Russian President Vladimir Putin lands in Geneva for his showdown summit with Joe Biden
BREAKING NEWS – Putin lands in Geneva for his Biden showdown: Russian president arrives for five-hour face-off over cyber-attacks, election meddling, Ukraine and Alexei Navalny
- Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin meet for their summit today in 18th Century villa
- ‘Nothing is off the table,’ said a senior administration official
- Putin landed just before 12:30 pm local time, about half an hour before his planned arrival
- Biden plans to raise hacking, election interference, and political prisoners, with potential room for gains on prisoner swaps and nuclear deal
- The two leaders will meet at Villa de la Grange, an 18th Century villa
- The White House rejected the idea of a joint press conference, and Biden plans to address the U.S. media solo
- Putin’s own logistical plans are closely-held, although he will arrive at the summit first
- The two men will hold a small meeting with top diplomats, then a larger one
- There is no planned ‘breaking of bread,’ but either is free to ask for refreshments
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in Geneva Wednesday afternoon for his summit showdown with President Joe Biden – landing about half an hour before his scheduled arrival at the lakeside villa where they will meet.
Putin’s official jet, emblazoned with ‘Russia’ written in Cyrillic in red lettering, touched at 12:26 pm local time. He was set to drive by motorcade to Lake Geneva where the two men will spend up to five hours in meetings.
Biden’s highly-anticipated first presidential summit with Putin is taking place in a chateau overlooking the lake – a Cold War throwback to Ronald Reagan’s meeting with the Soviet strongman Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985.
Relations between the two sides are similarly cool – at their lowest ebb in decades after the Kremlin’s cyber offensives, election meddling, threats to invade Ukraine, poisonings of dissidents both at home and abroad, and its increased intervention in the Middle East, where it is accused of shadowy mercenary deployments.
Street lights for Putin’s route on the brief drive to the villa were flashing yellow, with a main thoroughfare along the lake completely cleared of traffic for the summit.
Armoured personnel carriers have been driving the route, and nearby hotels with rooftop bars overlooking the drive were told to shutter them.
With Putin known to roll in late to seek the upper hand, he was scheduled to arrive first to the venue.
The U.S. side has been seeking to lower expectations amid the fanfare and buildup.
‘We have a 20+ year track record of seeing exactly who Putin is – no summit is going to change that, and I’m sure Biden and his team know that,’ tweeted former Obama deputy national security advisor Ben Rhodes.
Moscow rocked the boat over the weekend as it staged naval drills 300 miles off the coast of Hawaii – its largest military exercise in the Pacific since the Cold War – prompting Washington to dispatch USAF stealth fighters to ward off any stray Russian bombers.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin waves next to Swiss President Guy Parmelin as he arrives at Villa La Grange for the U.S.-Russia summit, in Geneva
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in Geneva Wednesday afternoon for his summit with President Joe Biden
Putin quickly exited the jet stairway and joined his motorcade, offering a quick wave
The two men are set to meet at the Villa de la Grange, a building with a long history that is located near the luxury hotel where Biden is staying. With its stocked Empire bookcases, Trompe l’oeil ceiling details, and colorful rose garden, the building and grounds offers bountiful opportunities for photo-ops and small talk.
A meeting room is prepared for Putin and Biden at the Villa La Grange in Geneva where they will be hosted by Swiss President Guy Parmelin
A cleaner hoovers the red carpet ahead of the arrival of Biden and Putin at the Villa de La Grange overlooking Lake Geneva
Putin landed about 30 minutes before his scheduled arrival
Putin is set to arrive first at the summit venue in an event that is both choreographed in its broad outlines and adjusted on the fly, some areas left entirely open – including the food.
‘No breaking of bread,’ quipped a senior official when asked about the lack of a set meal.
But the official allowed, ‘I presume that the principals and the participants can ask for some water or coffee or tea …’ The summit format also allowed for breaks to be determined.
Biden will arrive next, traveling in ‘the Beast’ for the short drive from his hotel.
Each man will meet separately with Swiss President Guy Parmelin, whose central role will be to break the ice and get things started on a good footing.
Then, the three men will be pictured together, but only Parmelin is scheduled to speak – a move that could at least forestall any early pyrotechnics.
