Remarks by U.S. President Biden -- February 24,
2022
Sorry to keep you waiting. Good afternoon. The Russian military has
begun a brutal assault on the people of Ukraine without provocation,
without justification, without necessity.
This is a premeditated attack. Vladimir Putin has been planning this
for months, as I've been -- as we've been saying all along. He moved
more than 175,000 troops, military equipment into positions along the
Ukrainian border.
He moved blood supplies into position and built a field hospital,
which tells you all you need to know about his intentions all along.
He rejected every good-faith effort the United States and our Allies
and partners made to address our mutual security concerns through
dialogue to avoid needless conflict and avert human suffering.
For weeks -- for weeks, we have been warning that this would happen. And now it's unfolding largely as we predicted.
In the past week, we've seen shelling increase in the Donbas, the
region in eastern Ukraine controlled by Russian-backed separatists.
Rus- -- the Russian government has perpetrated cyberattacks against Ukraine.
We saw a staged political theater in Moscow -- outlandish and
baseless claims that Ukraine was -- Ukraine was about to invade and
launch a war against Russia, that Ukraine was prepared to use chemical
weapons, that Ukraine committed a genocide -- without any evidence.
We saw a flagrant violation of international law in attempting to
unilaterally create two new so-called republics on sovereign Ukrainian
territory.
And at the very moment that the United Nations Security Council was
meeting to stand up for Ukraine's sovereignty to stave off invasion,
Putin declared his war.
Within moments -- moments, missile strikes began to fall on historic cities across Ukraine.
Then came in the air raids, followed by tanks and troops rolling in.
We've been transparent with the world. We've shared declassified
evidence about Russia's plans and cyberattacks and false pretexts so
that there can be no confusion or cover-up about what Putin was doing.
Putin is the aggressor. Putin chose this war. And now he and his country will bear the consequences.
Today, I'm authorizing additional strong sanctions and new limitations on what can be exported to Russia.
This is going to impose severe costs on the Russian economy, both immediately and over time.
We have purposefully designed these sanctions to maximize the
long-term impact on Russia and to minimize the impact on the United
States and our Allies.
And I want to be clear: The United States is not doing this alone.
For months, we've been building a coalition of partners representing
well more than half of the global economy.
Twenty-seven members of the European Union, including France,
Germany, Italy – as well as the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan,
Australia, New Zealand, and many others – to amplify the joint impact
of our response.
I just spoke with the G7 leaders this morning, and we are in full
and total agreement. We will limit Russia's ability to do business in
Dollars, Euros, Pounds, and Yen to be part of the global economy. We
will limit their ability to do that. We are going to stunt the ability
to finance and
grow Rus- -- the Russian military.
We're going to impose major — and we're going to impair their ability to compete in a high-tech 21st century economy.
We've already seen the impact of our actions on Russia's currency,
the Ruble, which early today hit its weakest level ever -- ever in
history. And the Russian stock market plunged today. The Russian
government's borrowing rate spiked by over 15 percent.
In today's actions, we have now sanctioned Russian banks that together hold around $1 trillion in assets.
We've cut off Russia's largest bank -- a bank that holds more than
one third of Russia's banking assets by itself -- cut it off from the
U.S. financial system.
And today, we're also blocking four more major banks. That means
every asset they have in America will be frozen. This includes V.T.B.,
the second-largest bank in Russia, which has $250 billion in assets.
As promised, we're also adding names to the list of Russian elites
and their family members that are sanctioning -- that we're sanctioning
as well.
As I said on Tuesday, these are people who personally gain from the
Kremlin's policies and they should share in the pain. We will keep up
this drumbeat of those designations against corrupt billionaires in the
days ahead.
On Tuesday, we stopped the Russian government from raising money from U.S. or European investors.
Now, we're going to apply the same restrictions to Russia's largest
state-owned enterprises – companies with assets that exceed $1.4
trillion.
Some of the most powerful impacts of our actions will come over time
as we squeeze Russia's access to finance and technology for strategic
sectors of its economy and degrade its industrial capacity for years to
come.
Between our actions and those of our Allies and partners, we
estimate that we'll cut off more than half of Russia's high-tech
imports.
It will strike a blow to their ability to continue to modernize
their military. It'll degrade their aerospace industry, including their
space program. It will hurt their ability to build ships, reducing
their ability to compete economically. And it will be a major hit to
Putin's long-term
strategic ambitions.
And we're preparing to do more. In addition to the economic
penalties we're imposing, we're also taking steps to defend our NATO
Allies, particularly in the east.
Tomorrow, NATO will convene a summit -- we'll be there -- to bring
together the leaders of 30 Allied nations and close partners to affirm
our solidarity and to map out the next steps we will take to further
strengthen all aspects of our NATO Alliance.
Although we provided over $650 million in defensive assistance to
Ukraine just this year – this last year, let me say it again: Our
forces are not and will not be engaged in the conflict with Russia in
Ukraine. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine but to
defend our NATO Allies
and reassure those Allies in the east.
