Calling Putin A Butcher, Biden Says This Man Cannot Remain in Power

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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a speech at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Poland, Saturday, March 26, 2022. Biden is in Poland for the final leg of his four-day trip to Europe as he tries to maintain unity among allies and support Ukraine's defence. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — President Joe Biden said Saturday that Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power,” dramatically escalating the rhetoric against the Russian leader after his brutal invasion of Ukraine.

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Even as Biden’s words rocketed around the world, the White House attempted to clarify soon after Biden finished speaking in Poland that he was not calling for a new government in Russia.

A White House official asserted that Biden was “not discussing Putin’s power in Russia or regime change.” The official, who was not authorized to comment by name and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Biden’s point was that “Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region.”

The White House declined to comment on whether Biden’s statement about Putin was part of his prepared remarks.

“For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power,” Biden said at the very end of a speech in Poland’s capital that served as the capstone on a four-day trip to Europe.

Biden has frequently talked about ensuring that the Kremlin’s invasion becomes a “strategic failure” for Putin and has described the Russian leader as a “war criminal.” But until his remarks in Warsaw, the American leader had not veered toward suggesting Putin should not run Russia. Earlier on Saturday, shortly after meeting with Ukrainian refugees, Biden called Putin a “butcher.”

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told The Associated Press that “it’s not up to the president of the U.S. and not up to the Americans to decide who will remain in power in Russia.”

“Only Russians, who vote for their president, can decide that,” Peskov added. “And of course it is unbecoming for the president of the U.S. to make such statements.”

Asked about the impact of such statements from Biden on Russia-U.S. relations, Peskov described it as “extremely negative.” “With each such statement, and Biden now prefers to make them daily, he is narrowing the window of opportunity for our bilateral relations under the current administration,” Peskov said.

This past week, Russians warned John Sullivan, the U.S. ambassador in Moscow, that diplomatic relations were in jeopardy because Washington has imposed painful economic sanctions on Russia. On Thursday, the Russians declared almost a dozen diplomats at the U.S. Embassy as “persona non grata,” paving the way for their expulsion. Staffing at the embassy is already thin, and U.S. officials have said further reductions will make it difficult if not impossible to keep it operating.

Biden also used his speech to also make a vociferous defense of liberal democracy and the NATO military alliance, while saying Europe must steel itself for a long fight against Russian aggression.

Earlier in the day, as Biden met with Ukrainian refugees, Russia kept up its pounding of cities throughout Ukraine. Explosions rang out in Lviv, the closest major Ukrainian city to Poland and a destination for the internally replaced that has been largely spared from major attacks.

The images of Biden reassuring refugees and calling for Western unity contrasted with the dramatic scenes of flames and black smoke billowing so near the Polish border — another jarring split-screen moment in the war.

In what was billed by the White House as a major address, Biden spoke inside the Royal Castle, one of Warsaw’s notable landmarks that was badly damaged during War II.

He borrowed the words of Polish-born Pope John Paul II and cited anti-communist Polish dissident and former president, Lech Walesa, as he warned that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine threatens to bring “decades of war.”

“In this battle we need to be clear-eyed. This battle will not be won in days, or months, either,” Biden said.

The crowd of about 1,000 included some of the Ukrainian refugees who have fled for Poland and elsewhere in the midst of the brutal invasion.

“We must commit now, to be this fight for the long haul,” Biden said.

Biden also rebuked Putin for his claim the the invasion sought to “de-Nazify” Ukraine. The president of Ukraine. Volodymyr Zelensky, is Jewish and his father’s family died in the Holocaust.

“Putin has the gall to say he’s de-Nazifying Ukraine. It’s a lie,” Biden said. “It’s just cynical. He knows that and it’s also obscene.”

Biden also tried to tie the invasion to the former Soviet Union’s history of brutal oppression, including the post-World War II military operations to stamp out pro-democracy movements in Hungary, Poland and what was then Czechoslovakia.

The president defended the 27-member NATO alliance that Moscow says is increasingly a threat to Russian security. He noted that NATO had worked for months through diplomatic channels to try to head off Russia’s invasion.

The war has led the U.S. to increase its military presence in Poland and Eastern Europe, and Nordic nations such as Finland and Sweden are now considering applying to join NATO.

“The Kremlin wants to portray NATO enlargement as an imperial project aimed to destabilize in Russia,” Biden said. “NATO is a defensive alliance that has never sought the demise of Russia.”

After meeting with refugees at the National Stadium, Biden marveled at their spirit and resolve in the aftermath of Russia’s deadly invasion as he embraced mothers and children and promised enduring support from Western powers.

Biden listened intently as children described the perilous flight from neighboring Ukraine with their parents. Smiling broadly, he lifted up a young girl in a pink coat and told her she reminded him of his granddaughters.

The president held hands with parents and gave them hugs during the stop at the soccer stadium where refugees go to obtain a Polish identification number that gives them access to social services such as health care and schools.

