Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday called for US President Joe Biden to visit his country, and said he believes the commander-in-chief will make the trip.
The wartime leader also said his government had ‘substantial evidence’ that Russia’s troops are committing genocide in Ukraine, as more and more western leaders accuse Moscow’s autocrat leader Vladimir Putin of war crimes.
‘I think he will,’ the Ukrainian president answered.
He quickly added: ‘It’s his decision of course, and about the safety situation.’
‘But I think he’s the leader of the United States, and that’s why he should come here to see.’
Late last week Biden confirmed that his administration was discussing a possible Kyiv trip by a senior official and was ‘making that decision now.’ He told reporters that he wanted to go himself.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki backtracked on the president’s comment just hours later during a taping of the Pod Save America Podcast.
Psaki said it’s true Biden was ‘ready to go.’ But, she added, ‘we are not sending the president to Ukraine’ — a policy line that senior administration officials have held consistently through Russia’s war.

Zelensky said he understood there are concerns about the ‘safety situation’ but claimed the president of the United States should see the conflict firsthand

Volunteers load bodies of civilians killed in Bucha onto a truck to be taken to a morgue for investigation. Zelensky said there is ‘substantial evidence’ of genocide there and other towns around Ukraine
It comes after a slew of NATO leaders descended upon Kyiv in recent weeks, some even seeing the horrors found in the capital’s suburbs after Kremlin troops’ retreat firsthand.
Multiple American leaders, including Biden and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, accused Putin and his soldiers of ‘genocide.’ British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it ‘doesn’t look far short’ of the heinous crime.
‘I have the same opinion as President Biden, and I immediately saw what was happening here. Especially what happened in Bucha and in the east of our country,’ Zelensky said in his Sunday interview.
‘I speak about this because Russia calls it a military operation, and not a war. But look what happened in Bucha. It’s clear that is not even a war — it’s a genocide.’
Biden has on multiple occasions expressed interest in visiting Ukraine, though his officials have backtracked each time
Scenes of devastation and carnage were revealed to the world as Russian troops retreated from Kyiv’s suburbs, with western intelligence pointing to an aim of regrouping to take over Ukraine’s east.
‘They just shot people in the streets. People were riding bicycles, taking the bus, or just walking down the street. There were corpses lying in the streets. These were not soldiers. They were civilians,’ Zelensky fumed.
‘They bound their hands. They forced children to watch as they raped their mothers. Then they threw them in a well or in mass graves, children, adults, the elderly.’
He continued, ‘We have substantial evidence that points to this being a genocide, audio and video where they talk about just how much they hate us.’
Zelensky said he was caught off guard by the magnitude of the hatred he felt.
‘I did not even know that there was such hatred of the Russian military for the Ukrainian people,’ Kyiv’s leader said.
‘They say they’re going to destroy us. Just to steal a toilet and a washing machine from an apartment, they shot an entire family. That is genocide.’
The heads of Lithuania, Latvia, Poland and Estonia took a train to Kyiv last week where they met with Zelensky.
And earlier this month, the UK’s Johnson stunned the world by appearing in Kyiv with Zelensky, after a secretly-planned train trip to the war-damaged capital city.
The European Union’s Ursula Von Der Leyen toured Kyiv and Bucha the day before.
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