Monday, March 28, 2022

Honest Joe Biden

A newsletter from POLITICO that unpacks essential global news, trends, and decisions.
Mar 28, 2022 View in browser
 
POLITICO Global Insider

By Ryan Heath

Send tips and thoughts to: rheath@politico.com

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Happening Today

SHANGHAI IS IN COVID LOCKDOWN: China's financial capital and by some accounts world's most populous city is now home to 27 million people locked down , either in their homes, or within the city limits.

Fourth vaccine shot works: A fourth BioNTech Pfizer vaccine shot cut the Covid death rate by 78 percent in an Israeli study of more than half a million people aged 60 to 100.

CHECK OUT THE LATEST LIST OF WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM DELEGATES. This is the list that WEF hates you to have , and which it kept under especially close wraps in recent weeks as the usual Davos crowd hemmed and hawed about signing up.

Many companies are yet to register the maximum five delegates. Overall, the participant list has shrunk from 41 pages to 39 since November, which appears to be mostly because there are no Russian participants anymore and government leaders don't appear on the new list.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president's ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 

BATTLEFRONTS

Follow POLITICO's Ukraine live blog here.

The memorial for the residents of Lukyanivka killed during the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945 is damaged by fighting.

The memorial for the residents of Lukyanivka killed during WWII is damaged by fighting in Ukraine on Sunday. | AP Photo

PAY ATTENTION: Putin protegé and former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev detailed the situations when Russia would use a nuclear weapon. It sounds terrifying, but former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul reads that in a relatively positive light.

Interview — Volodymyr Zelenskyy on why Ukraine must defeat Putin. In a sit-down with The Economist, he split NATO members into four groups, including the U.S. and U.K. as the major powers most supportive of Ukraine, while saying that Germany and France are "afraid of Russia. And that's it." (Read Matthew Karnitschnig on 'Putin's useful German idiots'.)

Compare Zelenskyy's groupings with POLITICO's: Global Insider mapped 35 countries on their sanctions, words, weapons and willingness to end their economic dependencies on Russia

WHAT TO MAKE OF BIDEN WANTING PUTIN GONE? Putin murderously pursues regime change in Kyiv. He even pursued regime change in the U.S. 2016 election — confirmed by U.S. government inquiries by the FBI and Senate. But a Western leader can't say it's time for him to go? Of course President Joe Biden thinks that. Those nine words — "For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power" — are what every democracy supporter has been shouting for a month now.

But is there real danger, as some posited over the weekend, that this unscripted utterance will provoke the Kremlin?

Sure, Putin might use those words to claim the U.S. wants to threaten Russia's very existence and therefore justify the use of chemical or nuclear weapons. But he invents reasons to harm people all the time, and he alone is the reason there is war in Europe. Trying to please a tyrant is not Biden's job.

POLITICO chief Brussels correspondent David Herszenhorn puts it this way: "Of course Biden wasn't announcing a plan to carry out forcible regime change. He won't do a no-fly zone. Won't put US soldiers in Ukraine to fight. That gaffe (flash of honesty?) may be the bravest thing he has said or done since war started."

His biggest criticism of the comments: the White House "won't even stand by it."

The key strategic check: The job of Western leaders is to do the opposite of what Putin wants, and in this case Putin wants the West to spend its time fighting among itself rather than directing its arms and capital at him.

DOING THE SPLITS … 

Macron and Putin: French President Emmanuel Macron criticized Biden for calling Putin "a butcher," telling local television: "I would not use that kind of language. If a ceasefire is to be brokered, we must not escalate — neither through words nor actions." Really?

Increasing lethal aid (escalation, by another name) is how Ukraine will keep Putin from sacking Kyiv and push him into a diplomatic agreement. It's also compatible with the NATO goal of not directly engaging Putin, which is why it has been NATO's main tactic in the first month of the war.

Putin and Russian diaspora diverge: Thousands of people, mostly Russian, protested in Prague against Putin's invasion . Their symbol: Russian flags minus the blood-red stripe, which has emerged as a symbol against the war. h/t Alfons López Tena

Poland and Hungary diverge: Warsaw isn't wasting the Ukraine crisis. The Polish government is using its generosity to Ukrainian refugees to urge Brussels to unlock funding that had been blocked due to repeated rule of law violations by Warsaw, and to woo back its Western critics, including by emphasizing how much more cooperative it is compared to Hungary on Russia relations.

NEGOTIATIONS 

IS UKRAINE THE NEW KOREA? OR FINLAND? Maybe it's both, or maybe it's neither. Remember: Russia may be an invading force, but it's also been losing ground for a week.

Russian military officials have briefed that they are now focused on splitting Ukraine into two: achieving a "complete liberation" of the eastern Donbas region. Zelenskyy says a deal may include handing over some or all of Donbas to Russia. He's already ready to discuss neutrality (ditching NATO aspirations), while keeping his eyes on the EU membership prize, which was also a prime driver of Putin's response to Ukraine's 2014 Maidan revolution.

FRONT LINES

REALITY CHECK: What's happening to Ukraine isn't unusual for Russia's enemies, it's Moscow's standard playbook. Russia pounded Grozny into oblivion in the 1990s, just as it helped Bashar Assad to do in Aleppo this century.