Some of the women and children told Biden that they fled without their husbands and fathers, men of fighting age who were required to remain behind to aid the resistance against Putin’s forces.

“What I am always surprised by is the depth and strength of the human spirit,” Biden told reporters after his conversations with the refugees at the stadium, which more recently had served as a field hospital for COVID-19 patients. “Each one of those children said something to the effect of, ‘Say a prayer for my dad or grandfather or my brother who is out there fighting.”

The president spent time reassuring Poland that the U.S. would defend against any attacks by Russia as he acknowledged that the NATO ally bore the burden of the refugee crisis from the war.

“Your freedom is ours,” Biden told Poland’s president, Andrzej Duda earlier, echoing one of that country’s unofficial mottos.

More than 3.7 million people have fled Ukraine since the war began, and more than 2.2 million Ukrainians have crossed into Poland, though it is unclear how many have remained there and how many have left for other countries. Earlier this week the U.S. announced it would take in as many as 100,000 refugees, and Biden told Duda that he understood Poland was “taking on a big responsibility, but it should be all of NATO’s responsibility.”

Biden called the “collective defense” agreement of NATO a “sacred commitment,” and said the unity of the Western military alliance was of the utmost importance.

“I’m confident that Vladimir Putin was counting on dividing NATO,” Biden said. “But he hasn’t been able to do it. We’ve all stayed together.”

European security is facing its most serious test since World War II. Western leaders have spent the past week consulting over contingency plans in case the conflict spreads. The invasion has shaken NATO out of any complacency it might have felt and cast a dark shadow over Europe.

No clear path to ending the conflict has emerged. Although Russian officials have suggested they will focus their invasion on the Donbas, a region in eastern Ukraine, Biden told reporters, when asked whether the Kremlin had changed its strategy, “I am not sure they have.”


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Rats Rats DemocRATs
Rats Rats DemocRATs
2 years ago

How quickly the DemocRATs and Biden the Israel hater forgot how American cities were under attack by progressives looting and burning. How manhattan looked all boarded up for miles. Where were the bleeding heart DemocRATs. They egged on these BLM and Antifa rioters. And now Biden is giving a million dollars to pay for slay Jews in Israel. Every terrorist who kills a Jew gets money for his family. Trump took away that funding and now Biden is refunding it. Then his dangerous Iran deal which will give Iran billions to use to attack Israel. Putin is far better for Israel than that wolf Biden in sheepskin. Dump DemocRATs.

Control yourself Joe
Control yourself Joe
2 years ago

We don’t want another cold war with Russia. Biden needs to be much more careful with what he says.

dumdems
dumdems
2 years ago

He’s a senile old moron.
This Man Cannot Remain in Power.

Rats Rats DemocRATs
Rats Rats DemocRATs
2 years ago

The real Butcher is Biden not Putin. Biden is refunding a million dollars to give Arabs who kill Jews in israel. Yes a million dollars. Trump discontinued these funds from the Obama administration. Biden the butcher also stopped three months ago the building of a new chareidi city and thus so many frum families lack normal housing. I have seen families living in parking lots and rooms meant to store Garabage. This is Butcher Biden. And his new funding of Iran and their terror actions. Allowing them to continue building nukes. Putin is a friend of israel. He loves Jews and in fact sent condolences to the victims of the Arab terror attack in beer Sheva last week.

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
2 years ago

Why are we apologising and back off our words . Say it like it is. The Russian people need to realize that in a civil society we don’t let leaders stay in power when they intentionally butcher innocent women and children minding their own business. And he is hurting their own people. Yes the president ought to call on the Russian people to be brave stand up and assainate their leader.

Last edited 2 years ago by
K belz
K belz
2 years ago

Biden didn’t & never says anything, he has no clue what is happening around him , let alone in the outside world STOP QUOTING HIM HE DOESN’T MATTER

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
2 years ago

Nobody in the world will be safe while Putin is in control of nuclear weapons.

Chaim Eluzer
Chaim Eluzer
2 years ago

ll he can do is call Putin names. More than that his hands are tied. Even America is shaking in their boots to send those planes to Ukraine.

Say it ain't so Joe
Say it ain't so Joe
2 years ago

Ironically, Biden, by his irresponsible words in this and multiple other instances, is making the case that he himself should be relieved of his own office.

Been here and there
Been here and there
2 years ago

It takes no genius to see clearly what a mortal danger is being created for the world by this corrupt, moronic senile criminally imposed ‘president ‘ , and his consistent baiting of the Russian leader. Putin is a friend to the Jews, and we should all recognize the horror of what this evil Biden is bringing all of us towards.

Just words
Just words
2 years ago

Only Words.

Disgusted democrat
Disgusted democrat
2 years ago

Who woke up this senile fool now he realizes it do why hasn’t he sent offensive weapons do they can defend themselves
Why didn’t he let Poland send their RUSSIAN jets

Triumpinwhitehouse
Triumpinwhitehouse
2 years ago

Burisma must’ve paid up but this corrupt and senile almost 80 year old will start WW3