Tag Archives: Meets

Biden meets Finnish leader as Russia rattles European neighbors

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks at Yellowjacket Union during his visit to the University of Wisconsin-Superior, in Superior, Wisconsin, U.S. March 2, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

WASHINGTON, March 4 (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden meets his Finnish counterpart Sauli Niinistö at the White House on Friday as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has roused fresh concern by Vladimir Putin’s other European neighbors.

The talks come as the Russian president’s more than week-long invasion of Ukraine has primed discussions in Finland over a closer alliance with NATO, with which it already cooperates but is not a member. Biden and Niinistö have spoken to each other twice in the past few months.

Finns have traditionally been wary of Russia, given the Nordic country’s shared 833-mile (1340-km) border and a history of two wars between 1939 and 1944 that cost Finland territory.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

But Finland, a European Union member which was part of the Swedish kingdom until 1809 and then was under Russia’s control until gaining independence in 1917, has also sought to preserve friendly relations with Moscow.

Russia does not want Finland to join NATO, but Niinistö has said the country retains the right to apply for membership. Ukraine’s government maintained its right to do so as well prior to Russia’s invasion.

Biden and Niinistö “will discuss the U.S.-Finnish defense relationship, which is very strong and in fact complements Finland’s close partnership with NATO,” White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters in previewing the visit.

The Finnish public is growing fonder of the idea of joining NATO. A poll by public broadcaster Yle last Monday said 53% of Finns support joining, compared to 28% when the Helsingin Sanomat newspaper asked the question in late January. read more

Finland’s government has sought to calm campaigns to join the U.S.-led defense bloc. Niinistö said in a statement that people should “keep a cool head and assess carefully the impact of the changes that have already taken place and of those that might still happen.”

Finland joined other countries on Thursday in boycotting Arctic Council meetings that Russia planned to host in May. read more

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Leslie Adler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

The moon meets up with Mercury and Saturn early Monday morning

You may be able to watch the moon cluster up with ringed Saturn and fleeting Mercury on Monday (Feb. 28), but it will be a considerable challenge.

The three worlds will be clustered extra-close to the southeastern horizon as the sun is rising. Saturn is at magnitude 0.7 and Mercury at a brighter -0.1. (For perspective, most people can see stars down to magnitude 6 in dark-sky conditions.)

According to the skywatching site In-The-Sky.org, neither of the lunar-planetary conjunctions will be visible from New York City (which admittedly, has a fair share of light pollution interference) given that the two worlds will be within five degrees of the horizon at dawn. For reference, your clenched fist held at an arm’s length is about 10 degrees wide. Closer to the equator and farther south, viewing conditions will be better, as Mercury and Saturn will be higher in the sky before the sun rises and the planets fade into daylight.

But you might get lucky with the right equipment or in a darker or different area. If you’re looking for binoculars or a telescope to see planets in the night sky, check our our guide for the best binoculars deals and the best telescope deals now. If you need equipment, consider our best cameras for astrophotography and best lenses for astrophotography to prepare for the next planet sight.

Related: The brightest planets in the night sky: How to see them (and when)

See Saturn, Mercury and the moon?

If you take a photograph of Saturn, Mercury and the moon let us know! You can send images and comments in to spacephotos@space.com.

You will still have opportunities to spot other planets, however. The moon, which will reach new phase on Wednesday (March 2), might be visible through the thick atmosphere close to our horizon. Farther up, you can spot bright Mars (in red) and Venus (above Mars, shining brightly in white). 

Venus and Mars are easily visible to the naked eye and were just in close alignment (or conjunction) with the moon on Sunday (Feb. 27). Worlds commonly come close to each other in Earth’s sky because the planets, moon and sun all share the same approximate pathway, called the ecliptic.

If you’re up for even more planet-gazing, NASA urges you to get out also in the evening to look for Jupiter in the twilight sky. It will be your last chance to easily see a planet in the early evening until August, the agency said in a statement; this period will be the first time since 2018 with no bright planets visible after sunset.

“The post-sunset sky will be essentially devoid of naked-eye planets until August, when Saturn will start rising in the east around sunset,” NASA wrote. “There’s a short period, though, in April and May when you might be able to spot Mercury as it pops briefly above the horizon.”

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook. 



