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Italian leader urges Ukraine ceasefire in visit with Biden

President Joe Biden has hosted Italian Premier Mario Draghi at the White House as the U.S. works to maintain trans-Atlantic unity over the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Via AP news wire
Tuesday 10 May 2022 15:35 EDT

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President Joe Biden and Italian Premier Mario Draghi met in the Oval Office on Tuesday for a visit intended to showcase allied unity against the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but it also provided a window into divergent approaches to the conflict.

Draghi said leaders should work toward ā€œthe possibility of bringing a ceasefire and starting, again, some credible negotiations.ā€ He added that ā€in Italy and Europe now, people want to put an end to these massacres and this violence, this butchery."

Biden did not echo Draghi's comments, and U.S. officials appear openly skeptical that there's a way to restart talks at this point.

Avril Haines, Bidenā€™s director of national intelligence, testified earlier Tuesday that both Ukraine and Russia believe they can make progress on the battlefield at this point, so ā€œwe do not see a viable negotiating path forward, at least in the short term.ā€

She also said Russian President Vladimir Putin is prepared for a ā€œprolonged conflict.ā€

The different tones over Ukraine reflect Italyā€™s geographic proximity to the war and deeper economic ties to Russia, which provides 40% of the countryā€™s natural gas. Thereā€™s also growing skepticism in Italy about sending weapons to Ukraine.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has been ramping up its military assistance for Ukraine with bipartisan support from Congress, and administration officials have used more aggressive rhetoric when talking about the war. For example, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin recently said the U.S. wants ā€œto see Russia weakened to the point where it canā€™t do things like invade Ukraine.ā€

Biden and Draghi still emphasized their two countries' deep ties and their work on Ukraine.

ā€œYouā€™ve been a good friend and a great ally,ā€ Biden said, adding that the allies had ā€œall stepped upā€ to confront Russia.

Draghi responded by saying, ā€œThe ties between our two countries will always be strong. And if anything, this war in Ukraine has made them stronger."

Echoing comments that Biden has often made, Draghi added that Putin ā€œthought he could divide us. He failed.ā€

Ali Wyne, a senior analyst with the Eurasia Group, said ā€œshock-induced unity can be difficult to sustain" as the war continues.

ā€œGeography means that the escalation of tensions between NATO and Russia poses a more immediate threat to Europeā€™s security than to Americaā€™s ā€” and means, therefore, that de-escalation is a more pressing imperative for Brussels,ā€ he said. ā€œIn addition, the more pronounced the externalities of the war become, including energy disruptions and food insecurity, the more pressure the American public and European publics are likely to place on their leaders to make a renewed push for a negotiated settlement.ā€

___

Associated Press staff writers Colleen Barry in Milan and Josh Boak in Washington contributed to this report.

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