Russians are right.
Joe Biden is doing everything he can to prolong this war.
This
is not a new development. Biden has been among the conflict’s most
aggressive provocateurs since its onset and even before. Think about all
the times when legitimate de-escalation could have been achieved but
wasn’t because of this administration’s steadfastly anti-peace behavior.
Before the war started, Vladimir Putin repeatedly decried the prospect
of Ukraine joining NATO as cripplingly damaging to his country’s
national security. His point had merit.
Ukraine’s admittance to the
West’s anti-Russia alliance would result in the stationing of hostile
military forces, and possibly nuclear weapons, on Putin’s border. Any
leader in their right mind would view that as unacceptable. America did
when it happened in Cuba.
Knowing those facts, the United States should have scaled back,
rejected the idea of a Ukraine/NATO partnership, and worked in good
faith to reduce tension with the world’s most powerful nuclear country.
Biden did the opposite. In February 2022, he sent his overburdened vice
president to the Munich Security Conference where she threw the American
government’s wholehearted support behind Ukraine and spoke glowingly
about the idea of a NATO initiation.
Russia invaded less than six days
thereafter.
A few months later, after much blood had been shed, Russia made a surprising declaration: It was ready to end the war.
In exchange for Ukrainian neutrality, Putin’s government told Kyiv it
would withdraw its forces and cease the fighting. But that did not come
to pass. According to Ukraine’s former top negotiator,
Biden surrogate
Boris Johnson hijacked the promising armistice talks, arriving in the
war zone as negotiations were already under way to deliver a message on
the American president’s behalf: Don’t sign a deal. Just keep fighting. Peace talks halted within the week.
Then this Sunday, just days after Donald Trump’s re-election introduced a
real chance for peace, Biden played his most damaging card yet.
By
allowing Ukraine to launch U.S.-provided missiles inside
Russia, the president increased this war’s potential damage from
regional to planetary, risking nuclear proliferation in the name of more
taxpayer-funded violence that benefits none of the parties involved.
Except permanent Washington.