Read original article here

SpaceX’s new Starship video animation is Tron meets Blade Runner in space

A stunning SpaceX animation released Thursday (Feb. 10) shows the Starship system on a future voyage to Mars.

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk released the five-minute video during the program’s first major update since 2019. He spoke of the fully stacked Starship ready for an orbital trip in (he expects) later 2022 and his hopes to reduce Mars launch costs through frequent liftoffs of Starship and its accompanying Super Heavy rocket.

Starship, Musk said in the livestreamed address, “is capable of getting getting a million tons to the surface of Mars, and creating a self sustaining city. I think we should try to do that as soon as we can.”

The new video shows what such a voyage could look like, with dramatic lighting and musical effects that feel very similar to the futuristic visions that the franchises “Blade Runner” and “Tron” have showed moviegoers over the decades.

Related: SpaceX’s Starship will reach orbit this year on road to Mars

Image 1 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 2 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 3 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 4 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 5 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 6 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 7 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 8 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 9 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 10 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)
Image 11 of 11

A still from a SpaceX video animation of the company’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster launching astronauts to Mars, a trip that includes orbital refilling and booster landings. (Image credit: SpaceX)

Accompanied by 1980s-sounding synthesizers, the video portrays a future Starship sitting on the launch pad during twilight. Panning up the ship, the camera shows steam coming off the system and fading into the surrounding area. 

As the sun rises, the spacecraft system lifts off and adds its smoke to the misty surroundings. We see Starship reach orbit, then flying over Earth while the sunlight glints off the ocean below. Then the spacecraft makes its way to Mars, with our planet getting smaller and smaller in the background and the Red Planet getting bigger and bigger.

The last few seconds of the video show a possible vision for a Mars base. Based on the imagery, it appears Musk would like to include a greenhouse, along with multiple Starship launch and landing pads and surface vehicles, to help potential settlers do science and exploration.

“The sales pitch for going to Mars is that it’s going to be cramped, dangerous, difficult, very hard work. You might die,” Musk said in his speech. “That’s the sales pitch. I hope you like it.”

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook. 



Read original article here

Macron Meets With Putin as France Tries to Flex Diplomatic Muscle Over Ukraine

President Biden said Monday that the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to deliver Russian natural gas to Germany won’t go forward if Russia invades Ukraine, stepping up pressure to isolate Moscow as French President Emmanuel Macron kicked off a round of shuttle diplomacy aimed at thawing tensions between the Kremlin and the West.

Speaking at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Mr. Biden said “there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2” should Moscow invade Ukraine. Mr. Putin has massed more than 100,000 troops along the border with Ukraine in what Western officials fear is a prelude to an invasion that would be Europe’s biggest land war since World War II. His demand: that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization scale back its military presence in Eastern Europe to 1997, before most of the eastern countries joined the alliance.

Read original article here

Biden Meets German Leader on Russia Sanctions and Pipeline

WASHINGTON — After meeting with the leader of Germany, President Biden said on Monday that a lucrative gas pipeline project connecting Russia and Germany would not go forward if Moscow invades Ukraine.

Mr. Biden vowed that Germany and the United States would take a “united” approach to rising tensions between Russia and Ukraine, despite concerns that Germany has not been a forceful enough partner in confronting Russia.

“If Russia makes a choice to further invade Ukraine we are jointly ready,” Mr. Biden said, standing beside Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the White House, “and all of NATO is ready.”

Their meeting, the first since Mr. Scholz took office in December, was designed to publicly shore up a key link in the Western alliance as it faces one of its gravest challenges since the Cold War, with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia massing more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine’s borders.

Among the main concerns ahead of the meeting, Mr. Biden’s advisers said, was Mr. Scholz’s reluctance to sign onto punishing economic sanctions in the event of an invasion, or to call off the gas pipeline project, Nord Stream 2.

On Monday, Mr. Biden, who has refrained publicly criticizing Mr. Scholz, said that the Germans supported a “strong package” of sanctions but did not detail what those would be. In recent weeks, Mr. Biden has threatened severe economic sanctions against Russia’s financial sector and members of Mr. Putin’s inner circle. On Nord Stream 2, Mr. Biden said that the project would not go forward should Russia invade.

