Biden's remark that Putin cannot remain in power: Slip or veiled threat?
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

US president Joe Biden delivers a speech at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Poland, on March 26, 2022.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
Follow topic:
WARSAW (NYTIMES) - They were among the final few words of a carefully crafted speech. But they strayed far from the delicate balance that US President Joe Biden had tried to strike during three days of wartime diplomacy in Europe.
"For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power," Mr Biden said on Saturday (March 26), his cadence slowing for emphasis.
On its face, he appeared to be calling for President Vladimir Putin of Russia to be ousted for his brutal invasion of Ukraine.
But Mr Biden's aides quickly insisted that the remark - delivered in front of a castle that served for centuries as a home for Polish monarchs - was not intended as an appeal for regime change.
Whatever his intent, the moment underscored the dual challenges Mr Biden faced during three extraordinary summit meetings in Belgium and an up-close look at the war's consequences from Poland: Keeping US allies united against Putin, while at the same time avoiding an escalation with Russia, which the president has said could lead to World War III.
To achieve his first goal, Mr Biden spent much of the trip drawing the world's attention to Mr Putin's atrocities since he started the war Feb 24.
He urged continued action to cripple the Russian economy. He reaffirmed America's promise to defend its North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) allies against any threat.
And he called Mr Putin "a butcher", responsible for devastating damage to Ukraine's cities and its people.
Mr Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said Mr Putin's fate was not in the hands of the American president.
"It's not for Biden to decide," Mr Peskov told reporters after Mr Biden finished speaking. "The president of Russia is elected by the Russians."
Even as he made it his mission to rally his counterparts, Mr Biden and his aides were determined to avoid taking actions that Mr Putin could use as pretexts to start a wider, even more dangerous conflict.
"There is simply no justification or provocation for Russia's choice of war," Mr Biden said earlier in his speech on Saturday night. "It's an example one of the oldest human impulses - using brute force and disinformation to satisfy a craving for absolute power and control."
In closed-door discussions at Nato and with the leaders of more than 30 nations, Mr Biden repeatedly vowed not to send US troops into combat against Russia.
And, despite desperate pleas for additional help from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Mr Biden remained opposed to using Nato or US fighter jets to secure the country's airspace from Russian attacks.
Mr Biden's trip, which began on Wednesday, came at a pivotal moment for his presidency and the world, amid the largest war in Europe since 1945 and a mushrooming humanitarian crisis.
Both are testing the resolve and cooperation within the Nato alliance after four years in which former president Donald Trump cast doubt on its relevance and pushed a policy of America First isolationism.
For most of his foray abroad, Mr Biden succeeded in staying on message, according to veteran foreign policy watchers - a reality that made his last-minute comment about Mr Putin's future even more striking.
"That message of unity is exactly what Putin needs to hear to convince him to scale back his war aims and end the brutality," said Dr Charles Kupchan, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"It's what Ukrainians need to hear to encourage them to keep up the fight. And it's what Europeans need to hear to steady their nerves and reassure them that the United States is fully committed to their defence."
And yet, the President ended his trip Saturday and returned home with few concrete answers about how or when the war will end - and grim uncertainty about the brutal and grinding violence still to come.
A top Russian commander on Friday appeared to signal that Moscow was narrowing its war aims, saying that capturing Kyiv, Ukraine's capital, and other major cities was not a priority.
Colonel General Sergei Rudskoi, chief of the Main Operational Directorate of the Russian military's General Staff, said in a public statement that the military would instead concentrate "on the main thing: The complete liberation of the Donbas", the south-eastern region that is home to a Kremlin-backed separatist insurgency.
Administration officials say a Russian withdrawal to Donbas would amount to a remarkable failure for Mr Putin, who has drawn international scorn for his invasion and has plunged the Russian economy into disarray under the weight of global sanctions.
If Mr Putin decides to limit the scope of the fight, it would pose new diplomatic challenges for Mr Biden, who has used the horror of all-out war to rally the world against Russia's aggression. That could prove more difficult if Mr Putin decided to move some of his forces back - whether as a real retreat or a strategic feint.
For the moment, however, large portions of Ukraine remain under siege while the country's forces have mounted a fierce resistance.
Mr Jeremy Bash, who served as a top adviser at both the Pentagon and the CIA under former President Barack Obama, called Mr Putin's war a "a geopolitical earthquake" and a "once-in-a-generation contest" that has forced Mr Biden to adapt quickly to a rapidly changing security and diplomatic world.
"President Biden is now a wartime commander-in-chief waging four wars at once," Mr Bash said Saturday.
"An economic war, an information war, likely a cyber war, and an unprecedented indirect military war against Putin. And so far, Putin has been unable to achieve a single one of his objectives."
Several of the administration's most ardent supporters in the foreign policy world quickly chided the president for seeming to seek Mr Putin's removal.
Dr Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, called it a "bad lapse in discipline that runs risk of extending the scope and duration of the war".
While US officials still insist their goal is not regime change in Moscow, even the president's top national security advisers have made clear they want Mr Putin to emerge strategically weakened.
"At the end of the day, the Russian people are going to ask the more fundamental question of why this happened and how this happened," Mr Jake Sullivan, the president's national security adviser, told reporters on Air Force One on Friday, before the president's speech.
"And we believe that, at the end of the day, they will be able to connect the dots."
Mr Sullivan added: "These are costs that President Putin has brought on himself and his country and his economy and his defence industrial base because of his completely unjustified and unprovoked decision to go to war in Ukraine."

