Biden and Putin agree relations are abysmal. Will their meeting change anything?

FILE - In this March 10, 2011, file photo, then Vice President Joe Biden, left, shakes hands with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia. President Joe Biden will hold a summit with Vladimir Putin next month in Geneva, a face-to-face meeting between the two leaders that comes amid escalating tensions between the U.S. and Russia in the first months of the Biden administration. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)
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President Biden agrees with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on at least one thing: Relations between their two nations are at a very low ebb.

Both said as much in interviews leading up to Wednesday's meeting in Geneva, which comes amid tensions over myriad issues, including a spate of cyberattacks emanating from within Russia; Putin's military adventurism along his country's border with Ukraine; and his imprisonment of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who survived poisoning with a Russian nerve agent.

Biden arrives at the summit fresh from enthusiastic meetings with allies welcoming the return of the United States to conventional multilateral diplomacy. He aims to use that support to present a united front to challenge Putin. At the same time, he acknowledged the difficulty in reversing the Russian president's policies, which seem impervious to a litany of U.S. economic sanctions and the expulsions of diplomats.

Biden knows he faces a formidable foe.

"I'm going to make clear to [Putin] that there are areas where we can cooperate if he chooses, and if he chooses not to cooperate and acts in a way that he has in the past, relative to cybersecurity and other activities, then we will respond," Biden said Monday at a Brussels news conference following a day of meetings with NATO allies.

He described Putin as a "worthy adversary" to whom he would delineate the "red lines."

Asked what his response would be if Navalny were to die in a Russian prison, Biden said it would be "another indication that Russia has little or no intention of abiding by basic fundamental human rights."

Russia is also holding several U.S. citizens in its prisons under what their supporters claim are trumped-up charges.

Speaking earlier in England, where he convened with the Group of 7 wealthiest democracies, Biden acknowledged the difficulties in reining in Putin.

"He's Vladimir Putin. There’s no guarantee you can change a person’s behavior," Biden told reporters Sunday. "Autocrats have enormous power and they don’t have to answer to a public."

The White House confirmed there will be no post-summit news conference, with Biden and Putin standing side by side. Administration officials are wary of elevating Putin to Biden's level by affording him such a platform.

"This is not a contest about who can do better in front of a press conference or who can embarrass one another," Biden said Sunday. "It's about making myself very clear what the conditions are to get a better relationship."

The lack of a formal news conference is also one way in which Biden's interaction with Putin will contrast sharply with what occurred in Helsinki in July 2018. In a stunning moment in the annals of world summitry, then-President Trump stood by the former KGB officer and Russia's longest-serving leader since Josef Stalin and appeared to eagerly acquiesce to his claims. At one point, Trump said he accepted Putin's denials over having interfered in U.S. elections despite U.S. intelligence evidence to the contrary.

Nor will Biden meet with Putin alone, as Trump did, conversing with Putin for two hours without aides or note takers in the room. The two leaders aren't likely to exchange gifts, as when Putin gave Trump a soccer ball. And, above all, this U.S. president will not publicly deny and excuse Russia's interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

One potential similarity to 2018: a lack of concrete results, actions or new policies.

"They just want to arrest the free fall so they're not in this escalation cycle, while also conveying they're being firm on everything from cyberattacks to incursions in Ukraine," said Ben Rhodes, a former national security advisor to President Obama. "This is not the kind of summit where you have a bunch of announcements. It's just to show that the bilateral relationship isn't unraveling, and it's not really guaranteed they'll be able to show that."

Russian President Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin, shown on Saturday. Putin is likely to test Biden's patience as well as the president's goal of having a predictable rival in Moscow. (Associated Press)

Putin, who uses his confrontation with the West as a way to distract his citizenry from a flagging economy and other domestic woes, is likely to test Biden's patience as well as the president's goal of having a predictable rival in Moscow, experts said.

"Putin is predictable only in his desire to keep the initiative in his confrontation with the West, so he is apt to strike at the first opportune moment," Pavel K. Baev, a Russia specialist, said in an analysis for the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think tank.

Biden, who affirmed in March his past characterizations of Putin being "a killer," said again Sunday that his review of U.S. intelligence led him to conclude that Russia did in fact attempt to help Trump in 2016. And in recent weeks, amid a spate of cyber- and ransomware attacks on U.S. infrastructure from inside Russia, the president and top aides have put the onus on Putin to rein in the criminal groups behind them.

The Biden administration has already imposed economic sanctions on Russia for ongoing cyberattacks and the poisoning of Navalny.

"We're not looking for conflict," Biden said Sunday in England. "We are looking to resolve those actions which we think are inconsistent with international norms."

Beyond delivering what he said would be a "very straightforward" message, Biden said he hopes to find areas in which the U.S. and Russia can work in tandem — potentially on arms control, the Middle East and climate change. Biden also intimated that Russia had "its own dilemmas," pointing to its economy and COVID-19, as well as in Syria and Libya.

Biden also said he was encouraged by Putin's comments that Russia is prepared to extradite cybercriminals to the U.S. on a reciprocal basis. However, national security advisor Jake Sullivan later clarified that Biden was not advocating an exchange, but that he welcomed Russia's willingness to extradite suspects to the U.S., while the U.S. would prosecute American suspects in its own system.

Putin's comments came in an interview last week with NBC News in which he sang Trump's praises but said he thought he could still work with Biden.

Then-President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin walk together
On June 28, 2019, then-President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin walk together to a group photo at the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan. (Associated Press)

Characterizing Trump as "an extraordinary individual, talented individual" and "colorful" outsider, Putin said the 78-year-old successor is "radically different from Trump because President Biden is a career man. He has spent virtually his entire adulthood in politics."

Putin dismissed Biden's labeling him a killer as "Hollywood macho," and he suggested there are "some advantages, some disadvantages" in working with a more predictable counterpart in Washington.

"There will not be any impulse-based movements on behalf of the sitting U.S. president," he predicted.

Trump — still barred from social media over incitement of the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot after refusing to accept his election loss — has issued a number of statements since Biden embarked last week on his first overseas trip as president.

Trump touted a "great and productive" Helsinki meeting with Putin and lambasted the "Fake News" for its critical portrayal of his performance. And he re-affirmed what he said standing beside Putin: that he trusts the Russian leader's denial of 2016 election interference over the U.S. intelligence officials who confirmed it.

"Good luck to Biden in dealing with President Putin," he said in conclusion, "don't fall asleep during the meeting and please give him my warmest regards."

Stokols reported from Brussels, Wilkinson from Washington.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.