Mr. Biden defined invasion in the most traditional terms possible — troops and tanks — not addressing a number of other ways his aides fear Mr. Putin could bring the country to its knees, including organizing a coup or launching crippling cyberattacks.

“If Russia invades, that means tanks and troops crossing the border of Ukraine again, then there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2,” Mr. Biden said. “We will bring an end to it.”

When asked exactly how, Mr. Biden said, “I promise you we’ll be able to do it.”Mr. Scholz, asked the same question, did not answer as forcefully. He has been vague about whether he would agree to terminate the pipeline project, but on Monday he repeated what he has said frequently: “We are absolutely united.”

It has been a rocky first few months on the job for Mr. Scholz, who took over from Angela Merkel, who had worked with four U.S. presidents. Berlin’s reluctance to join in outlining consequences for Russia if it invades Ukraine strained relations to the point that last week the German ambassador in Washington sent a warning home that many in the United States see Germany as an “unreliable partner.”

Mr. Biden forcefully swatted away that notion.

“There’s no need to win back trust,” Mr. Biden said. “He has the complete trust of the United States.”

The situation represents a diplomatic pivot for Mr. Biden, who extolled his relationship with Ms. Merkel in a meeting at the White House in July: “Good friends can disagree” on matters including how each conducted relations with Russia, he said at the time. More than six months later, Mr. Biden is determined to present a united NATO front in the Ukraine crisis; administration officials say that the Russian military has already assembled 70 percent of the forces it would need to mount a full-scale invasion.

In a call with reporters on Sunday, administration officials said that Mr. Biden would be looking to discuss a package of “swift and severe” sanctions against Russia if Mr. Putin decides to invade Ukraine; the Kremlin insists that no such action is contemplated.

“I don’t know that he knows what he is going to do,” Mr. Biden said. He added, “I have been very very straightforward and blunt with President Putin both on the phone and in person: We will impose the most severe sanctions that have ever been imposed.”

Given the risk of war, Mr. Biden advised American civilians in Ukraine to leave the country, adding that he would “hate to see them get caught in the crossfires.”

In comparison, Mr. Scholz’s relatively vague stance that has drawn criticism from both Republicans and Democrats: “The Germans are right now missing in action,” Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, who visited Ukraine in January, said recently. Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio, has publicly criticized Germany for not allowing flights carrying military aid for Ukraine to fly through German airspace.

Nord Stream 2 , an $11 billion natural gas conduit being built between Germany and Russia, has been assailed by Mr. Biden and his advisers as a coercive tool against Ukraine and other allies, even though the president agreed last year to waive sanctions related to the project.

The pipeline is on hold as European Commission officials investigate whether the project is in compliance with European energy policy.

Next week, Mr. Scholz will visit Kyiv and Moscow, following a visit to both cities from Emmanuel Macron, the president of France.

Germany has declined to sell Ukraine weaponry or ammunition, citing a longstanding policy of not contributing to ongoing conflicts. Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said he intended to raise the issue with Germany’s foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock.

Andrew E. Kramer contributed reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine.

Read original article here

Macron meets with Putin, leading Europe’s diplomatic efforts to diffuse Ukraine crisis

As the United States moves forces to Eastern Europe to support its NATO allies and Russia deploys more troops onto Ukraine’s border, Macron visited his counterpart, President Vladimir Putin, in Moscow on Monday to demand a de-escalation to the crisis, before traveling to Kyiv.

Though the shape of a solution to the showdown is still unclear, and the Kremlin continues to push for security guarantees that the US and NATO have called non-starters, Macron said that he and Putin were beginning to build a “constructive arrangement,” which was “mutually acceptable” to Russia and the rest of Europe to “help us avoid war.”

“This dialogue is absolutely essential, more than ever, to ensure the stability and security of the European continent,” Macron said in remarks aired on Russian state television at a meeting soon after he arrived at the Kremlin.

Putin said the two countries shared “common concern” about the security situation in Europe. “I see how much effort the current leadership of France and personally the president of France are making to resolve the crisis associated with ensuring equal security in Europe,” he added, shorthanding the issue as “the resolution of the intra-Ukrainian crisis,” a phase that casts the conflict in Donbas as a purely internal matter of Ukraine and avoids mention of Russia’s role in it.

