Harris urged Zelensky on succession plan before invasion
The Vice President of the United States and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris, before Russia invaded Ukraine, urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to develop a "succession plan" in case he was "captured or killed."
9 October 2024 06:56
Information on this topic appeared in the new book by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Bob Woodward, titled "War," with excerpts published by "The Washington Post."
"Now I have to deal with Russia devouring Ukraine?"
According to Woodward, Harris discussed the issue with Zelensky in February 2022 at the Munich Security Conference. At the same time, as the journalist notes, the administration of current U.S. President Joe Biden found it hard to believe that Russian President Vladimir Putin would decide to invade.
When CIA Director William Burns presented Biden with U.S. intelligence data on the impending aggression, the American president called it "madness."
"Oh my God, now I have to deal with Russia devouring Ukraine?" Biden supposedly said.
Earlier, Time magazine wrote that a week before the outbreak of war in Ukraine, Harris refused to provide Zelensky with arms and impose preemptive sanctions on Russia. According to the magazine, the politicians' meeting at the Munich conference set the tone for their future relations, "which were never particularly warm."
Harris will not meet with Putin
In an interview published on Tuesday, Harris stated that "There will be no success in ending that war without Ukraine and the UN Charter participating in what that success looks like." She responded negatively when asked if she would meet with Vladimir Putin to negotiate a diplomatic resolution to the conflict.
She also mentioned that if her opponent in the presidential election from the Republican Party, Donald Trump were the President of the United States, "Putin would be sitting in Kyiv right now," and she called his "peace plan" a capitulation of Ukraine.
Trump has repeatedly stated that he would need 24 hours to end the war in Ukraine because he has good relations with both Putin and Zelensky.
Harris's victory "worst-case scenario"
"The Washington Post" sources among Russian officials reported that the Kremlin hopes Trump will win the presidential election, as it would create a "window of opportunity" to resolve the armed conflict on Russian terms.
Harris's victory is seen in Moscow as the worst possible scenario.