Biden calls Putin a ‘rational actor’ who ‘miscalculated’

Bloomberg

President Joe Biden said the US has gamed out responses if Russian President Vladimir Putin uses a nuclear weapon in Ukraine.
“The Pentagon didn’t have to be asked,” Biden said in an interview Tuesday with CNN, in response to a question about whether he’d directed the Defense Department to come up with contingencies.
The president declined to elaborate on the discussions, saying it would be irresponsible “to talk about what we would or wouldn’t do.”
At a political fundraiser last week, Biden expressed concern that Putin could escalate further, saying the world faced “the prospect of Armageddon” if Putin used nuclear weapons in the conflict. US officials later said there is no intelligence indicating Russia is preparing a nuclear attack.
Biden said Tuesday that his comments were directed toward Putin himself and that he ultimately doesn’t think the Russian leader would go through with deploying a nuclear weapon.
“I don’t think he will. But I think that it’s irresponsible for him to talk about it,” he said. “Once you use a nuclear weapon, the mistakes that can be made, the miscalculations, who knows what would happen?”
Biden also said last week that the US is trying to find an “off-ramp” for Putin to bring an end to the conflict. On Tuesday, he suggested Putin could just abandon his efforts in Ukraine.
“I don’t know what’s in his mind. But clearly, he could leave. He could just flat leave and still probably hold his position together in Russia,” Biden said.
Biden’s comments came after a deadly Russian missile barrage Monday against Kyiv and other cities that damaged key infrastructure and civilian sites. Biden and his allies are facing renewed pressure to supply Ukraine with sophisticated weaponry they have thus far been reluctant to provide, following Russia’s steps to escalate the war.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said after a call with Biden on Monday that air defenses were his number one priority, and the US president said he would be willing to provide “advanced” equipment to meet those needs.
The Group of Seven major industrialized nations held an emergency call with Zelenskiy on Tuesday to discuss their response to the Russian attacks. The allies pledged in a statement to support Ukraine “for as long as it takes.”
The president on Tuesday described Putin as a “rational actor” who has “miscalculated significantly” when he decided to invade.
But elsewhere in the interview, the president characterized the Russian leader’s decision to invade as irrational.
“He talked about the whole idea of — he was needed to be the leader of Russia that united all of Russian speakers. I mean, it’s just I just think it’s irrational,” Biden said in the interview.
He added that Putin “thought he was going to be welcomed with open arms, that this was the home of Mother Russia in Kyiv, and that where he was going to be welcomed, and I think he just totally miscalculated.”

Biden says he’d meet
Putin to discuss Griner,
but not Ukraine
US President Joe Biden said he’d meet with Vladimir Putin to discuss the release of detained basketball star Brittney Griner, but would not talk with the Russian leader about resolving the war in Ukraine without Kyiv’s involvement.
“Look, I have no intention of meeting with him,” Biden said Tuesday in an interview with CNN. “But for example, if he came to me at the G-20 and said I want to talk about the release of Griner, I’d meet with him.

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