Ukraine-Russia LIVE- Joe Biden ‘risking nuclear World War III’ with shock reckless comment about ousting Vladimir Putin

JOE Biden has been accused of “risking nuclear World War 3” after his comments about a change of leadership in Russia.

Donald Trump claims Joe Biden has risked pushing Vladimir Putin into a nuclear conflict after the US president apparently called for the Russian leader to be ousted in off-the-cuff remarks.

Criticising the Biden administration’s handling of the Russian leader, former president Mr Trump said: “When you put him into a corner and you talk the way they’re talking – they’re talking weak – and they’re almost giving him an incentive.

“They’re handling him very badly, in my opinion.”

The President was talking about the invasion of Ukraine to a crowd at the Royal Castle in Warsaw.

He said: “A dictator, bent on rebuilding an empire, will never erase the people’s love for liberty.

“Ukraine will never be a victory for Russia, for free people refuse to live in a world of hopelessness and darkness.”

“For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power.”

The apparent call for regime change in Russia was a stark change of American policy towards Putin.

Following the speech, the White House appeared to backtrack on Biden’s comments in a statement.

It said: “The President’s point was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region. He was not discussing Putin’s power in Russia, or regime change.”

Follow our Russia-Ukraine live blog below for up-to-the-minute updates…

  • Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said Joe Biden’s comments about Vladimir Putin’s position were “not helpful”.

    The White House scrambled to row back Mr Biden’s unscripted declaration that Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power”, insisting he was not calling for a regime change.

    Sir Keir told LBC radio: “Not helpful, to say something, to row back – big thing to say, for obvious reasons.”

    The Labour leader said the Ukraine situation is “thoroughly depressing” and, following the end of the Cold War, “I didn’t think in my lifetime we would see Russian tanks going into a European country”.

  • Public sector bodies ordered to cancel contracts with Russian & Belarusian companies

    Public sector bodies are being urged to check if they have any contracts with Russian or Belarussian companies and, if possible, cancel them and switch suppliers.

    The Cabinet Office has issued guidance to public bodies – including hospitals, councils and Whitehall departments – advising them on what they should do.

    Cabinet Office minister Steve Barclay said: “Public money should not fund (Vladimir) Putin’s war machine.

    “We are asking hospitals, councils and other organisations across the public sector to urgently look at all the ways they can go further to sever their commercial ties to Russia.

    “The Government will continue to work closely with these organisations, ensuring they are able to take the necessary steps as quickly as possible, including taking legal routes where necessary.”

  • Ukraine-Russia peace talks to begin in Turkey later today

    Ukrainian and Russian negotiators will begin peace talks in Istanbul later on Monday, a senior Turkish official said, without elaborating.

    Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin agreed in a telephone call on Sunday for Istanbul to host the talks, which Ankara hopes will lead to a ceasefire.

  • Ukraine claims it has taken down a Russian Su-35

    Security analyst Michael A Horowitz tweeted a video appearing to show the wreckage of a Russian Su-35 jet on the ground after being shot down.

    He tweeted: “Gerashchenko (advisor to the Interior Ministry) published this video of an Su-35 he says was shot down on March 24 near Izyum by Ukrainian air defenses.”

    The Sun has not been able to immediately verify the footage.

  • Growing fears for animals suffering in zoos

    Fears are beginning to grow for thousands of animals suffering from cold, hunger and stress in Ukraine’s zoos.

    Vitaly Ilchenko, who runs an ecopark near Ukraine’s second city of Kharkiv, said part of it had been occupied by Russian forces.

    Three staff members have also been killed trying to get food to the animals.

    But he said he feared the park’s lions and tigers could starve to death.

    Karina Detiuk, the zoo’s deputy director, told the BBC: “Our monkeys need fruit and vegetables, our predators need meat and so on.

    “We are doing the impossible trying to keep them alive. Our wolves are howling worse than the air-raid sirens and it is heart-breaking.”

  • Good morning

    Joe Gamp here, signing in to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine.

    I’ll be bringing you the latest news, as it happens, throughout the day.

  • Vitali Klitschko gives Oleksandr Usyk his blessing to rematch Anthony Joshua

    VITALI KLITSCHKO has backed Oleksandr Usyk’s decision to leave Ukraine and train for a rematch with Anthony Joshua.

    The unified heavyweight champion, who dethroned AJ in September, had bravely taken up arms to defend his nation amid Russia’s invasion.

    And it threatened to postpone his sequel with Joshua, 32, who was instead contemplating a confidence-building interim bout.

    But Usyk, 35, has since revealed he is crossing the border to go through with a second fight against AJ.