But there will be another chance to glimpse the two men together in a small meeting, with only the two leaders, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov, and notetakers and translators present.
A larger meeting will have five staff members each – and Biden is set to hold a press conference after the estimated five hours of meetings.
Biden will get to put his spin on the day with a full press conference with the U.S. and international press near the bank of Lake Geneva. But it’s time was not firmly set.
Putin, too, is certain to want to put his spin on events, but hasn’t said how he will do it when, or where.
He has kept up a busy schedule of interviews in the days leading up to the summit.
The relationship has featured intense comments, and Biden agreed with Putin’s assessment that national relations were at a ‘low point.’
Biden says he once told Putin he had ‘no soul.’ He caused an uproar when he agreed Putin was a ‘killer.’
But this week he also called him ‘bright’ and ‘tough,’ as well as a ‘worthy adversary.’
He wants to see if there is a way to at least establish ‘stability and predictability’ in U.S.-Russia relations.
‘We should decide where it’s in our mutual interest, in the interest of the world, to cooperate, and see if we can do that,’ Biden said this week. ‘And the areas where we don’t agree, make it clear what the red lines are.”
Biden dons his signature pair of aviators as he steps off Air Force One on arrival in Switzerland on Tuesday
Biden is pictured in his limousine on his way out of Cointrin airport after arriving in Switzerland on Tuesday
Biden (L) meets the Swiss delegation members next to Swiss Federal president Guy Parmelin (R) in front of Air Force One after Biden’s arrival at Cointrin airport in Geneva on Tuesday
Vladimir Putin is briefed by an adviser in Moscow on Tuesday before he set off for Geneva for his showdown with Biden
Biden meeting with Putin in March 2011 when he was vice president. The two leaders will meet on Wednesday in Geneva
Putin described Biden with the double-edged ‘career man’ label, saying he ‘spent virtually his entire adulthood in politics.’
Putin said the remark this week by way of contrast with former President Trump, who he met at the infamous Helsinki summit – presenting Trump with a soccer ball and standing alongside Trump while he accepted Putin’s denials of election interference in 2016.
Biden has limited his comments on the issues he would raise. But he and his aides have said he will bring up ransomware, hacking, election interference, Ukraine, press freedoms, opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and human rights.
The Navalny issue is a particularly thorny one. To the U.S. it is a core rule of law issue. Biden wants to send a message to dissidents and other opposition figures, but it is an area where it will be challenging to make progress.
‘Navalny’s death would be another indication of Russia has little or no intention of abiding by basic fundamental human rights. It would be a tragedy,’ Biden said this week when asked what it would mean should he die in prison.
‘We should not lose sight of the fact that Navalny is the most famous of several hundred political prisoners,’ said Matthew Rojansky, director of the Wilson Center’s Kennan Institute in Washington. He said Biden may want to raise the question of Russia’s political prisoners more broadly.
He said the U.S. should hold Putin to international standards and its own commitments as well as Russia’s own constitution. ‘We should try to hold them to those standards. The problem is the regime views these behaviors as essential to its survival. They’re not things we can convince them that they should reverse,’ he noted.’
If Biden didn’t already know it, he should be prepared for Putin trying to turn the tables on him by bringing up domestic U.S. politics. In recent days he has spoken about the prosecution of Capitol rioters while discoursing on Black Lives Matter protests, a go-to tactics when outsiders seek to call attention to stifling of internal dissent or lack of press freedoms.
Biden also must decide how direct he wants to be when he warns Russia about ransomware attacks the U.S. believes come from its soil, even if not government-run operations.
Biden said this week: ‘I’m going to make clear to President Putin that there are areas where we can cooperate if he chooses.
And if he chooses not to cooperate and acts in a way that he has in the past relative to cybersecurity and some other activities, then we will respond. We will respond in kind.’
The two men are set to meet in Geneva at the Villa de la Grange, a building with a long history that is located near the luxury hotel where Biden is staying. With its stocked Empire bookcases, Trompe l’oeil ceiling details, and colorful rose garden, the building and grounds offers bountiful opportunities for photo-ops and small talk.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is putting on a show of force with the largest naval exercises in the Pacific Ocean since the end of the Cold War ahead of a meeting with Biden