Los Angeles Times

Biden warns and invites Putin

President expresses concern about Russia’s actions on Ukraine and suggests a summit.

- By David Lauter and Tracy Wilkinson

The president expresses concern about Russia’s military role in Ukraine but also suggests a summit.

WASHINGTON — President Biden spoke Tuesday morning with Russian President Vladimir Putin, warning him against aggressive moves toward Ukraine but also inviting him to a summit meeting in coming months.

Biden suggested that the two leaders meet in a third country to discuss their difference­s, the White House said in a statement.

Biden “voiced our concerns over the sudden Russian military build-up in occupied Crimea and on Ukraine’s borders, and called on Russia to deescalate tensions,” the statement said. “Biden also made clear that the United States will act firmly in defense of its national interests in response to Russia’s actions, such as cyber intrusions and election interferen­ce.”

The announceme­nt came as Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III met in Brussels with Ukrainian officials and NATO allies to discuss coordinati­ng in response to Russia’s military moves along its border with Ukraine.

“We’re now seeing the largest concentrat­ion of Russian forces on Ukraine’s border since 2014, and that is of deep concern not only to Ukraine, but to the United States, and indeed to many of our allies and partners,” Blinken said.

The Russian government released a statement several hours later that did not say whether Putin would accept Biden’s summit invitation. It said that Biden had “suggested considerin­g the possibilit­y of holding a personal meeting at the highest level in the foreseeabl­e future .”

The Kremlin statement said that the two presidents had conducted “an exchange of opinions on Ukraine’s internal political crisis” and that Putin had told Biden about “approaches to a political settlement.”

The two also discussed arms control, the Iranian nuclear program, the situation in Afghanista­n and climate change, the Russians said.

Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, later annexing the territory, and continues to back separatist­s in eastern Ukraine in an insurgency that has resulted in some 14,000 deaths.

In recent weeks, a surge of cease-fire violations in the region, along with Russian troop movements at the border, has made U.S. and European officials worry that Russia might invade Ukrainian territory.

Two weeks ago, Biden spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and expressed his support in the face of the Russian moves.

A senior State Department official, briefing reporters in Brussels under State Department ground rules that require anonymity, said that “this enormous buildup” that the Russians have made could be in preparatio­n for a move “to take aggressive action, but we don’t know their intentions obviously.”

Just as worrisome as the buildup of Russian troops and hardware, the official said, are reports that Russians have erected field hospitals in the border area and are jamming radios and f looding Russian media with anti-Ukraine disinforma­tion.

“To this day, they’ve given no good explanatio­n of what they’re doing with this enormous and costly buildup,” the official said.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was quoted by Russian news agencies saying that the military deployment­s were in response to reports that the U.S. and NATO were buttressin­g their own military presence in the Baltic region of Europe, a perceived threat to Moscow.

The briefing came after Blinken met with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on the sidelines of a NATO ministeria­l summit.

The administra­tion wanted to reiterate that the United States “stands firmly behind the sovereignt­y and the territoria­l integrity of Ukraine,” Blinken told reporters ahead of the meeting. “And that’s particular­ly important at a time when we’re seeing, unfortunat­ely, Russia take very provocativ­e action when it comes to Ukraine.”

Blinken also said he and NATO partners would discuss Ukraine’s “Euro-Atlantic aspiration­s,” a reference to Ukraine’s desire to join NATO and other European institutio­ns that Putin strongly opposes.

Consultati­ons with North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on allies over Ukraine will continue in the coming days, Blinken said.

Kuleba said the meetings were “extremely timely,” adding that the “Russian buildup is taking place not only along the border of Ukraine, but along the border of the democratic world.”

The U.S. has limited options in the Ukraine conflict. Starting during the Trump administra­tion, Washington has been supplying Ukraine with weapons and has imposed numerous economic sanctions on Russia’s government, companies and oligarchs with ties to Putin.

Pressed repeatedly about what steps the U.S. can take if Russia does act against Ukraine, the U.S. official who briefed reporters declined to elaborate.

Philip T. Reeker, the U.S. acting assistant secretary of State for Europe, who was accompanyi­ng Blinken in Brussels, said earlier in the day that “if Russia acts recklessly or aggressive­ly, there will be costs. There will be consequenc­es to that.”

“What we’re focused on now is discussion and meeting with our allies and others who are equally concerned,” Reeker said. The U.S. was working with the Viennabase­d Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe “to try to address those concerns and see deescalati­on by Russia in terms of not only the military threat, but also this disinforma­tion and the rhetoric that’s flowing,” he added.

The OSCE is a much wider grouping than NATO, with 57 members, including Russia and Ukraine.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki also declined to comment on additional steps the U.S. might take against Russia beyond saying that the U.S. will impose “consequenc­es” for Russian actions that it sees as improper, including election interferen­ce and cyberattac­ks.

Plans for a potential summit meeting were “just at the early stages of the discussion­s,” Psaki said.

“We certainly expect the relationsh­ip to remain a challenge,” she said, adding that Biden does not want an “adversaria­l relationsh­ip” with Moscow, but one that is “honest and candid.”

The two countries can work together “where there is mutual interest,” she said, citing arms control and the continuing negotiatio­ns over renewing the nuclear agreement with Iran, in which Russia, China, France, Britain, Germany and the European Union joined with the U.S.

In an interview last month, Biden labeled Putin a “killer,” prompting an angry reaction from Moscow, which recalled its ambassador from Washington. The administra­tion defended Biden’s comment, saying he was being honest in response to a question but also adding that he continued to believe the U.S. and Russia must work together.

A summit between the two men would be the first meeting between the Russian and U.S. heads of state since Putin and President Trump held a meeting in Helsinki, Finland, in 2018. In a news conference after that meeting, Trump blamed U.S. officials for worsening relations between the two countries and accepted Putin’s denials that his country had interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, despite American intelligen­ce findings to the contrary.

 ?? Alexei Druzhinin Sputnik ?? RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin, shown in Moscow in March, spoke with President Biden about a range of issues, including the situation in Ukraine.
Alexei Druzhinin Sputnik RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin, shown in Moscow in March, spoke with President Biden about a range of issues, including the situation in Ukraine.

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