Albany Times Union

Biden, Putin deliver dueling fiery speeches on Ukraine

- By Matt Viser, Cleve R. Wootson Jr., Mary Ilyushina and Robyn Dixon

WARSAW — The leaders of the United States and Russia delivered blistering, contradict­ory addresses in Eastern Europe on Tuesday, showcasing starkly opposing worldviews as they spoke on the eve of the first anniversar­y of a Ukraine war that has set the two superpower­s increasing­ly at odds.

President Biden, speaking to an enthusiast­ic crowd outside Poland’s Royal Castle, urged the world’s nations to recommit to a unified defense of Ukraine, saying global democracy was at stake and accusing Russia of committing crimes against humanity through its “abhorrent” acts against civilians.

A few hours earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin, addressing a joint session of the Russian parliament, reiterated his attacks on what he called Ukraine’s “neo-nazi regime” and, in a surprise move, announced that Moscow was suspending its participat­ion in New START, the last remaining U.s.-russia nuclear arms agreement.

U.S. officials said that the timing of the two speeches was coincident­al and that Biden had decided long ago to travel to the region for the first anniversar­y of the brutal war. But if the president did not plan his remarks as a response to Putin’s, they nonetheles­s often sounded like a rebuttal of the Russian president.

Putin said during his televised state of the nation address that Western elites “started” the conflict in conjunctio­n with Ukraine. Biden, in his address, responded that it was Putin who “chose this war,” adding, “The West was not plotting to attack Russia, as Putin said today.”

Biden also used soaring terms to cast the war, as he has before, as one front in a worldwide struggle between autocracy and democracy.

“When Russia invaded, it wasn’t just Ukraine being tested. The whole world faced a test for the ages,” Biden said before a large crowd on a cold night with a colorful backdrop. “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO is being tested. All democracie­s are being tested. And the questions we face are as simple as they are profound: Would we respond, or would we look the other way?”

He added: “One year later, we know the answer. We did respond. We would be strong, we would be united, and the world would not look the other way.”

Biden seemed to relish the opportunit­y to create the contrast with Putin. He mocked him and criticized him. He called him a failed leader who had badly miscalcula­ted. And while Biden, in the same place a year ago, ad-libbed a phrase that his aides quickly walked back - “For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power” — Tuesday’s speech suggested that he still holds that belief.

“President Putin’s craven lust for land and power will fail, and the Ukrainian people’s love for their country will prevail,” he said.

In Putin’s telling, in contrast, Russia is not an autocratic power that attacked a neighborin­g country without provocatio­n, but a victimized nation targeted by the United States and the West. “Our relations have degraded, and that’s completely and utterly the U.S.’S fault,” Putin said.

“They were the ones who started the war,” he told the assembled members of Russia’s parliament, referring to Ukraine and Western “elites” he said were supporting Kyiv.

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