Analysis-Biden talks down Russia, spurs allies in bid to back Putin into
a corner
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[June 17, 2021]
By Simon Lewis and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON/GENEVA (Reuters) - President Joe
Biden on his first foreign foray sought to cast Russia not as a direct
competitor to the United States but as a bit player in a world where
Washington is increasingly pre-occupied by China.
Aides said Biden wanted to send a message that Putin was isolating
himself on the international stage with his actions, ranging from
election interference and cyber-attacks against Western nations to his
treatment of domestic critics.
But Biden could struggle in a parallel attempt to stop the rot in
U.S.-Russia relations and deter the threat of nuclear conflict while
also talking down Russia, some observers said.
"The administration wants to de-escalate tensions. It's not clear to me
that Putin does," said Tim Morrison, a national security adviser during
the Trump administration. "The only cards he has to play are those of
the disruptor."
Officials on both sides had played down the chances of major
breakthroughs at the talks, and they were right. None materialized.
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But the two leaders pledged to resume work https://www.reuters.com/world/wide-disagreements-low-expectations-biden-putin-meet-2021-06-15
on arms control as well as cyber security and to look for areas of
possible cooperation, signs of some hope for a relationship between two
countries with little common ground of late.
Ties were already frayed when Biden, at the start of his administration,
repeated his description of Putin as "a killer." That deepened a
diplomatic rift that saw both countries withdraw their ambassadors from
each others' capital.
Echoing an approach by former President Barack Obama, who called Russia
a “regional power” after it annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, Biden
sought to cast Russia not as a direct competitor to the United States.
Speaking after his meeting with Putin, Biden said Russia wants
"desperately to remain a major power."
"Russia is in a very, very difficult spot right now. They are being
squeezed by China,” Biden said before boarding his plane out of Geneva,
quipping that the Russians “don't want to be known as, as some critics
have said, you know, the Upper Volta with nuclear weapons." Biden was
referring to the former French West African colony, which changed its
name to Burkina Faso.
Biden also pointed to the troubles of Russia’s economy and called out
Putin on Russia’s detention of two Americans, and threats toward U.S.
government-funded Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.
American businessmen “don’t want to hang out in
Moscow,” he said.
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President Joe Biden and Russia's President Vladimir Putin meet for
the U.S.-Russia summit at Villa La Grange in Geneva, Switzerland,
June 16, 2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/Pool
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Matthew Schmidt, associate professor at the University of New Haven
and a specialist on Russian and Eurasian affairs, said Biden was
seeking to undermine Putin's importance on the global stage.
"The strategy is very simply to push Putin's buttons, but with some
real facts," Schmidt said. "Backlash will happen anyways,
regardless."
Putin, a former agent in Russia’s KGB security agency, lived through
the fall of the Soviet Union, a humiliation for the nation that he
has sought to right with increasingly aggressive foreign policy, as
seen in the Crimea move and Russian support for separatists in
eastern Ukraine.
Biden arrived at the lakeside villa in Geneva where he met Putin on
Wednesday on the back of meetings of the G7 group of nations and the
NATO alliance.
A senior administration official said Biden’s approach to Russia was
more likely to be successful because Biden met Putin straight after
rallying allies around the principle of upholding a “rules-based
international order” at a G7 meeting in Britain and talks with NATO
members in Brussels.
“There was strong alignment on the basic proposition that we all
need to defend … this order, because the alternative is the law of
the jungle and chaos, which is in no one's interest,” the official
said.
At home, Biden's Republican opponents quickly criticized Biden for
failing to block a major Russian-backed natural gas pipeline being
built in Europe.
U.S. Senator Lindsay Graham, a frequent Republican critic of Biden,
said he was disturbed to hear the president suggest Putin would be
troubled by how other countries view him.
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“It is clear to me that Putin could care less about how he's viewed
by others and, quite frankly, would enjoy the reputation of being
able to successfully interfere in the internal matters of other
countries,” the South Carolina senator said.
(Reporting by Simon Lewis and Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington and
Humeyra Pamuk and Steve Holland in Geneva; Editing by Kieran Murray
and Lincoln Feast.)
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