Biden visits Kyiv to show solidarity, says 'One year later, Ukraine still stands'
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Biden visits Kyiv to show solidarity, says 'One year later, Ukraine still stands'
Biden
met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and announced a half a billion
dollars of additional assistance to Ukraine — and said there would be new
sanctions on Russia — with details to be released in the coming days.
"One
year later, Kyiv stands. And Ukraine stands. Democracy stands," Biden
said.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan, who traveled with Biden
to Kyiv, said that the White House notified the Russians of the trip "some
hours" ahead of his departure for "deconfliction purposes." On a
call with reporters, Sullivan would not go into details about how the Russians
responded or the nature of the U.S. message.
Biden's
visit comes as Russian forces make a new push to take control of Ukraine's
eastern Donbas region, which Russia illegally annexed last September.
Biden
returned to Poland Monday evening. He is scheduled to meet with Polish
President Andrzej Duda and give remarks in Warsaw on Tuesday.
How Biden's trip came
together
Biden
had been slated to travel to Warsaw this week to mark the anniversary of the
war and to hold a series of meetings with central European allies. Instead, he
secretly left Washington early on Sunday morning.
Only
three White House officials, as well one reporter and one photographer,
travelled with Biden. A small group of reporters already inside Ukraine — including
NPR's Joanna Kakissis — joined Biden after his arrival at 8 a.m. local time.
Details
of how he got to Ukraine were not immediately available due to security
concerns, but once the president arrived back in Poland, the print reporter,
who was present for Biden's journey from Washington, was able to share more
about how the trip came together.
Biden
left Washington in the middle of the night Sunday from Andrews Air Force Base.
Air Force One sat in darkness with the shades drawn and away from the tarmac,
where it is typically parked for presidential travel. The plane left at 4:15
a.m. ET on Sunday, and made one stop at Ramstein Air Base in Germany to refuel,
before arriving at Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport in Poland at 7:57 p.m. local time
on Sunday.
After deplaning, the group drove for roughly one hour in the
president's motorcade, which did not use sirens as it typically does, and
arrived at Przemyśl Główny train station in western Poland at approximately
9:15 p.m.
"It
was relatively quiet at this time of night with a handful of people milling
about outside the station and the stalls seemingly all closed," according
to the print reporter traveling with Biden.
Biden
boarded the train, which began moving toward Kyiv at 9:37 p.m. local time. Most
of the train was occupied by a heavy security presence, and there was no
interaction between the journalists present, the White House officials or the
president during the 10 hour journey to Kyiv.
By roughly 8:00 a.m. local time, Biden arrived at the train
station in Kyiv and was greeted by the U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Bridget
Brink.
Biden's
first words upon arriving in the city were, "It's good to be back in
Kyiv."
Sullivan
told reporters that Biden's trip to Kyiv was "historic" and
"unprecedented" for a sitting president given that the U.S. does not
have a military presence on the ground there and only a limited embassy
presence. While the trip was risky, Sullivan said Biden was confident that his
security team was able to bring the risk to a "manageable level."
The
plan for Biden's visit has been in the works for months between the White House
and a limited number of people from the Pentagon, the Secret Service and the
intelligence community.
Air sirens were going
off during Biden's visit
Kyiv has been the target of Russian missile and drone strikes, including as recently as Feb. 10.
Biden met with Zelenskyy at Mariinsky Palace. Then, the two
leaders walked together outside St. Michael's cathedral in central Kyiv. Air
raid sirens were heard across the city as they left the church.
Zelenskyy
called it "a huge moment for Ukraine" and "a historical moment
for our country."
"I
thought it was critical that there not be any doubt, none whatsoever, about
U.S. support for Ukraine in the war," Biden said, emphasizing bipartisan
support in Congress for Ukraine.
Sullivan
said Biden was excited about that trip and that during the flight was focused
on making the most of his limited time on the ground.
Sullivan
said the trip was "filled with real anticipation that this was an
important moment, and that the president was rising to the moment and felt he
had an important mission to undertake and he wanted to do it."
Biden has marshalled international support for Ukraine, sending
billions of dollars of weapons and economic aid to Kyiv and uniting allies and
partners around economic sanctions meant to punish Moscow for the invasion. The
U.S. Congress appropriated more than $112 billion in defense, economic and
humanitarian aid last year.
But with no end to the war in sight, polls show a growing number of Americans are concerned about how much money has gone to the war — and some Republican budget hawks have said they would like to curtail the spending.
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