How the Biden White House scrambled after Poland missile blast
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[November 19, 2022]
By Steve Holland and Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden
has been adamant that the United States will back Ukraine in its
nine-month fight to repel a Russian invasion. But he has insisted, "we
will not fight the Third World War in Ukraine."
So when a missile struck a village in Poland near the Ukraine border on
Nov. 15 and there were early claims it was launched by Russia, he and
his top team of advisers were jolted into crisis mode. The United States
and other NATO nations would be obliged to defend fellow NATO member
Poland militarily if it were a Russia attack - a situation that could
escalate into the global war most wanted to avoid.
Biden, in the waning days of a week-long Asia trip, was woken up by
aides in the middle of the night in Bali, Indonesia, to let him know
that a missile had killed two people in Poland, a U.S. official said.
Ukrainian officials publicly blamed Russia, as did a since-corrected
Associated Press report, citing an unnamed senior U.S. intelligence
official.
The reports sent stock markets diving and officials scrambling. Eastern
European countries responded angrily and the temperature rose.
Preliminary information from U.S. sources indicated that Ukraine may
have fired the missile in an attempt to repel a blizzard of incoming
Russian missiles and it had accidentally landed in Poland.
As they sought confirmation, the White House and other U.S. agencies
publicly said little. "We cannot confirm the reports or any of the
details at this time. We will determine what happened and what the
appropriate next steps would be," said White House spokesperson Adrienne
Watson.
Behind the scenes, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman was reaching
out to some foreign diplomats, asking them to adopt a cautious approach
and to be "measured" while the United States worked out how it would
respond, Western diplomats told Reuters.
Flanked by Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security
adviser Jake Sullivan, and wearing a t-shirt and khakis, Biden made an
early-morning call to Polish President Andrzej Duda, offering his
condolences and support for an investigation, the White House said.
SOME MOSCOW COMMUNICATIONS FAILED
As tensions simmered, and European allies fretted, the U.S. military
tried to reach out to Moscow.
The Pentagon has stressed the importance of military-to-military
communication with Moscow during the nine-month-long Ukraine war.
For instance, the White House has had talks with Russia about its
threats to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine, and top defense
officials spoke with their Russian counterparts in October after Moscow
accused Ukraine of planning a "dirty bomb" attack.
But at the Pentagon on Tuesday, efforts to contact Russia's military
failed.
General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said his
staff tried to arrange a call with his Russian counterpart, Chief
General Staff General Valery Gerasimov.
"Some attempts were made. No success," Milley told reporters.
"My staff was unsuccessful in getting me linked up with General
Gerasimov," he said.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks to the
media after an alleged Russian missile blast in Poland, in Bali,
Indonesia, November 16, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Sullivan, who has been in touch with Russian officials about the
risks around the Ukraine invasion, did not make contact in relation
to this incident, a White House official said.
CIA Director Bill Burns, who had met with his Russian counterparts
at the Russian intelligence agency SVR in Ankara on Monday, was in
Kyiv on Tuesday, the day the missiles hit Poland, and traveled to
Warsaw the next day.
A U.S. official said that in Ukraine Burns "discussed the U.S.
warning he delivered to the head of Russia's SVR not to use nuclear
weapons and reinforced the U.S. commitment to provide support to
Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression."
The U.S. official said Burns met with officials in Poland and
"discussed the current situation" but would not comment when asked
whether Burns had reconnected with SVR after the Poland incident.
A Kremlin spokesperson said he did not know if Russian channels with
the United States were activated to prevent any further escalation
but noted that the American reaction was "restrained."
INVESTIGATION
Biden and his aides convened an emergency meeting of G7 leaders at
9am Wednesday morning in Bali to discuss the incident, where he told
them what the United States had learned - that the blast was caused
by a Ukrainian air defense missile.
He was a little more vague answering reporters' questions after the
meeting, saying it was "unlikely" that the missile was fired from
Russia based on its trajectory.
Later, NATO's secretary-general said the blast was likely caused by
a Ukrainian air defense missile that went astray but that Russia was
ultimately responsible because it started the war.
Poland has been conducting its own investigation into what happened.
The U.S. military has sent American explosives experts to the site
to help with the probe, at Poland's request, a U.S. official said.
The official said the investigation is expected to conclude fairly
quickly that Ukraine fired the missile. "It's now just a matter of
doing forensics work to determine what kind of missile it was," the
official said.
Ukraine has insisted there was a "Russian trace" in the blast and
has sent its own experts to the site to investigate.
The incident highlights just how dangerous the Russian invasion of
Ukraine is for Europe, and the rest of the world, observers said.
"Poland and the Baltics have been warning for some time that there
is a real risk of something happening that draws the West into a
wider conflict," said one European diplomat. "What happened on
Tuesday makes it clear that this war is not managed, it is not
controlled."
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Phil Stewart; additional reporting
by Michael Martina, Nandita Bose and Andrea Shalal; Editing by
Heather Timmons and Rosalba O'Brien)
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