U.S. Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday denounced Vladimir Putin's "pure aggression" in Ukraine, warning that Western nations must be prepared to respond with further sanctions against Russia if necessary.
Condemning the Russian president's actions abroad and repression at home, Biden said facing down Putin was "critical to checking further aggression down the road."
"We're looking for him to, in our view, act more rationally and if he does not, we will continue to confront what I characterize as pure aggression," he said in a speech at a Washington think tank.
In March 2014, Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region after a pro-European government came to power in Kiev.
Since then, pro-Russian forces have launched a rebellion in eastern Ukraine, destabilizing the country.
Biden urged European leaders meeting in June to keep sanctions on Russia in place until the terms of a ceasefire agreement are met.
"Sanctions on Russia must and will remain in place," he said, adding that allies must be ready to mete out more sanctions if "Russia again moves beyond the line of contact."
He said Putin was "at his core" practical, "he will push as far as he can... until he reaches a resistance."
"President Putin is wagering that he has greater staying power," Biden added. "In Ukraine, he's betting that he can outlast the current reformist pro-European government and undermine it economically."
Biden said the debate over sending lethal defensive weapons to Ukraine was "worth having," while stopping short of endorsing the controversial move.
Some believe that providing even defensive weapons to Kiev would escalate a conflict against Russia that Ukraine has no chance of winning.
Biden also framed the crisis as a test for democracies, with far-reaching implications around the world.
"What happens in Ukraine and how the West and the world responds has, I think, consequential implications for the nature of the international order," Biden said at the Brookings Institution.
"China and many other nations are watching very closely how the world responds."
Biden accused the Kremlin of "rattling the cage," funding destabilizing political parties across Europe, nurturing a "hyper-aggressive state-sponsored Russian propaganda machine" and using corruption as a tool of foreign policy.
The U.S. State Department meanwhile said Wednesday that Washington was providing an additional $18 million in humanitarian aid to help victims of the conflict in eastern Ukraine and Crimea.
The assistance bump was announced by Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Population, Refugees, and Migration Simon Henshaw during a trip to Kiev on May 23.
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