to an active war zone.

The White House said as recently as last week that while the president “would love to visit” Ukraine, there were no plans for him to do so at this time.

Security is a concern for the first lady too.

But when she travels solo, she flies on a smaller plane than the president’s Air Force One and with a significan­tly smaller “package” of Secret Service agents, Air Force crew members, White House staff and, sometimes, journalist­s.

The difference in the “footprint” makes it easier for a first lady to act as an emissary for the president and then tell him about what she picks up during her travels.

Jill Biden had wanted to visit Ukraine in March but settled on a Mother’s Day weekend trip to help buck up Ukrainian moms who fled with their children to “front-line” countries like Slovakia that border Ukraine and have been taking them in.

During multiple stops in Romania and Slovakia, refugees shared their heartbreak­ing stories with the first lady — but also their gratitude for her visit as a high-profile symbol of U.S. support.

While first ladies lack the power or authority to send money or fighter jets, what they can do is show people that they — and the United States — care, Gutin said.

A first lady is a presidenti­al adviser without comparison.

On a trip like this, “she will be able to say to the refuges, ‘I’m going to tell the president what I saw, I’m going to tell the president what you told me,’ ”Gutin, a professor at Rider University in New Jersey, said before the trip.

As Jill Biden interacted with displaced Ukrainians and the volunteers helping them, the first lady sometimes turned the person she was face to face with around and asked them to tell their story to the journalist­s in the room.

“Come here so the press can hear you, then they know what you’re doing,” she said Sunday while reposition­ing a local volunteer working in one of the tents at a processing facility at the Slovak border crossing in Vysne Nemecke.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? First lady Jill Biden prepares Monday to depart Bratislava, Slovakia. Biden was on a four-day regional tour that included an unannounce­d visit to western Ukraine.
SUSAN WALSH/AP First lady Jill Biden prepares Monday to depart Bratislava, Slovakia. Biden was on a four-day regional tour that included an unannounce­d visit to western Ukraine.

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