Biden told reporters Monday that he had insisted on a statement from last week, in which he said Putin “could not stay in power,” adding that he did not apologize for the comments, which many interpreted as US. . in favor of regime change in Russia. The White House was later forced to clarify, after Biden faced criticism from many quarters for “provoking Russia.” Responding to previous comments, Biden said: “It’s more of an ambition than anything else. He should not be in power. It does not exist – I mean, people like him should not rule countries, but they do. “The fact is that they do, but that does not mean I can not express my anger at it.” “I was talking to the Russian people. “The last part of the speech was to talk to the Russian people, to tell them what we thought,” Biden told reporters. The answer was in line with Mr Biden’s fraudulent leaflet, which contained notes printed on a small piece of paper entitled “Tough Discussions on Putin’s Questions and Answers.” The scam sheet had possible bold questions about his remarks and about NATO, along with hints for the 79-year-old to answer. “If you did not support regime change, what did you mean? Can you clarify? ” mentioned one of the questions. “I was expressing the moral outrage I felt about this man’s actions,” wrote the point of discussion below the question. “I did not articulate a policy change.” Biden’s printed paper shows discussion points related to his comments on Vladimir Putin and NATO (EPA) Asked about NATO unity, Biden’s point of view said: “No, NATO has never been more united.” Mr Biden had previously been seen holding a cheat sheet during his first press conference as president last year, which included snapshots of journalists present and whom he planned to invite, as well as statistics on the infrastructure bill. However, he was criticized for remaining wrong in some of the facts.