Ukraine and Poland stick together, as Biden defers to Merkel on Putin’s pipeline

The extraordinary, slow-motion dispute between the U.S. and its Eastern European allies reached a new low this afternoon.

As the Biden administration prepared to officially announce a deal on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline with the German government, the White House announced the date of a highly anticipated meeting between President Biden and his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelensky.

That meeting will take place on August 30, a month later than was initially discussed, and long after Biden’s June 16 summit with Russian president Vladimir Putin, who continues to prosecute a shadowy proxy war against Ukraine and build up military forces on the country’s border.

Then, after the deal was unveiled, the foreign ministers of Ukraine and Poland issued a joint statement declaring their opposition to the deal, arguing that the security crisis in Europe has been “deepened by the resignation from efforts to stop the launch” of Nord Stream 2.

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