Putin has assembled 70% of the military personnel and weapons it would need for a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, based on the latest US intelligence estimates, but US officials say they still don’t know whether Russia’s leader has decided to launch an attack. The Kremlin has repeatedly denied it is planning an incursion, but has argued that NATO support for the country constitutes a growing threat to Russia.
The crunch talks between Putin and Macron came as US President Joe Biden met with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Washington, DC on Monday. While the Biden administration has sought to demonstrate a united Western front against Putin’s aggression, Scholz has largely watched from the sidelines as the crisis escalates — drawing criticism and questions over Germany’s willingness to confront Moscow.

Ahead of the meeting, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said its government was prepared to enforce “unprecedented sanctions” on Russia if the Kremlin fails to de-escalate tensions with Ukraine, adding that the “ball is firmly in Moscow’s court.”

“We will do everything to ensure that there is no further escalation. We have therefore jointly prepared a series of tough measures against Russia for this eventuality,” Baerbock said.

“These unprecedented sanctions have been coordinated and prepared with the approval of all partners,” she added.

Scholz, who succeeded Angela Merkel in December, has taken a softer approach on Russia than the US and its allies. Germany has not joined the US, France, Spain and other allies in bolstering troops along NATO’s eastern flank. It has also been reluctant to provide lethal aid, refusing to allow NATO ally, Estonia, to send German-made howitzers to Ukraine and drawing mockery for sending thousands of helmets instead of weapons.

Some experts have suggested Germany’s contentious Nord Stream 2 pipeline project, which is meant to bring natural gas from Russia to the country, may be the reason why it’s not taking a more prominent role. In an apparent attempt to refute that criticism, Scholz will visit Russia and Ukraine later this month.
As Putin tests the West’s resolve, Macron has thrust himself to center stage, taking Merkel’s place as leading mediator for Europe as he readies himself for a re-election bid at home. Currently at the helm of the European Union’s rotating presidency, Macron has spoken several times per week with Putin, and placed his third phone call in a week to Biden on Sunday evening.

According to a statement from the Elysee Palace, Macron and Biden agreed Sunday to capitalize on the “positive progress” made in the Normandy Format — a grouping of France, Germany, Ukraine and Russia — to bolster the Minsk agreements, a ceasefire protocol signed by Ukraine and Russia in 2015 after Russia annexed Crimea and fomented a rebellion in Ukraine’s east. Despite the agreement, the two sides have not seen a stable peace.

The French president, who in 2019 said bluntly that Europe was facing the “brain death of NATO,” caused by American indifference to the transatlantic alliance, and has called on the EU to take on a larger role in Europe’s defense, is now getting a chance to lay out his vision for what a Europe more independent from US influence might look like.

To Moscow, Macron has presented himself as a “quality interlocutor,” as Putin described him, according to an official in the French presidency. The official told reporters Friday that among Macron’s agenda for the talks was to try to balance “the new order of security in Europe, including guarantees of regional security and the role and capacity of the European Union in taking charge of its own security,” alongside his commitments to the US and NATO.

The stakes could not be higher. Macron is seeking to stop the massive Russian military buildup of more than 100,000 soldiers from bubbling over into war and soothe Russia’s security grievances, which include demands that Ukraine and Georgia be blocked from ever becoming members of the alliance and a drawdown of troops in the region.

“I’m reasonably optimistic but I don’t believe in spontaneous miracles,” Macron told reporters on the flight to the Russian capital, according to CNN affiliate BFM TV, which was traveling with the French president.

Moscow, on the other hand, had been more cautious about the planned meeting. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said earlier on Monday the Russian government had seen “nothing new” in response to its security demands.

“For now, the atmosphere remains extremely tense,” Peskov added.

CNN’s Joseph Ataman and Camille Knight in Paris contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Macron Meets With Putin in Russia: Live Ukraine News

Image
Credit…Sputnik, via Agence France-Presse

President Emmanuel Macron of France, who has positioned himself at the center of Europe’s furious diplomatic maneuvering over Ukraine, said on Monday that the continent was at a “critical crossroads” as he met in Moscow with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.

Amid fears over Russia’s military buildup surrounding Ukraine, Mr. Putin and Mr. Macron met at the Kremlin, sitting some 20 feet apart at a long table to maintain social distancing. In televised opening remarks, the Russian president spoke to his French counterpart using the informal form of address, and praised France for trying to resolve the “fundamental questions of European security.”

