White House says it's no longer calling potential Russian invasion of Ukraine 'imminent'
The White House says it will no longer describe a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine as "imminent," suggesting the word sent an unintended message when officials used it last week.
"I
used that once. I think others have used that once. And then we stopped
using it because I think it sent a message that we weren't intending to
send, which was that we knew (Russian) President (Vladimir) Putin had
made a decision," press secretary Jen Psaki said during a briefing
Wednesday.
"I
would say the vast majority of times I've talked about it, we said he
could invade at any time," she went on. "That's true. We still don't
know that he's made a decision."
The
decision to discontinue the use of "imminent" came after a rift emerged
between US and Ukrainian officials over how best to describe the threat
from Russia.
While Biden and his senior officials have warned Putin could order
troops over the border at any moment, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky has downplayed the prospects of imminent war.
The discrepancy caused some frustrations to break into the open. Last week, Psaki's description of an attack as "imminent" drew anger in Kyiv. Ukrainian officials, including Zelensky, disagreed, and said the descriptions could cause panic and economic turmoil.
"There is a feeling abroad that there is war here. That's not the case," Zelensky said during a news conference last Friday.
Biden himself has predicted Putin
will ultimately decide to launch an invasion, though has acknowledged
the uncertainty surrounding the situation and said even Putin's top
aides are likely in the dark about the Russian President's intentions.
Ukrainian
officials said privately it would be more productive for the United
States to apply sanctions before a Russian attack than to warn of
impending war.
"Kyiv
would find more value in taking active deterrent measures such as
immediate sanctions against Nord Stream than the persistent verbal
warnings predicting imminent war for the last couple months that provide
no deterrent, and are actually unintentionally negatively impacting the
Ukrainian economy," an adviser to Zelensky said, referring to the
Russia-Germany gas pipeline Nord Stream 2.
On Wednesday, Psaki said she'd only used the word "imminent" once, but wouldn't going forward.
Other
American officials have also avoided the term in recent days. Linda
Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the United Nations, said in an
interview Tuesday that a Russian invasion of Ukraine isn't "imminent" because the US is still seeking to provide Russia with a diplomatic off-ramp.
"No,
I would not say that we are arguing that it's imminent because we're
still pursuing a diplomatic solution to give the Russians an off-ramp.
Our hope is that this will work and that Putin will understand that war
and confrontation is not the path that he wants to follow, but he wants
to take a path at diplomacy," she told NPR.
Still,
the shift in language did not suggest new optimism that Russia was
preparing to pull back the 100,000 troops it has amassed at Ukraine's
border. While Putin said during his own news conference Tuesday he was
open to continuing talks, there was little in his remarks to indicate a
plan to stand down.
Biden,
in turn, has deployed 3,000 US troops to Eastern Europe in a bid to
reassure NATO allies of the continued American commitment to their
security.
It
wasn't clear when or where US and Russian officials would resume
negotiations over each sides' security concerns, even as both Washington
and Moscow indicate a preference for a diplomatic solution.
Officials
said Biden's decision to deploy troops to Europe, made following a
lengthy briefing from top Pentagon officials on Tuesday, was not sparked
by a particular event over the past days.
Instead,
they said it was the result of continued consultations with European
allies about security needs in the region. And they made explicit the
troops would not be sent into Ukraine itself to defend the country from
Russian aggression.
Yet
even sending troops to countries not under current threat from Russia
will draw the ire of Putin, who has made known his concerns about NATO
and US forces being deployed in former Soviet states.
On
Wednesday, after the Pentagon announced the new deployments to Poland,
Romania and Germany, the White House downplayed the suggestion the move
could be viewed as escalating tensions.
"What's important to be very clear about here is there's one aggressor here. That aggressor is Russia," Psaki said.
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