Macron Says Biden's Remark That Putin Is a Butcher Makes it Harder To End the Ukraine Conflict

French President Emmanuel Macron Says Joe Biden’s Butcher Remark about Putin Makes Harder To End the Ukraine Conflict
French President Emmanuel Macron thought the 'butcher' remark of the POTUS was out of place and only impressed the world with how diminished the US is. LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP via Getty Images

French President Emmanuel Macron has considered Joe Biden's remark in the recent summit as not helpful and incendiary to efforts via diplomacy.

Unlike the US, the bloc has a lot to lose whenever President Biden commits a blunder. Many have come to doubt if the US leader has cognitive soundness and a gross comparison compared to the firm leadership of Donald Trump.

Macron's Hopes To Stop the War Through Diplomacy

Macron is keeping away from the allegations that the Russian president is a butcher, which is out of line with the goals of the EU, reported the Express UK.

He has not closed the lines of communication with the Kremlin and is less likely to cause a furor like the US president. His goal and the EU to stop a war, not fight one, is lost on the US leader.

He noted that in his next phone contact with Putin, he would seek support for a French-Turkish-Greek relief crisis to leave Mariupol, which could take effect on Monday or Tuesday.

The US has been sending weapons that prolong the war and the suffering of the Ukrainians, who are barely keeping up with assaults by the Russians, despite claims saying it's going well.

Contrary to the war hawks in Washington, the French president said that EU negotiators were hoping to pull back the Russian troops through diplomacy.

Macron criticized Biden's approach, which caused more conflict, stressing de-escalation by saying the right word and actions, noted the Moscow Times.

A stark lack of diplomacy with the butcher remark and the supposed mastery of US policy's current US policy could have been a mirage.

Last Sunday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian addressed the Doha Forum international conference and said that there'd be collective blame for nothing done to assist civilians in Mariupol.

Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk Kyiv and Moscow decided on two humanitarian corridors to remove civilians from frontline areas, including Mariupol inhabitants who depart by private automobile, last Sunday.

White House Covers Biden's Remarks

A flustered White House tried to cover up the embarrassing remarks by Joe Biden that many bloc leaders did not accept.

That only showed that the US leader had a narrow perception of the conflict, strengthening the opinion that he allegedly made it harder for his allies to reach an agreement, cited the Head Topics.

No one bought the like that the US is readying for a longer conflict; the White House cannot hide that something is amiss with the Biden administration.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken had to correct the Sunday comment with a facile explanation spinning what was meant as a regime change or vicious overthrow of Putin as the answer.

It only made the Biden administration look allegedly inept by changing the damaging implication of the statement.

A harsh rebuke from Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov last Sunday said that Russians elect Putin. He then called the words of the US president inappropriate filled with vitriol. He added that more countries other than America and Europe are concerned.

A far-right presidential hopeful in France, Marine Le Pen, said she endorsed Mr. Macron's position. She agreed that the US leader was incorrect, and the French leader was wise not to support it.

In Poland, Joe Biden called Putin a butcher and should be deposed, which many viewed as a foolish remark. French President Emmanuel Macron and his approach to suing for a ceasefire make it hard due to the butcher remark.

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Joe Biden, Vladimir putin
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