Chicago Sun-Times

BIDEN WALKS STREETS OF KYIV

‘Ukraine stands. Democracy stands. The Americans stand with you, and the world stands with you’

- BY EVAN VUCCI, JOHN LEICESTER, AAMER MADHANI AND ZEKE MILLER

KYIV, Ukraine — President Joe Biden swept unannounce­d into Ukraine on Monday to meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a defiant display of Western solidarity with a country still fighting what he called “a brutal and unjust war” days before the first anniversar­y of Russia’s invasion.

“One year later, Kyiv stands,” Biden declared after meeting Zelenskyy at Mariinsky Palace. Jabbing his finger for emphasis on his podium, against a backdrop of three flags from each country, he continued: “And Ukraine stands. Democracy stands. The Americans stand with you, and the world stands with you.”

Biden spent more than five hours in the Ukrainian capital, consulting with Zelenskyy on next steps, honoring the country’s fallen soldiers and seeing U.S. embassy staff in the besieged country. Altogether he was on Ukrainian territory for about 23 hours, traveling by train from and back to Poland.

The visit came at a crucial moment: Biden is trying to keep allies unified in their support for Ukraine as the war is expected to intensify with spring offensives. Zelenskyy is pressing allies to speed up delivery of promised weapon systems and calling on the West to provide fighter jets — something that Biden has declined to do.

The U.S. president got a taste of the terror that Ukrainians have lived with for close to a year when air raid sirens howled just as he and Zelenskyy wrapped up a visit to the golddomed St. Michael’s Cathedral.

Looking solemn, they continued unperturbe­d as they laid two wreaths and held a moment of silence at the Wall of Remembranc­e honoring Ukrainian soldiers killed since 2014, the year Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula and Russian-backed fighting erupted in eastern Ukraine.

The White House would not go into specifics, but national security adviser Jake Sullivan said that it notified Moscow of Biden’s visit to Kyiv shortly before his departure from Washington “for deconflict­ion purposes” in an effort to avoid any miscalcula­tion that could bring the two nuclear-armed nations into direct conflict.

In Kyiv, Biden announced an additional half-billion dollars in U.S. assistance — on top of the more than $50 billion already provided — for shells for howitzers, anti-tank missiles, air surveillan­ce radars and other aid but no new advanced weaponry.

Ukraine has also been pushing for battlefiel­d systems that would allow its forces to strike Russian targets that have been moved back from frontline areas, out of the range of HIMARS missiles that have already been delivered. Zelenskyy said he and Biden spoke about “long-range weapons and the weapons that may still be supplied to Ukraine even though it wasn’t supplied before.” But he did not detail any new commitment­s.

Biden’s trip was a brazen rebuke to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who had hoped his military would swiftly overrun Kyiv within days. Biden recalled speaking with Zelenskyy on the night of the invasion, saying, “That dark night one year ago, the world was literally at the time bracing for the fall of Kyiv. Perhaps even the end of Ukraine.”

A year later, the Ukrainian capital remains firmly in Ukrainian control. Regular air raid sirens and frequent missile and killer-drone attacks against military and civilian infrastruc­ture across the country are a near-constant reminder that the war is still raging. The bloodiest fighting is concentrat­ed in the country’s east.

“The cost that Ukraine has had to bear has been extraordin­arily high,” Biden said. “And the sacrifices have been far too great.” But “Putin’s war of conquest is failing.”

It was rare for a U.S. president to travel to a conflict zone where the U.S. or its allies did not have control over the airspace.

The U.S. military does not have a presence in Ukraine other than a small detachment of Marines guarding the embassy in Kyiv, making Biden’s visit more complicate­d than other recent visits by prior U.S. leaders to war zones.

While Biden was in Ukraine, U.S. surveillan­ce planes, including E-3 Sentry airborne radar and an electronic RC-135W Rivet Joint aircraft, were keeping watch over Kyiv from Polish airspace.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Joe Biden walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy outside St. Michael’s gold-domed Cathedral on a surprise visit Monday to Kyiv. Moscow was notified before the trip “for deconflict­ion purposes.”
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Joe Biden walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy outside St. Michael’s gold-domed Cathedral on a surprise visit Monday to Kyiv. Moscow was notified before the trip “for deconflict­ion purposes.”
 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Ukrainian paramedic in Donbas, eastern Ukraine, holds his phone showing an image of the Biden-Zelenskyy meeting on Monday, calling it “fantastic.”
JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES A Ukrainian paramedic in Donbas, eastern Ukraine, holds his phone showing an image of the Biden-Zelenskyy meeting on Monday, calling it “fantastic.”

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