Mr. Macron said that he hoped the meeting would begin a process of de-escalation, adding: “This dialogue is absolutely essential, more than ever, to ensure the security and stability of the European continent.”

Later, President Biden was scheduled to hold his first meeting with Germany’s new chancellor, Olaf Scholz, in the hope of strengthening Western nations’ response to Russia. Mr. Putin is demanding a rollback of NATO’s presence in Eastern Europe, and has massed troops near Ukraine’s borders — about 130,000 according to U.S. and Ukrainian officials, in what they say appears to be preparation for a full-scale military assault.

With the Biden administration staking out a hard line against Moscow, Germany so far lying low and Mr. Putin seemingly determined to force a solution to Russia’s security grievances, Mr. Macron has emerged as a key player in Europe’s attempts to ease one of the continent’s gravest security crises since the end of the Cold War. He was scheduled to continue his diplomatic outreach on Tuesday with a visit to Ukraine and a meeting with President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv.

Mr. Macron has urged a more conciliatory approach toward Mr. Putin than the United States and Britain have taken, and the two presidents have spoken several times recently by phone.

On Monday, Mr. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, said the Kremlin expected “a very substantive and lengthy conversation” during a meeting and working dinner, which would be followed by a joint news conference.

“Of course, the situation is too complicated to expect some breakthroughs as a result of just one meeting,” Mr. Peskov said. “But we know, and Macron told Putin that he will bring some ideas that could help de-escalate tensions, and that he plans to share these ideas.”





Border with Russian units

Transnistria, a

Russian-backed

breakaway region

of Moldova.

Russia invaded and

annexed the Crimean

Peninsula from

Ukraine in 2014.

Approximate line

separating Ukrainian and

Russian-backed forces near

two breakaway provinces.

Border with

Russian units

Russia annexed

the Crimean

Peninsula from

Ukraine in 2014.

Transnistria, a

Russian-backed

breakaway region

of Moldova.

Approximate line

separating Ukrainian

and Russian-backed

forces.


French officials said that in his meetings with Mr. Putin and Mr. Zelensky, Mr. Macron would seek to use the Normandy Format — a grouping of France, Germany, Ukraine and Russia — to bolster the 2015 Minsk 2 agreement that secured a cease-fire between Ukrainian forces and Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

In an interview published on Sunday in the Journal du Dimanche, a French newspaper, Mr. Macron said that he did not believe Russia’s goal was to seize Ukraine, but to “clarify the rules of cohabitation” with NATO and the European Union. Russia has called for Western countries to scale back their presence in Eastern Europe to mid-1990s levels. Mr. Macron said that Russia had a right to seek security guarantees, while emphasizing that “efficient and lasting dialogue” with Russia would not lead to the “weakening” of regional states that fear Russian aggression.

On Monday, Mr. Macron tweeted: “Let us start building a response that is useful for Russia, useful for all of our Europe, a response that helps us avoid war and build all the elements of trust, of stability, of visibility. Together.”

His stance has sometimes been in contrast to that of the United States, which has rejected Mr. Putin’s main security demands outright. Last week, Mr. Biden ordered the deployment of 3,000 additional U.S. troops to help secure NATO allies in Eastern Europe, although he has emphasized that he will not send forces to Ukraine.

Russia has denied plans to invade Ukraine, and accused the United States of instigating tensions. On Monday, Maria Zakharova, a spokeswoman for Russia’s foreign ministry, said that Washington and its British allies were demonizing Moscow in order “to divert public attention from domestic political crises, invest billions of dollars into arming ‘fragile democracies’ and use the situation to reinforce their ‘invincible’ image, which has been frayed by the debacle in Afghanistan.”

Read original article here

Joe Biden meets German Chancellor Olaf Scholz as resolve on Ukraine is tested

Amid the uncertainty, Biden is eager to demonstrate western unity against Putin’s aggression. Ahead of the President’s meeting with Scholz, US officials said the two leaders would spend most of their time together discussing the Ukraine matter, including a “robust sanctions package” being prepared to punish Moscow should an invasion go ahead.

