https://ift.tt/2gzFXIx his first press conference of the year, U.S. President Joe Biden spoke candidly at the White House on Wednesday about the possibility of a Russian invasion in Ukraine.
“My guess is he will move in — he has to do something,” Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin. He warned that such an invasion would be met with the harshest measures. “He has never seen sanctions like the ones I promise will be imposed if he moves,” Biden said.
“What I’m concerned about is this could get out of hand,” he said on the potential confrontation between Moscow and NATO countries bordering Ukraine.
In an interview with VOA earlier Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized the administration’s message.
“We’ve equally made clear that if Russia chooses to renew its aggression against Ukraine, we — and not just we, the United States, we, many countries, throughout Europe, and even some beyond — will respond very forcefully and resolutely,” Blinken said in Kyiv, where he met with Ukrainian leaders.
But some analysts said Biden has ceded too much ground to Putin.
“For all his talk about these being unprecedented sanctions, we have yet to see sanctions change the Kremlin’s calculus,” Brett Bruen told VOA. Bruen was director of global engagement during the Obama administration and is president of the consulting firm Global Situation Room.
Biden stressed the importance of managing the brewing conflict that stems from Russia’s displeasure that Ukraine, a former Soviet country, may someday join NATO.