(CNN) — President Joe Biden left this Wednesday for Brussels to participate in a series of emergency summits with Western allies that will focus on supporting Ukraine and showing cooperation to punish Russia.
Biden hopes to come out of an intense day of meetings on Thursday with some new actions to announce together with his partners: new sanctions on Russia, measures to cut off its oil and gas profits or new announcements of military or financial assistance to Ukraine.
What is not on the table, as he has repeatedly said, is sending US troops to Ukraine.
Biden and his Western allies have largely ruled out using their own forces in Ukraine and rebuffed calls from Zelensky to establish a no-fly zone or provide fighter jets.
Even a Polish proposal to establish an international peacekeeping force in Ukraine, which Warsaw is expected to raise during Thursday’s meeting, has been met with skepticism from US officials, who say Biden opposes any scenario. pit US troops directly once morest Russian troops.
The background to Biden’s stance
During his State of the Union address in early March, the US president. emphasized that US troops would not fight on the ground and assured Americans of their security in the midst of the war in Ukraine.
“Let me be clear: our forces are not and will not be involved in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine,” he said.
Earlier, when he announced sanctions once morest Russia for the start of its invasion, Biden was careful to make it clear that the United States was not being aggressive towards Russia.
“Let me be clear: these are totally defensive moves on our part. We have no intention of fighting Russia.” said Biden.
In early February, Biden told NBC News that he would not consider any scenario that would include sending US troops to evacuate Americans in Ukraine.
“There isn’t. That’s a world war if the Americans and Russia start shooting at each other,” he said.
While Biden’s clarification that US troops would not engage offensively may help avoid a US-Russian conflict, critics noted that he also made it clear to Russian President Vladimir Putin that his forces would face fewer obstacles in the war. his invasion.
“Biden diluted our most important source of influence in this crisis,” said Ian Brzezinski, a former Pentagon official under President George W. Bush, a The New York Times a early this month.
There are US troops in countries bordering Ukraine
One of the main factors in Putin’s invasion is their fear that Ukraine will become part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)which was formed following World War II to contain the Soviet Union and has expanded in recent decades to incorporate the countries of the former Soviet bloc.
Ukraine borders NATO member countries from Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania. If Russia threatened one of these countries, the United States would be bound by the agreement to defend them.
Biden said the US would stick to the principle of NATO’s Article 5, which says that an attack on one NATO country is an attack on all member countries. “As I have made abundantly clear, the United States and our allies will defend every inch of NATO country territory with the full force of our collective power,” he said.
Movement of troops within NATO countries
Although Biden pledged not to send US troops to Ukraine, in recent weeks the United States sent more soldiers and fighter planes to Eastern European countriessuch as Poland and Romania.
During his State of the Union address, the US president. assured that US troops were deployed in Europe not to fight in Ukraine, “but to defend our NATO allies in case Putin decides to push further west.”
“For that purpose, we have mobilized US ground forces, air squadrons, ship deployments to protect NATO countries, including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia,” he added.
Opposition to further US involvement
Americans are wary of US involvement in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, according to polls conducted in the run-up to the Russian invasion.
In a recent AP-NORC poll, only 26% of Americans believe the United States should play a significant role in the Russia-Ukraine situation. About half, 52%, said they should play a minor role, and another 20% said they should play no role at all.
A third of Democrats (32%) and 22% of Republicans wanted the United States to play a major role. Independents were the most likely to say that the United States should play no role; 32% thought so, compared to 22% of Republicans and 14% of Democrats.
In light of the polls, Biden and US officials would have to be very careful regarding engaging the public before changing the administration’s position on the commitment of US troops.
CNN’s Barbara Starr and Ariel Edwards-Levy contributed to this report. Updated March 3.