Biden surrounded by Republicans after US missile attack on Russia, now strategy to remove him through impeachment!

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Washington: Republican Party leaders have targeted President Joe Biden after he allowed Russia to attack Ukraine with US missiles. Surrogates of the newly elected president have accused Biden of trying to incite a ‘Third World War’ over his decision to allow limited attacks on Russia. At the same time, the former top UN war crimes prosecutor Dr. Francis Boyle has created a stir by revealing the impeachment bill against Biden to prevent the Third World War. However, no such official demand has been made by the Republicans so far. 

 

 

President-elect Donald Trump’s allies have lashed out at Joe Biden for his decision to allow Ukraine to use long-range US missiles to strike inside Russia for the first time, a move Russia has described as a deadly escalation of the war, The Guardian reports. 

Accused of trying to incite “Third World War” 

Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr., hardline congressional Republicans, and other supporters have accused Biden of trying to ignite “World War III” before Trump takes office in January. “It seems the Military Industrial Complex wants to make sure they start World War III before my father has a chance to make peace and save lives,” Donald Trump Jr. (Trump’s son) wrote in a post on X. 

Richard Grenello, Trump’s nominee for secretary of state and former acting director of national intelligence in his first term, wrote: “No one anticipated that Biden would escalate the war in Ukraine during the transition period. It’s as if he were starting a whole new war. Now everything has changed – all previous calculations are meaningless.” Other Republicans who spoke out include far-right congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene and Utah senator Mike Lee, who said: “Joe Biden has just set the stage for World War III. Let’s all pray it doesn’t come to that.”

US State Department defends Biden.

State Department spokesman Matthew Miller defended Biden’s decision during a press briefing on Monday, saying: “[The] American people elected Joe Biden not to a three-year and 10-month term, but to a four-year term, and we will use every day of our term to pursue foreign policy interests that we believe are in the best interests of the American people.”

Whether to allow strikes in Ukraine has been under discussion for months between the White House, the State Department, and European allies. Currently, the decision to allow limited strikes using US-supplied Atakam missiles would allow Ukrainian forces to target Russian military infrastructure in the Kursk region, where the US has said more than 10,000 North Korean troops have joined Russian forces preparing for a counter-attack. 

Trump wants the war to end.

The White House decision will create a dilemma for the incoming administration over whether to immediately withdraw the authorization after Trump is inaugurated or retain it as a potential bargaining chip in negotiations. While Trump and his allies have broadly denounced the stepping up of military support and financial aid for the Ukrainian government, Trump wants to end the Russia-Ukraine war. But analysts said it was unclear whether Trump would take immediate steps to reverse the decision regarding long-range missiles.