By PTI
RZESZOW: Just 60 miles from Ukraine, President Joe Biden saluted Poland on Friday for welcoming more than 2 million refugees who have fled Russia’s invasion.
Then he met with humanitarian experts on the ground about what will be needed to mitigate the growing suffering.
Biden said he had hoped to get even closer to the border but was prevented because of security concerns.
Still, he said he wanted to visit Poland to underscore that the assistance it is providing is of “enormous consequence” as Europe experiences the biggest refugee crisis since World War II.
“It’s not stopping,” Biden said of the devastation in Ukraine.
“It’s like something out of a science fiction movie.”
Biden also visited with some of the thousands of US troops who have been sent near Poland’s border to assist with the humanitarian emergency and to bolster the US military presence on the eastern flank of NATO.
More than 3.5 million Ukrainians have fled the country since the Feb 24 invasion, including about 2.2 million to Poland, according to the United Nations.
Within a few days, the number of refugees displaced from Ukraine since last month will exceed the number of Syrians routed from their homes over years of conflict after a 2011 uprising turned into a full-scale war, said Samantha Power, the US Agency for International Development administrator.
The American military commitment in Poland was apparent as soon as Air Force One touched down, rolling past Patriot missile batteries.
More hardware, including heavy trucks and other equipment painted with dark green and brown camouflage, was present at the airport.
A nearby convention centre serves as a base for the US Army’s 82nd Airborne Division.
Polish President Andrzej Duda joined Biden for a briefing with humanitarian experts.
Duda, through an interpreter, thanked Biden for his support.
He said the Poles see the Ukrainians they are receiving as their “guests”.
“This is the name we want to apply to them,” Duda said.
“We do not want to call them refugees. They are our guests, our brothers, our neighbors from Ukraine, who today are in a very difficult situation.”
Biden’s first stop was with 82nd Airborne troops, at a barbershop and dining facility where he invited himself to sit down and share some pizza.
The Americans are serving alongside Polish troops.
With the troops, he shared an anecdote about visiting his late son, Beau Biden, while he was deployed in Baghdad and going by his mother’s maiden name so as not to draw attention to himself.
The president jokingly razzed one service member about his standard-issue short haircut and seriously praised the troops, too.
“You are the finest fighting force in the world and that’s not hyperbole,” Biden said.
He later addressed a group of soldiers in more formal remarks, telling them the nation “owes you big.”
He also borrowed the words of the late Secretary of State Madeline Albright to underscore their place in a fragile moment for the US and its European allies.
“The secretary of state used to have an expression.”
She said, ‘We are the essential nation,'” Biden told the troops.
“I don’t want to sound philosophical here, but you are in midst of a fight between democracy and an oligarch.”
Biden will be in Warsaw on Saturday for further talks with Duda and others.
The Polish leader had planned to welcome him at the airport on Friday, but his plane was delayed by a technical problem.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Biden was looking to hear directly from the American troops and humanitarian experts about the situation on the ground and “what further steps need to be taken to make sure that we’re investing” US dollars in the right place.
Biden, who spent Thursday lobbying US allies to stay united against Russia, speculated that what he sees in Poland “will reinforce my commitment to have the United States make sure we are a major piece of dealing with the relocation of all those folks, as well as humanitarian assistance needed both inside Ukraine and outside Ukraine”.
Speaking in Brussels after meetings with other world leaders, Biden said he had visited many war zones and refugee camps during his political career and “it’s devastating” to see young children without parents or men and women with blank looks on their faces wondering, “My God, where am I? What’s going to happen to me?” He said Poland, Romania and Germany shouldn’t be left on their own to deal with the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.
“This is an international responsibility,” Biden said shortly after he announced $1 billion in additional assistance to help Ukrainian refugees.
He also announced that the United States would take in up to 100,000 of those refugees.
The White House has said most Ukrainian refugees eventually want to return home.
Biden said the United States is obligated to be “engaged and do all we can to ease the suffering and pain of innocent women and children and men” who make it across the border.
He said, “I plan on attempting to see those folks. I hope I get to see a lot of people.”
Some refugees interviewed Friday at the train station in Przemysl, Poland, said they hoped to eventually return to Ukraine.
They also weren’t very hopeful about Biden’s visit.
“For sure I do not have any expectations” about Biden, said a tearful Ira Satula, 32, from Kremenchug.