OUTNUMBERED: Why are so many Russian troops being killed in Ukraine?

SPYING — RISE IN RUSSIAN SPYING ACTIVITY ALARMS EUROPEAN CAPITALS: "Austria is a 'veritable aircraft carrier' of covert Russian activity," one official told Financial Times.

SANCTIONS — U.S. BUMPS UP REWARDS TO $10 MILLION: Rewards for Justice keep rising. If you have information on Russian government cyber actor Evgeny Viktorovich Gladkikh, you're in line for $10 million.

GLOBAL RISKS AND TRENDS

WAR HAMPERS ARCTIC RESEARCH: Scientific groups and researchers studying climate change in the Arctic are pausing collaborations with Russian counterparts over the war on Ukraine.

MIDDLE EAST — YEMEN NOW IN EIGHTH YEAR OF WAR: 'We are lost'. 

AFRICA — TRUCE AGREED IN ETHIOPIA: The ceasefire comes as upwards of 30 million people face hunger, and should allow for humanitarian assistance. Aid organizations have been unable to deliver assistance in 2022 because of the dangerous conditions.

PAKISTAN — PM KHAN FACES NO CONFIDENCE VOTE: Imran Khan faces defectors in his own party, not to mention opposition parties. Khan's defense is again full of anti-Western rhetoric. The country's largest journalist association is warning about coup risks.

AFGHANISTAN — TALIBAN REVERSAL ON GIRLS' EDUCATION DERAILS U.S. PLAN FOR DIPLOMATIC RECOGNITION: Are you surprised?

AMERICAS 

UNITED STATES — BIDEN TO PROPOSE 20 PERCENT MINIMUM TAX ON RICHEST: The new tax plan would affect households that are worth more than $100 million, also known as the 0.01 percent.

LATIN AMERICA — EL SALVADOR'S DEADLY TURN: 76 murders in two days , that's the result of a pact between the Bukele government and gangs falling apart. The other result is a state of emergency supported by a two-thirds majority in Parliament.

LATIN AMERICA — DICTATORS WITHOUT LAWYERS: After 40 years working as Daniel Ortega's international legal counsel, lawyer Paul Reichler ditched him in a blistering letter. The real question is what took him so long. h/t Tin Royer

EUROPE — HOW BRITAIN'S CHANCELLOR LOST HIS SHINE: A national budget is usually a showcase of a nation's treasurer. In Britain in 2022, it's been a reminder of how Chancellor Rishi Sunak is friendless in the Cabinet.

EUROPE — LABOUR MAINTAINS POWER IN MALTA: Prime Minister Robert Abela's Labour party won 38 seats out of 65 in a Saturday national election. More from POLITICO.

AFRICA — WHERE WOMEN ARE MOST LIKELY TO BE YOUR BOSS: African countries dominate this global list

U.N. — AGREEMENT TO ESTABLISH WHO CENTER FOR TRADITIONAL MEDICINE: 170 governments asked for the center, which will be based in India, to help create a "body of reliable evidence and data on traditional medicine practices and products."

GLOBETROTTERS

FINLAND STATION TO NOWHERE: Finland's national railway company has now suspended services between Helsinki and St. Petersburg, Russia, closing the last major public transport route for Russians trying to reach the European Union.

MAPPING SPACE JUNK: Apple Co-founder Steve Wozniak has a new space venture, called Privateer, which will attempt to map up to 100 million pieces of space debris , a.k.a. space junk, most of which are smaller than a softball. "It's very difficult to spot the dangerous small particles less than 10cm cubed … and they're traveling at 1,000 times the speed of a bullet. So, they're very dangerous," Wozniak told a Saudi conference on Sunday. He's also calling for international standards on space-junk data sharing to help speed the process.

The business model: creating the "data infrastructure that will enable sustainable growth for the new space economy."

KLEPTOWATCH

Russian oligarchs are welcome in Turkey, foreign minister says.

Czechs freeze Russian tycoon assets.

Mystery yacht docked in Italy is owned by Vladimir Putin, activists claim.

What is life like on a Russian superyacht? And why aren't oligarch private jets being seized?

Russia seizes $700,000 Audemars Piguet watches, in apparent retaliation for Swiss sanctions.

London's Kensington turns on its oligarch landlords: A new activist group, Kensington Against Dirty Money, launched with a washing machine full of cash outside houses owned by Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev. The group is now on a meeting tour of British MPs asking for "a much tougher second economic crimes bill," a spokesperson told Global Insider.

Yale's deep Kremlin ties: At least seven children of sanctioned Russian billionaires have attended Yale since 2005. Clara Molot details all the related Russian connections and the curious disappearance of some Yale board members' lists in recent weeks; a series of moves with echoes of the World Economic Forum suspending its Russia ties.

'I don't feel safe being Russian in London.'

BRAIN FOOD

LONG READ: Royal Roadkill, by Nick Bryant 

Thanks to editor Ben Pauker, producer Hannah Farrow, Joseph Gedeon and all the POLITICO reporters working across eight countries who are reporting on the Russian war in Ukraine. 

 

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