The dire facts on the ground have lent Monday’s meeting in the Oval Office the air of crisis talks, though Biden also hopes to use the session to get to know Scholz personally, given they are likely to spend a lot more time together in the years to come. They have met once before, when Merkel brought Scholz along to October’s Group of 20 summit, but never as equals. Biden has sought to repair ties to Germany after former President Donald Trump publicly accused the country of shirking its international obligations.

Looming over the meeting, however, is the question of Scholz’s resolve to confront Putin. Among the United States’ major European allies, Germany has appeared the most reluctant to commit to lethal aid, sending thousands of helmets instead of weapons and refusing to allow another NATO ally, Estonia, to send German-made howitzers to Ukraine.

Germany has not joined the United States, France, Spain and other allies in bolstering troops along NATO’s eastern flank. And Scholz hasn’t spelled out in any details what sanctions he might be willing to impose on a country that is still a major trading partner for Germany.

US officials frustrated

The impression that Germany is unwilling — or, because of its energy dependence on Russia, unable — to offer serious deterrence measures has left some US officials frustrated.

Both Republican and Democratic members of Congress have voiced their displeasure, and even Biden has hinted at the discord, saying last month a “minor incursion” by Russia into Ukraine would prompt some disagreement among NATO members over how to respond.

A senior administration official on Sunday sought to downplay any concerns over Germany’s stance, saying that NATO members each brought their own particular strengths to the table.

“The beauty of having an alliance with 30 NATO allies is that different allies step up to take different approaches to different parts of the problem,” the official said, noting the US and Germany were working closely on sanctions and that Germany was a significant economic donor to Ukraine and had provided humanitarian assistance.

The official also pointed out Germany’s diplomatic efforts, alongside France, to revive a ceasefire agreement between Ukraine and Russia. And the official said the US and Germany were aligned in their view of the troop buildup along Ukraine’s border.

“I absolutely think that our countries are unified in terms of awareness of the risk of further Russian aggression to Ukraine. We have been, for a long time, sharing intelligence with Germany, with the rest of our allies. We are engaged in very regular conversations, both by the White House and State Department, our embassy in Berlin, our other agencies, on the situation. And I think there is absolutely absolute agreement that if there is further Russian aggression, that there’s a number of things that need to be done in terms of deployment of additional troops to the eastern flank, and to the imposition of a large package of economic sanctions,” the official said.

Scholz has insisted Russia will pay dearly if its troops cross over into Ukraine.

“We are intensively engaged with all our allied partners in the European Union, with the question of Ukraine, hardly any question occupies us more,” Scholz said in an interview with the German public broadcaster ZDF before traveling to Washington. He went on to say that an attack by Russia on Ukraine would have a “very high price.”

Before his meeting, Scholz told the Washington Post in an interview published Sunday that “our answer will be united and decisive” to a Russian invasion, seeking to dissuade the impression of a fractured alliance. Scholz was also scheduled to appear on CNN’s “The Lead with Jake Tapper” on Monday, a rare media blitz for a foreign leader intent on reversing the sense he is on a different page from the United States.

The fate of Nord Stream 2

Still, the new chancellor has declined to say whether a Russian invasion of Ukraine would scuttle the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which transmits Russian natural gas under the Baltic Sea to Germany, avoiding Ukraine. The United States opposes the pipeline and has stated clearly it won’t go forward should Putin decide to invade.

A day ahead of Scholz’s arrival at the White House, Biden’s aides made clear their position, even if their incoming visitor has been opaque on the subject.

“If Russia invades Ukraine, one way or another, Nord Stream 2 will not move forward,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday. “And Russia understands that. We are coordinated with our allies in Europe on that and that will be the reality if Russia chooses to move forward.”

The senior administration official told reporters that the US has made its position clear to the Scholz government. “We will continue to work very closely with Germany to ensure the pipeline does not move forward,” the official said.

The Nord Stream issue underscores Scholz’s predicament in confronting Russia for its aggressions in Europe. Germany is heavily dependent on Russian energy, making it difficult to impose severe punishment without risking a shut-off of oil and gas during the cold winter months.

The United States has been hurriedly searching the globe for alternative supplies of energy that could be diverted to Europe, from Asia to the Middle East to domestic American suppliers. It isn’t clear how successful the initiative has been, and some countries have said their gas supplies are already spoken for.