As I made crystal clear, the United States will defend every inch of
NATO territory with the full force of American power. And the good news
is: NATO is more united and more determined than ever.
There is no doubt -- no doubt that the United States and every NATO
Ally will meet our Article 5 commitments, which says that an attack on
one is an attack on all.
Over the past few weeks, I ordered thousands of additional forces to Germany and Poland as part of our commitment to NATO.
On Tuesday, in response to Russia's aggressive action, including its
troop presence in Belarus and the Black Sea, I've authorized the
deployment of ground and air forces already stationed in Europe to
NATO's eastern flank Allies: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and
Romania.
Our Allies have also been stepping up, adding -- the other Allies,
the rest of NATO -- adding their own forces and capabilities to ensure
our collective defense.
And today, within hours of Russia's unleashing its assault, NATO
came together and authorized and activated -- an activation of response
plans.
This will enable NATO's high-readiness forces to deploy and -- when
and where they're needed to protect our NATO Allies on the eastern
boundaries of Europe.
And now I'm authorizing additional U.S. forces and capabilities to
deploy to Germany as part of NATO's response, including some of
U.S.-based forces that the Department of Defense placed on standby
weeks ago.
I've also spoken with Defense Secretary Austin and Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs, General Milley, about preparations for additional moves
should they become necessary to protect our NATO Allies and support the
greatest military Alliance in the history of the world -- NATO.
As we respond, my administration is using the tools -- every tool at
our disposal to protect American families and businesses from rising
prices at the gas pump.
You know, we're taking active steps to bring down the costs. And
American oil and gas companies should not -- should not exploit this
moment to hike their prices to raise profits.
You know, in our sanctions package, we specifically designed to allow energy payments to continue.
We are closely monitoring energy supplies for any disruption. We
have been coordinating with major oil producing and consuming countries
toward our common interest to secure global energy supplies.
We are actively working with countries around the world to elevate
[evaluate] a collective release from the Strategic Petroleum Reserves
of major energy-consuming countries. And the United States will release
additional barrels of oil as conditions warrant.
I know this is hard and that Americans are already hurting. I will
do everything in my power to limit the pain the American people are
feeling at the gas pump. This is critical to me.
But this aggression cannot go unanswered. If it did, the
consequences for America would be much worse. America stands up to
bullies. We stand up for freedom. This is who we are.
Let me also repeat the warning I made last week: If Russia pursues
cyberattacks against our companies, our critical infrastructure, we are
prepared to respond.
For months, we have been working closely with our private – with the
private sector to harden their cyber defenses, sharpen our ability to
respond to Russian cyberattacks as well.
I spoke late last night to President Zelenskyy of Ukraine and I
assured him that the United States, together with our Allies and
partners in Europe, will support the Ukrainian people as they defend
their country. We'll provide humanitarian relief to ease their
suffering.
And in the early days of this conflict, Russian propaganda outlets
will keep trying to hide the truth and claim success for its military
operation against a made-up threat.
But history has shown time and again how swift gains in territory
eventually give way to grinding occupations, acts of mass civil -- mass
civil disobedience, and strategic dead-ends.
The next few weeks and months will be hard on the people of Ukraine.
Putin has unleashed a great pain on them. But the Ukrainian people have
known 30 years of independence, and they have repeatedly shown that
they will not tolerate anyone who tries to take their country backwards.
This is a dangerous moment for all of Europe, for the freedom around
the world. Putin has a -- has committed an assault on the very
principles that uphold global peace.
But now the entire world sees clearly what Putin and his Kremlin --
and his Kremlin allies are really all about. This was never about
genuine security concerns on their part. It was always about naked
aggression, about Putin's desire for empire by any means necessary --
by bullying Russia's
neighbors through coercion and corruption, by changing borders by
force, and, ultimately, by choosing a war without a cause.
Putin's actions betray his sinister vision for the future of our world -- one where nations take what they want by force.
But it is a vision that the United States and freedom-loving nations
everywhere will oppose with every tool of our considerable power.
The United States and our Allies and partners will emerge from this stronger, more united, more determined, and more purposeful.
And Putin's aggression against Ukraine will end up costing Russia
dearly -- economically and strategically. We will make sure of that.
Putin will be a pariah on the international stage. Any nation that
countenances Russia's naked aggression against Ukraine will be stained
by association.
When the history of this era is written, Putin's choice to make a
totally unjustifiable war on Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and
the rest of the world stronger.
Liberty, democracy, human dignity -- these are the forces far more
powerful than fear and oppression. They cannot be extinguished by
tyrants like Putin and his armies. They cannot be erased by people --
from people's hearts and hopes by any amount of violence and
intimidation. They endure.
And in the contest between democracy and autocracy, between sovereignty and subjugation, make no mistake: Freedom will prevail.
God bless the people of a free and democratic Ukraine. And may God protect our troops.
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
|