Putin laughs off ‘killer’ comments ahead of summit with Biden
Russian President Vladimir Putin laughed off the idea that he could be considered a “killer,” but expressed a willingness to work with President Joe Biden in an interview with NBC News ahead of the two leaders’ summit Wednesday in Geneva.
In a clip that NBC News posted before airing the full interview on Monday, Putin described Biden as a “career man” who has “spent virtually his entire adulthood in politics,” making him a very different type of politician than former president Donald Trump. “It is my great hope that, yes, there are some advantages, some disadvantages, but there will not be any impulsebased movements on behalf of the sitting U.S. president,” Putin said.
In March, George Stephanopoulos of ABC News asked Biden: “So you know Vladimir Putin. You think he’s a killer? Biden responded: ‘‘I do.’’ In the NBC interview, Putin chuckled when asked about the characterization, then said he is used to facing ‘‘attacks from all kinds of angles.’’ He steered clear of criticizing Biden, saying that ‘‘harsh rhetoric’’ is part of U.S. political culture. When NBC reporter Keir Simmons named specific opponents of Putin’s who have been killed in recent years, the Russian president’s response was somewhat less sanguine. ‘‘I don’t want to come across as being rude, but this looks like some kind of indigestion except that it’s verbal indigestion,’’ he said, before dismissing the deaths as a list of people who ‘‘suffered and perished at different points in time for various reasons, at the hands of different individuals.’’
Biden has said that he wants to use Wednesday’s summit to communicate to Russia ‘‘that there are consequences for violating the sovereignty of democracies in the United States and Europe and elsewhere.’’ Topics expected to be raised at the meeting include cyberattacks on American targets, the Syrian civil war, election interference and Russia’s aggression toward Ukraine.