@Reggie Belafonte
You insist on Biden's key role in escalating the Ukraine conflict in 2022, but that's only the narrative pushed by Trump's PR team and people like you. In Ukraine, what you say would be met with bewilderment and laughter, and similarly in Russia.
By the way, in his interview with Tucker Carlson, Putin gave a detailed explanation of what he sees as the causes of the Ukraine-Russia conflict. If I'm not mistaken, Putin didn't mention Biden at all in that interview. Only later, after Trump's election as U.S. president, did Putin start flattering Trump. But Putin is being disingenuous here.
Look at the bigger picture. After the USSR's collapse, Ukrainian nationalists like UNA-UNSO and others emerged from the shadows and gradually seized power. The West bet on these nationalists, supporting them with money, PR, and diplomacy.
Then came the "Euromaidan" in 2004, essentially a state coup. Yushchenko came to power, and Ukrainian nationalism began to grow exponentially.
Then Yanukovych won legitimate elections, but he wasn't even allowed to finish his term. The "Euromaidan" of 2014 began, resulting in an armed state coup, and Yanukovych fled to Russia.
After Yanukovych's flight in February 2014 and the formation of a new government in Kyiv, Putin began using the term "junta" to describe the new Ukrainian authorities.
He claimed there was an "unconstitutional coup" organized by "radical nationalists" with Western support. For example, in his speech on March 18, 2014, announcing the annexation of Crimea, Putin spoke of "nationalists, neo-Nazis, and Russophobes" who had seized power in Kyiv, calling their actions a "coup." But soon his rhetoric changed, and he recognized the legitimacy of the government he had called the "Kyiv junta" by signing the Minsk agreements.
Later, Merkel admitted that the Minsk agreements were a ruse to deceive Putin and give Ukraine time to prepare for a full-scale war with Russia to restore the 1991 borders.
Now history is repeating itself. From the start of the special military operation, Putin's rhetoric was similar to 2014. In his speech on February 24, 2022, he stated:
"The goal is to protect people who have been subjected to bullying and genocide by the Kyiv regime for eight years. To achieve this, we will strive for the demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine, as well as bringing to justice those who committed numerous bloody crimes against civilians, including citizens of the Russian Federation" (kremlin.ru).
However, Russian troops began withdrawing from the Kyiv region by late March 2022, completing it by April 6, 2022. The Kremlin called this a "gesture of goodwill" through spokesman Dmitry Peskov. This withdrawal was perceived by many as a retreat from the stated goals, undermining trust in official rhetoric.
Then came the "difficult decision" on Kherson, which was declared "forever with Russia," and the "humiliating retreat" in the Kherson and Kharkiv region, where Sergei Kiriyenko stated in 2022, "Russia is here forever." These bold statements were not backed by actions, increasing disappointment among those who hoped for the protection of Russians in Ukraine.

Ultimately, the protection of ethnic Russians in Ukraine proved as illusory as the slogan "Russia is here forever."
It's not hard to guess what happened to those people who believed Russia, obtained Russian Federation passports, and didn't manage to flee to Russia before these regions were reclaimed by Ukraine.
Do you see what Putin said? What goals and objectives did he articulate for the special military operation? According to Putin, he wanted "t
o protect people who have been subjected to bullying and genocide by the Kyiv regime for eight years." How is Biden relevant to what Putin claims the "Kyiv regime" did in Ukraine for eight years? How is Biden relevant to the fact that, since 1991, immediately after the USSR's collapse, Ukraine has been systematically and deliberately taken over by Ukrainian nationalists, descendants of those who fought for Hitler, with the West's full support?
How, with all this, do you manage to point the finger solely at Biden?