Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

His own two eyes

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Ayear ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin thought he would be riding triumphant­ly into Kyiv, perhaps aboard a tank from the vanguard of his armed forces that were supposed to steamroll Ukrainian defenders within days.

Instead, that tank is probably now lying in a rusted husk somewhere, and the foreign leader striding triumphant­ly in the Ukrainian capital is Joe Biden, who took a train into Kyiv to stand with wartime President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and pledge continued

U.S. support for Ukraine’s self-defense.

Biden’s surprise visit (of which the Russians were told in advance to avoid any bombardmen­t) bolsters the Western commitment to Ukraine and to keep military assistance flowing. His decision to travel to an active war zone to personally join the battle-weary public sends a couple of important messages: despite some news fatigue, internatio­nal support for Ukraine is not waning, and the United States is not bowed by Russia’s aggression.

As powerful as symbolic gestures are, they are useless without an overarchin­g strategy and clear objectives, and at this stage the predominan­t goal should be to reach a negotiated end to the war that leaves Ukraine as intact as possible.

Internatio­nal logistical and weapons support is appropriat­e in that it puts Ukraine on much stronger footing to set terms of the deal, including an absolute maxim that no territory will be given up. Forcing Russia to the negotiatin­g table in a way that won’t seek to back the nuclear-armed Putin into a corner should be the next step to avoid another year of bloodshed.

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