Where is Putin? Leader leaves bad news on Ukraine to others 

Putin

President Vladimir Putin was absent from the room when Russia’s top military officials decided to withdraw troops from Kherson, a strategic city in southern Ukraine.

On November 9, Putin was touring a neurological hospital in Moscow and watching a surgeon perform brain surgery as Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Gen. Sergei Surovikin, Russia’s top commander in Ukraine, stiffly recited the justifications for the retreat in front of the cameras.

Putin spoke at another event later that day, but he avoided bringing up the withdrawal from Kherson, which was arguably Russia’s most humiliating action in Ukraine. He hasn’t made any public comments about it in the days since.

Putin’s silence comes as Russia experiences increasing setbacks in its war that has lasted almost nine months. The Russian president appears to have used a strategy he employed during the coronavirus pandemic in which he assigned others to deliver bad news.

Kherson was the only regional capital in Ukraine that Russian forces had taken control of in the early stages of the invasion. A crucial entryway to the Crimean Peninsula, the city and the majority of the surrounding area was under Russian occupation for months.

Biden says Putin has failed to splinter NATO

According to President Joe Biden, autocrats who “pay a price for their aggression” wreak more havoc. In the excerpts from his speech that were made public on Tuesday, Mr. Biden asserts that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine was planned and unprovoked.

In his address to Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday night, he will also emphasize the significance of European allies. According to Mr. Biden, the alliance formed after World War II to ensure “peace and stability” in Europe is still important today. Mr. Putin was mistaken, he claimed, in thinking he could split the NATO alliance.

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