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Biden and Putin to discuss Ukraine by phone

December 30, 2021

US President Joe Biden is expected to offer Russian leader Vladimir Putin a "diplomatic path" to defusing tensions over Ukraine. The West is alarmed at a buildup of Russian troops near Ukraine.

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US President Joe Biden und Russian leader Vladimir Putin face off from a meeting in June in Geneva
US officials have said Biden and Putin will talk Thursday with a meeting planned between senior officials scheduled for just after the new year in GenevaImage: Patrick Semansky/AP/picture alliance

US President Joe Biden is expected to speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin Thursday in a call requested by the Russian side.

It comes as the US and Ukrainian governments have raised concerns over a Russian military buildup on Ukraine's borders.

Ahead of the call, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin is "in the mood for a conversation, this is what we want."

Peskov added, "We believe that only through talks is it possible to solve all the immediate problems that we have in abundance between us."

What will Biden and Putin discuss?

Thursday's call will be the second this December. Earlier this month, Biden warned Putin of "severe consequences" were Russian forces to launch a further incursion into Ukrainian territory.

Biden is set to tell Putin that the US seeks a "diplomatic path" rather than conflict, according to one senior administration official, who said Washington remains "gravely concerned" about the Russian military buildup on Ukraine's borders.

The official added the US was "also prepared to respond if Russia advances with a further invasion of Ukraine."

Biden is also expected to emphasize that talks with Russia ought occur in "a context of deescalation rather than escalation."

The call is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. (8:30 p.m. UTC) in Washington.

Biden, who is at his home in Wilmington, Delaware this week, is expected to take the call from there.

What has the US said to its allies?

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy Wednesday.

After that call, Zelenskyy affirmed on Twitter, "I was assured of full US support for Ukraine in countering Russian aggression." 

US State Department spokesman Ned Price said Blinken also spoke Wednesday with the German, French and UK foreign ministers about "coordination to deter any further Russian aggression against Ukraine."

The US has maintained, notably on a call with leaders on NATO's eastern flank earlier this month, that the US is committed to "nothing about you without you" when it comes to security on the European continent.

Will the West stand by Ukraine against Putin?

What is the situation in Ukraine?

Currently Russian proxy forces remain active in Donbass, the industrial region in Ukraine's east, and have since 2014. That year, Russia occupied and annexed Crimea, an act recognized by very few countries as legal.

The war has already cost 13,000 lives. Now with around 100,000 Russian troops amassed on Ukraine's borders, according to US and Ukrainian officials, there is great anxiety preparations for a large-scale invasion are underway.

Russia maintains no invasion is planned and that it is free to move its own forces how it pleases within Russian territory.

Russia recently put in writing a wish list of sorts of security guarantees it seeks from the US. Many of those, such as no further eastward expansion of the NATO military alliance, are nonstarters because Washington in principle is disinclined to give Russia any veto power over sovereign nations steps towards membership.

When are US and Russian officials to meet next?

Senior US officials have set a date of January 10 to meet in Geneva. Those talks will be led by US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, Moscow said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has vowed his country will take a "hard line."

Those talks will not include Biden and Putin as occurred last June when the US sought greater predictability and stability in relations with Russia. The military build-up on Ukraine's borders since then has done much to quell Washington's hopes.

A similar Russian military build-up occurred last spring before Biden and Putin met in Geneva.

After meeting with US officials in January, Russian officials are scheduled to meet with the NATO-Russia Council in Brussels on January 12 as well as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Vienna on January 13.

The OSCE was a key forum at the end of the Cold War for bringing Russia to the table to discuss human rights under the framework of the "human dimension" conference.

ar/rt (AFP, AP)