The US has succeeded in mobilizing the world to support Ukraine and prevent a war between two nuclear powers, says Joe Biden, President of the United States.
In a speech to the US State Department, Biden argued that the enemies of the United States had been weakened during his administration. In this context he mentioned Russia and its aggression against Ukraine.
When Putin invaded Ukraine, he thought he would conquer Kiev within days. After the war started, it was I who visited the center of Kiev, and not him. Putin didn’t do it, the American president joked.
He remembered reaching Kiev by train. He will emphasize that he is the only US president to have visited a war zone not controlled by US troops.
According to Biden, the United States helped Ukraine and stopped Putin, and in nearly three years of a full-scale invasion, he “failed to achieve any strategic objective.” – He failed to conquer Ukraine. He failed to break the unity of NATO. He failed to occupy key areas, he argued.
Biden: I will set two goals for myself. In both cases we were successful
He then listed the two goals he had set for himself at the beginning of the war’s outbreak: to mobilize the world to support Ukraine and to prevent a war between two nuclear powers.
– In both cases we were successful. And today, Ukraine remains a free and independent country with the potential for a bright future. We have laid the foundation for the next administration to protect the future of the Ukrainian people, Biden argued.
Earlier, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said the department’s leadership was committed to ensuring that the future administration of Donald Trump has the strongest possible foreign policy position.
The inauguration of the new president will take place next week, on January 20. Trump, who claimed before the election that he would end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours, extended that deadline to six months last week.
Source: Do Rzeczy

Roy Brown is a renowned economist and author at The Nation View. He has a deep understanding of the global economy and its intricacies. He writes about a wide range of economic topics, including monetary policy, fiscal policy, international trade, and labor markets.