    Former boxing champ Klitschko, now the mayor of Kyiv, has thrown support to his countryman and will even offer him some advice.

    He told The Telegraph: “A very important message could be carried through an event like this. We do not know if in three months we will exist.

    “I actually have plans to speak to Oleksandr Usyk to give him advice if he decides to make the fight, to have some special messages that he can put out there.”

  • Bitcoin price soars after Russia says it could try to dodge sanctions

    BITCOIN prices soared after Russia said it could try to dodge sanctions by selling oil and gas in cryptocurrency.

    The digital money has shot up around five per cent since Putin’s energy chief Pavel Zavalny said it could be used by friendly countries.

    He added they could use various currencies, such as the Turkish lira or Chinese yuan, depending on the buyer’s preference.

    The move is an attempt by the Kremlin to boost Russia’s currency, which has fallen 20 per cent in value this year, to avoid the West’s economic sanctions.

    Mr Zavalny said on Thursday: “We have been proposing to China for a long time to switch to settlements in national currencies for roubles and yuan.

    “With Turkey, it will be lira and roubles. You can also trade bitcoins.”

    The price of bitcoin has gone from around £32,576 on Thursday to around £34,156 on Sunday morning.

    Analyst David Broadstock, of the Energy Studies Institute in Singapore, said: “Russia is very quickly feeling the impact of unprecedented sanctions.

    “There is a need to shore up the economy and in many ways, Bitcoin is seen as a high growth asset.”

  • Ukraine ready to deploy baguette-sized Switchblade flying bombs 

    UKRAINE is ready to deploy baguette-sized Switchblade flying bombs that fit in a backpack to rain death on Russian tanks.

    The weapon, controlled from a tablet, can scout out targets over enemy lines to hit battlefield command and control headquarters.

    US President Joe Biden agreed to give Ukraine 100 Switchblades for around £600million.

    The devices fly at around 60mph for up to 15 minutes using a camera relaying video of the terrain, before accelerating to 100mph when its remote pilot locks onto a target.

    Military analysts say it gives Ukraine major advantages by providing surveillance and reconnaissance intelligence.

    They weigh about 2.5kg and are much lighter than the 20kg Javelin anti-tank missiles already used, which America also supplied.

  • Polish TV holding global charity telethon for Ukraine

    British artists Fatboy Slim and Craig David are among the music stars taking part in an English-language charity telethon for Ukraine being organised on Sunday by Polish state channel TVP, the network said.

    The “Save Ukraine #StopWar” programme, which will also include Ukrainian footballing legend Andriy Shevchenko, is being broadcast to more than 20 countries, TVP World said in a statement.

    The two-hour show will start at 1530 GMT.

    “Money will be raised for the victims of the Russian invasion of Ukraine,” the statement said, adding that Polish and Ukrainian anchors would take part.

    The organisers said it was “a project aimed at reaching out to millions of people around the world to help Ukrainians live through the war and win it”.

  • Macron fears ‘escalation’ after Biden calls Putin a ‘butcher’

    French President Emmanuel Macron has warned against verbal “escalation” with Moscow, after US President Joe Biden called Russian leader Vladimir Putin a “butcher”.

    Macron told broadcaster France 3 that he saw his task as “achieving first a ceasefire and then the total withdrawal of (Russian) troops by diplomatic means.”

    “If we want to do that, we can’t escalate either in words or actions.”

    Macron also added that he would call Putin on Monday or Tuesday to discuss a proposal from France, Greece and Turkey to evacuate Ukrainians from besieged port city Mariupol.

    “There is a lot of cynicism from the Russian side on this question,” Macron said.

    “We’re looking with the Ukrainian authorities in the city of Mariupol at how to organise the evacuation of everyone who wants to flee.”

    He added that “we have to do it quickly, in the very next days” given the intensity of combat and bombardments in the city.

  • People forced to drink sewage water in Kyiv

    Ukrainian MP Lesia Vasylenko said people are starving and being forced to drink sewage water in Kyiv as the situation across the country worsens.

    Speaking to Times Radio, Ms Vasylenko said that Kyiv is still facing attacks and suffering food scarcity while people are “made to stay in basements and metro stations”.

    “People are actually starving without food, and drinking sewage water,” she said.

    “In Mariupol, thousands of people are getting forcefully deported across the border to Russia apparently to safety but then they are sent off in an unknown direction and nobody hears from them again.

    “So the atrocities, they’re just the same all over the place.”

  • Mayor of Kyiv says ‘We need more help to win’

    VITALI Klitschko, the mayor of Kyiv, has begged Boris Johnson and Joe Biden to send more help to Ukraine whilst vowing his country will “never give up”.

