Putin And Biden Signal Chilly Relations To Come

Russian President Vladimir Putin, photographed at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Moscow in 2017, has seen U.S. relations reach their lowest point since the Cold War. By waiting over a month to congratulate President-elect Joe Biden, Putin tried to show strength and that “he’s ready to take the fight all the way to Washington,” Russian political commentator Konstantin Eggert says.

Ivan Sekretarev / AP

As the news broke in November that Joe Biden had won enough states to be declared president-elect, congratulations poured in from world leaders. Russian President Vladimir Putin was conspicuously absent from the list of well-wishers — and waited for more than a month, until the Electoral College vote last week, before congratulating him.

“It’s classic Putin,” says Konstantin Eggert, a Russian political commentator. “By not congratulating Biden for so long, he — in his eyes at least — proved that he’s tough, he’s strong, and, if need be, he’s ready to take the fight all the way to Washington.”

The two leaders have a history going back to when Biden was President Barack Obama’s vice president. According to Biden, he once told Putin he had looked into his eyes and didn’t think Putin had a soul. During the presidential election campaign, Biden called Russia “the biggest threat to America.” After a massive hack of U.S. government agencies was blamed on Russia this month, the president-elect said there would be costs for the perpetrators.