Scholz, meanwhile, has faced the awkward association of a predecessor from his political party establishing close ties to the Russian energy industry. Gerhard Schroeder, the last Social Democratic Party politician to serve as chancellor, serves on the board of directors for Nord Stream 2. And last week, Russia’s state-owned gas giant Gazprom announced Schroeder had been nominated to its board, as well.

Merkel’s absence

There has only been one other chancellor since Schroeder left office in 2005: Merkel, whose absence from the world stage after her 16-year tenure has been felt acutely, particularly as Putin tests the West’s resolve.

When Russia last invaded Ukraine, in 2014, Merkel played a central role as a go-between for Putin and Germany’s western allies. She spoke with him consistently and encouraged other leaders to step up their sanctions to punish Moscow for annexing Crimea. She also played a central role keeping Washington updated through the close relationship she’d cultivated with then-President Barack Obama.

This time, it is not the German leader who is emerging in that role but the French. President Emmanuel Macron has spoken several times per week with Putin, and placed his third phone call in a week to Biden on Sunday evening. Macron visits Moscow and Kyiv at the start of this week.

Scholz hasn’t taken as visible a role in defusing the latest crisis, earning him criticism from Germans who accuse the chancellor of making himself invisible at a moment of strain. In an apparent attempt to dissuade that impression, Scholz, too, will visit Russia and Ukraine later this month.

Read original article here

Peng Shuai: Chinese tennis star meets Olympic officials in Beijing

The dinner, held on the sidelines of the Beijing Games, was the first in-person meeting between IOC President Thomas Bach and Peng since the former Olympian alleged she had been pressured into sex by a retired top Chinese Communist Party official — an explosive allegation she has since appeared to retract.

Bach and Peng were joined at dinner by former Chair of the Athletes’ Commission and IOC member Kirsty Coventry, the IOC confirmed in a statement Monday.

“During the dinner, the three spoke about their common experience as athletes at the Olympic Games, and Peng Shuai spoke of her disappointment at not being able to qualify for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” said the IOC statement, which made no mention of the reason for the meeting nor the allegations.

It was not immediately clear if Peng was accompanied at the dinner by any Chinese officials. The Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG) “had no knowledge” of the meeting, IOC Director of Communications Mark Adams said Monday.

Bach and Peng first agreed to meet during the Beijing Olympics in a video call in November that came amid an outpouring of global concern about the whereabouts and safety of the athlete.

Peng, a three-time Olympian and Grand Slam doubles champion, earlier that month had accused retired Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli of pressuring her into having sex, according to screenshots of a swiftly deleted post from Peng’s verified account on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like social media platform.

All mention of the post — widely seen as the first allegation in China’s restricted #MeToo movement to touch the top echelons of the Chinese government — was wiped from the Chinese internet. Peng herself disappeared from the public eye for several weeks prior to a weekend of appearances, including the video call with Bach.

The IOC has come in for harsh criticism from international human rights groups for its handling of the situation, with critics accusing it of supporting Chinese government efforts to silence Peng and raising concerns about whether the athlete was at liberty to speak with IOC officials while in China — given the Communist Party’s well-documented record of quashing dissent.

The situation further amplified calls from such groups for an Olympic boycott ahead of the Games. Beijing dismissed questions circulating around Peng’s ongoing safety as “malicious speculation.”

Peng has since denied making sexual assault allegations, in December telling Singapore-based Chinese-language newspaper Lianhe Zaobao that she had “never spoken or written about anyone sexually assaulting me” and that her initial social media post describing the incident had been misunderstood.

The tennis star again denied making sexual assault allegations in a sit-down interview on Sunday in Beijing with independent French sport news site L’Equipe in what was only the second interview she is known to have given to a foreign media outlet.

In the nearly hourlong interview, Peng reiterated, “I never said anyone had sexually assaulted me in anyway,” and said she herself had erased the social media post from November. Zhang has not issued any response to the accusation and has remained outside of public view.

Peng, who was accompanied in the interview by Wang Kan, the Chinese Olympic Committee chief of staff, appeared to acknowledge the relationship in the interview, saying: “My lovelife problems, my personal life must not be mingled with sports and politics.”

When asked why she deleted the post on Chinese platform Weibo, she said: “Because I wanted to.”