Satula was grateful for all the support and Poland’s warm reception.
“But home is home, and I hope we’ll be there soon,” Satula said.
Olga Antonovna, 68, from Chernigov, said “it’s really 50-50″ that Biden will help enough.”
“I think that we needed help a long time ago, long before,” she said.
Sullivan said Biden will give a speech Saturday on “the stakes of this moment, the urgency of the challenge that lies ahead, what the conflict in Ukraine means for the world”.
First Lady Jill Biden was scheduled to travel to St Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Tennessee on Friday, a visit expected to include meetings with Ukrainian children with cancer and their families fleeing the war and seeking treatment in the US.
Biden’s afternoon visit to the Memphis hospital is the first leg of a trip Friday that also includes travel to Colorado for a Democratic National Committee finance event in Denver, the White House said.
Her visit to St Jude, considered a leading researcher of cancer and other life-threatening diseases that affect children, is part of her and President Joe Biden’s so-called Cancer Moonshot effort, which aims to reduce the cancer death rate by at least 50% over the next 25 years.
Improving the lives of children with cancer is a main goal of St Jude, founded by late actor Danny Thomas in 1962.
Using mostly private donations, families with children who are patients at St Jude never receive a bill for treatment, travel, housing and food.
Thomas’ daughter, actress Marlo Thomas, is St Jude’s national outreach director.
Jill Biden will meet with a cancer survivor, tour a laboratory and receive a briefing on St Jude’s research programmes, the White House said.
Then, she will visit privately with Ukrainian pediatric cancer patients and their relatives.
On Monday, St Jude received four Ukrainian children, ages nine months to 9 years old.
In addition to receiving cancer treatment, the children also will get therapy to address their psychological, emotional and cultural needs, the hospital said.
After Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, St Jude teamed up with foundations in Poland to evacuate children with cancer from the war zone, St Jude President and CEO James Downing said.
The collaborative has helped more than 600 patients by translating medical records and coordinating convoys from the Ukrainian city of Lviv to the Unicorn Marian Wilemski Clinic, a summer resort converted into a triage centre in Poland.
From there, sick children have been transported to cancer centres in Europe, Canada and the US, Downing said.
The four St Jude patients travelled aboard a US government-operated medical transport aircraft from Krakow, along with a St Jude doctor who had been in Poland with them, the hospital said.
A second group of Ukrainian patients could arrive at the hospital next week, Downing said.
The US has granted patients and their families accelerated immigration parole status, Downing said.
In 2019, St Jude began working with the government and hospitals in Ukraine to assess the level of care they could provide.
Ties were established with four Ukrainian hospitals and other entities in Poland, Moldova and Romania, Downing said.
Within hours of the Russian invasion, St Jude was asking its partners how it could help, Downing said.
“In those early hours of the war, it was clear that, over time, children were going to have to be evacuated,” Downing said.
Downing said he knows of at least two children who have died in the process of moving from Ukraine to Poland.
“It is a journey that is life-threatening, in and of itself,” Downing said.
“I think it was Marlo who said these children face two wars, the war of fighting cancer and the war in their homeland.”
Part of the drive to help Ukrainian children with cancer involves translating their medical records.
St Jude established a network of 200 translators across the world who work on patient records.
A Memphis doctor, Lana Yanishevski, and her husband Yuri have been involved in that effort.
The Jewish couple fled anti-Semitism in Ukraine and arrived in Memphis in 1991.
They received asylum and have become US citizens.
Lana is a paediatrician and Yuri works as an engineer for ALSAC, St Jude’s fundraising arm.
With help from Yuri, who converts photographed and emailed medical charts into a more easily-readable format, Lana translates them from Russian or Ukrainian into English.
She then sends them to St Jude, which distributes them to the proper hospitals.
During a Zoom interview with The Associated Press, Lana held up a medical chart for a child who has an inoperable brain tumour and is under palliative care.
She does not know the child’s location.
“No hope for survival, and then he’s dealing with war,” Lana said.
“Imagine those parents.”
Lana and Yuri said they have felt depressed and helpless as they’ve watched the war unfold in Kyiv, where they lived and still have friends and relatives.
But now, they feel like they are making a tangible difference.
“That was kind of like a light inside me, against all this darkness,” Yuri Yanishevski said.
“It makes me feel great, makes me feel useful.”