    In a highly emotional interview today on GB News Vitali, 50, said: “I want to say thank you very much to the US and to Great Britain for all their humanitarian help and all for their financial support.

    “But it’s not enough. We need more weapons and we need more help. We have to stop the Russians. The Ukrainian Army is so strong and our soldiers are destroying Russian plans, but we need more help to win.”

    Explaining why he believed Ukrainian forces were putting up such a strong fight, Vitali continued: “It’s like this, Russia’s Army and Russia’s soldiers are fighting for money. We are defending our children, our families, our homeland, our future. That’s why we are strong.

    “The world needs to remember this is our homeland. We are defending our friends. Our relatives. Our families. That’s why we are here. We have to defend our hometown and we have to defend our future. This war doesn’t have rules. We see big drama every day. We see millions leave Ukraine. We were always a peaceful country. We never were aggressive to anyone. But right now we have to defend ourselves.”

    “The Russians want to bring us back to the USSR. They want to occupy our homeland. We see our future as democratic and part of the European family.

    *We never go to the knee. We never give up. We defend our families”

  • US ‘has no strategy of regime change for Russia’

    The United States has no strategy of regime change for Russia, secretary of state Antony Blinken told reporters today.

    “I think the president, the White House, made the point last night that, quite simply, President Putin cannot be empowered to wage war or engage in aggression against Ukraine or anyone else,” Blinken said during a visit to Jerusalem.

    “As you know, and as you have heard us say repeatedly, we do not have a strategy of regime change in Russia – or anywhere else, for that matter.”

  • Beckett: Biden has strong feelings and is inclined to voice them

    Former foreign secretary Dame Margaret Beckett spoke to Sky News’ Sophy Ridge earlier. 

    When asked what she thought about US President Joe Biden’s strong speech about Vladimir Putin no longer being allowed to remain in power, she said: “I’ve rather liked what we’ve seen in Joe Biden.

    “I know that he gets a lot of criticism, but he strikes me as being somebody who has strong feelings and is inclined to then just voice them.

    “And, you know, maybe we don’t get quite enough of that sincerity and reaction sometimes from people in our political world.”

    She added: “I’m sure that his staff and the people around him are right to say America’s not calling for regime change, but equally, I think many people will sympathise with the sentiments that led him to say what he did.”

  • Pictured: Civilians use the humanitarian corridors

    Today, civilians were being evacuated along humanitarian corridors from the Ukrainian city of Mariupol.

    It is being done so under the control of Russian military and pro-Russian separatists.

    The corridors will run from the Luhansk and Donetsk regions and include people leaving Mariupol in cars.

  • Injured Russian soldiers freeze and appear terrified as they are awarded bravery medals

    CHILLING footage shows haunted Russian soldiers frozen as they waited in line to receive bravery medals after returning home from the frontline in Ukraine with crippling injuries.

    The wounded troops appeared petrified as they sat in silence in a row of wheelchairs while Russian deputy defence minister Alexander Fomin hailed their war efforts.

    Despite the Colonel-General’s enthusiasm, the young soldiers – many missing a limb from the horrors of Putin’s invasion – looked shellshocked and full of despair.

    Footage broadcast by the Kremlin-controlled Channel One showed Fomin declare “I serve Russia” as he greeted each ailing troop with a handshake before pinning a medal to their chest.

    “You all carried out the orders assigned to you, you all gave one hundred percent,” Fomin told the wounded men. 

    “Like real men, like real soldiers, you continued the glorious military traditions of our grandfathers and fathers.”

  • Ukrainian President has pleaded for more fighter jets and tanks

    Volodymyr Zelensky has accused the West of cowardice as his brave troops stave off invading troops.

    The Ukrainian President has pleaded for more fighter jets and tanks to be sent out to help defend against Putin’s butchers.

    He urged Western leaders to hand over supplies that are “gathering dust” in stockpiles.

    “I’ve talked to the defenders of Mariupol today. I’m in constant contact with them. Their determination, heroism and firmness are astonishing,” he said in a video address on Sunday.

    Referring to NATO, Zelensky added: “If only those who have been thinking for 31 days on how to hand over dozens of jets and tanks had one per cent of their courage.”

  • Chernobyl radiation spikes

    Ukrainian MP Inna Sovsun said: “It isn’t possible to put out the fire now, as this territory isn’t controlled by Ukraine.

    “We’re afraid that the fire will reach the nuclear power plant. The radiation level is already elevated.”

    Russia’s troops have set up a field camp and withdrawn as radioactive dust has made it impossible to conduct military operations, Ukraine’s General Chief of Staff said.