She also told L’Equipe that she “never disappeared” from the public eye and said so many people reached out that “it was simply impossible to answer so many messages.”

L’Equipe says they were able to secure the rare sit-down interview after submitting a request last month to the Chinese Olympic Committee (COC) through the IOC.

Speaking at an IOC & Beijing Organizing Committee media briefing Monday, IOC Director of Communications Adams said it was not up to the governing body to pass judgment on Peng Shuai’s sexual assault accusation — which she has since recanted — or claims she has been “speaking under duress” in subsequent appearances.

“We as a sports organization are doing everything to ensure that she is happy and I don’t think it is up to us to be able to judge in one way, just as it’s not for you to judge either in one way or another, her position,” Adams continued.

The IOC reiterated its position that any calls for an inquiry into sexual assault allegations made would have to come from the tennis star herself.

CNN’s Bex Wright and Alex Stambaugh contributed reporting.

Read original article here

Peng Shuai Meets IOC Leader at Winter Olympics

Peng Shuai, the Chinese tennis player who largely disappeared from public life after making sexual abuse accusations against a political official in November, held a private meeting with Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee, in Beijing over the weekend.

The two had dinner on Saturday at the Olympic Club and were joined by Kirsty Coventry, the former chair of the Athletes’ Commission and an I.O.C. member, according to a statement released by the I.O.C. on Monday.

The statement did not address Peng’s sexual assault accusations or the possibility of Bach pressing for an investigation of Peng’s claims, but it said that Peng was at the Winter Olympics and attending events, including a curling match between China and Norway on Saturday night.

The revelation of the meeting might do little to satisfy critics who question whether Peng has been speaking freely in her sporadic and seemingly highly orchestrated public appearances over the past few weeks.

Mark Adams, a spokesman for the I.O.C., declined to say on Monday whether the committee believed Peng’s initial claim that she had been sexually assaulted. She made the claim in November on a verified account on a Chinese social media platform, but has since recanted. Adams also declined to say whether the committee believed she was speaking under duress from government officials.

“I don’t think it’s a judgment for the I.O.C. to make — we are a sporting organization,” Adams said at the I.O.C.’s daily news conference in Beijing.

He noted that the organization had remained in constant communication with Peng in recent weeks to ensure that she was physically safe.

“I don’t think it’s up to us to be able to judge, just as it’s not for you to judge, either, in one way or another, her position,” he said.

Peng’s disappearance from public view late last year prompted a global chorus of concern for her safety. In November, the I.O.C. scheduled a video call between Bach and Peng that confirmed she was in China and apparently unharmed. The organization did not release a transcript of that call and has not released transcripts or recordings of any of its subsequent interactions with Peng.

On Saturday, according to the I.O.C., Peng told Bach that she was disappointed that she hadn’t qualified for the Summer Olympics in Tokyo last summer, but planned to travel to Europe “once the pandemic was over.” It added that Coventry and Peng would remain in contact and that “all three agreed that any further communication about the content of the meeting would be left to her discretion.”

Bach had said last week that the I.O.C. would call for an official inquiry into Peng’s initial sexual assault accusations only if she had asked them to do so.

In response to a question about whether the I.O.C. had discussed a potential investigation with anyone, Adams referred journalists on Monday to an interview Peng conducted with L’Equipe, a French sports daily, that was published Monday. In it, Peng once again claimed that the situation, and her accusation, had been a misunderstanding.

The hourlong interview with Peng, according to L’Equipe, was arranged on Sunday by China’s Olympic committee. The newspaper said it had been required to submit questions for Peng in advance, and her comments in Chinese were translated by a Chinese Olympic committee official.

“Sexual assault? I never said that anyone made me submit to a sexual assault,” Peng said, according to L’Equipe. “This post resulted in an enormous misunderstanding from the outside world,” she added. “My wish is that the meaning of this post no longer be skewed.”

Peng was asked why her original post containing the sexual assault accusation had been erased from her account.

“I erased it,” she said, adding: “Why? Because I wanted to.”

She also told the newspaper that she was retiring from tennis.

Bach was not made available to comment on Monday. The I.O.C. said he was outside the city, watching downhill skiing, biathlon and ski jumping competitions.

Read original article here