President Joe Biden on Monday said he is not taking back his comments that Russian President Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power,” adding that it does not mean the administration has changed its policy regarding the Russian regime.

“I’m not walking anything back,” Biden said. “The fact of the matter is I was expressing the moral outrage I felt toward the way Putin is dealing and the actions of this man, which is just brutality.”

Biden noted that he felt that outrage after meeting with refugees in Warsaw, Poland. 

“I want to make it clear, I wasn’t then nor am I now articulating a policy change,” he said. “I was expressing moral outrage that I feel. I make no apologies for it.”

The president also said he doesn’t believe his comments complicate the diplomatic efforts to end the war or escalate the hostilities.

“What complicates the situation at the moment is the escalatory efforts of Putin to continue to engage in carnage,” Biden said, “the kind of behavior that makes the whole world say, ‘My God, what is this man doing?”’

Biden was asked whether he would meet with Putin and did not directly answer yes or no, saying it would be conditional on what the Russian leader would want to discuss. Putin has not called for a meeting between them.

— Rebecca Morin

Latest developments

►Retaliatory visa measures against “unfriendly countries” are being developed in Russia, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

►Irpin, a sprawling Kyiv suburban city of 60,000, has been liberated from Russian forces, Mayor Alexander Markushin said. “We understand that our city will be attacked more; we will protect it. Irpin is Ukraine,” he said.

►Kyiv schools reopened for online learning Monday. Teachers were told not to overwhelm students already under strain from the war.

►Russia, releasing information on its losses in Ukraine for the first time in weeks, says 1,351 servicemen have been killed and 3,825 have been injured as of Friday. NATO has estimated Russian deaths at several thousands while acknowledging the true number is difficult to determine. 

►The Oscars took 30 seconds of silence for Ukraine, beginning with a tribute from Ukrainian-born Mila Kunis.

Pentagon official says Russian ground forces no longer advancing

Russian troops have ceased making advances on the ground toward the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and appear to have refocused their aims in eastern Ukraine, a senior U.S. Defense official said Monday.

The Russians appear intent on cutting off Ukrainian forces in the Donbas region, according to the official, who discussed intelligence assessments on condition of anonymity. The Russian move could also be aimed at establishing authority there to gain leverage in negotiations for a cease-fire or peace deal, the official said.