    Some military units are also withdrawing to Belarus to regroup.

  • Ukraine warns Russia wants to split us in half like North and South Korea

    RUSSIA wants to split Ukraine in half like North and South Korea, the country’s military intelligence chief has warned as frustrated Putin launches a deadly new pincher move.

    Kyrylo Budanov has accused Russian troops of attempting apply what he calls the “Korean scenario” after failing to capture Kyiv as the invasion continues to stall.

    Budanov, Ukraine’s head of defence intelligence, said Putin’s butchers will soon launch a guerrilla warfare in Russian-occupied territory in a bid to create a Moscow-controlled region.

    In a statement released by the Defense Ministry, Budanov said Putin realised “he can’t swallow the entire country” – and would instead try to divide the country like North and South Korea.

    “The occupiers will try to pull the occupied territories into a single quasi-state structure and pit it against independent Ukraine,” he added.

  • Chelsea set to have new owners BEFORE end of season

    CHELSEA are set to have new owners in place by the end of next month – with four bidders left in the frame.

    US investment bank Raine Group has told the four remaining contenders they have until April 11 to submit revised bids for the club.

    And with the Government keen to push through a sale as soon as possible, it is now expected a deal will be signed off inside the next five weeks.

    That will still have to be approved by Prem chiefs and the Government.

    But it appears increasingly likely that Chelsea’s future will be settled well before the end of the season.

    All four bidders still in the contest have links to US sports franchises, with only two of the contenders having genuine British links.

  • Blind mystic Baba Vanga who ‘predicted 9/11’ also claimed Putin will be ‘Lord of the World’

    A BLIND mystic who is said to have predicted 9/11 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine claimed Putin will become “lord of the world”.

    Baba Vanga, known as the “Nostradamus of the Balkans”, died 25 years ago – but is believed to have possessed an uncanny knack for predicting major world events.

    It’s been suggested that she believed Russia will dominate the world after a meeting in 1979 with writer Valentin Sidorov.

    BirminghamLive reports that during the interview, Vanga said: “All will thaw, as if ice, only one remain untouched – Vladimir’s glory, glory of Russia.

    “Too much it is brought in a victim. Nobody can stop Russia.

    “All will be removed by her from the way and not only will be kept, but also becomes the lord of the world.”

  • Grain exports in Ukraine getting worse by the day

    Ukraine’s new agriculture minister Mykola Solskyi says the country’s ability to export grain is getting worse by the day, add it would only improve if the war with Russia ends.

    Speaking in a televised briefing, Solskyi says Ukraine’s export volume has fallen to just a few hundred thousand tonnes, where they would normally be exporting 4-5 million tonnes of grain per month.

    “The impact (on global markets) is direct, dramatic and large. And it continues. Every day the situation will become more and more difficult,” he says.

    Ukraine is one of the biggest grain exporters in the world.

  • Zahawi says there’s evidence war crimes have been committed in Ukraine

    Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi, was asked on Sky News this morning if the UK Government agreed with Joe Biden that Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power”, and said: “I think that’s up to the Russian people.”

    “The Russian people, I think, are pretty fed up with what is happening in Ukraine, this illegal invasion, the destruction of their own livelihoods, their economy is collapsing around them and I think the Russian people will decide the fate of Putin and his cronies.”

    Mr Zahawi added there is “evidence that war crimes have been committed in Ukraine”.

    Pressed further about the US president’s comments on regime change in Russia, Mr Zahawi told Sophy Ridge On Sunday on Sky News: “It’s an illegal invasion of Ukraine and that must end, and I think that’s what the president was talking about.”

    Asked if Mr Biden was wrong to say what he did, Mr Zahawi replied: “No, what I’m saying to you is the White House has been very clear on this, the president gave a very powerful speech on this and I think both the United States and the United Kingdom agree that it’s up to the Russian people to decide who should be governing them.”

  • Joe Biden ‘made a dangerous situation more dangerous’

    US President Joe Biden’s comment that Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power” has prompted strong criticism from president of the US Council on Foreign Relations, Richard Haass.

    The comments “made a difficult situation more difficult and a dangerous situation more dangerous”, Mr Haass wrote on Twitter.

    “That is obvious,” he added.

    “Less obvious is how to undo the damage, but I suggest his chief aides reach their counterparts & make clear the US is prepared to deal with this Russian government.”

    Mr Haass also said: “The White House walk back of @POTUS regime change call is unlikely to wash.

    “Putin will see it as confirmation of what he’s believed all along. Bad lapse in discipline that runs risk of extending the scope and duration of the war.”


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