heard bide ten talk about before, this idea of democracy versus autocracy. how did biden make his case? reporter: jake, if yesterday in kyiv, that surprise visit was a dramatic, deeply similar bottic moment about the war itself, today was to paint a broader picture, underscore the bigger stakes, a larger effort that the president detailed about why this isn t just about ukraine or just about the war, in but many stead about the fate of wercht western democracies, particularly pointing here in warsaw as the president detailed, is about freedom. there s no sweeter word than freedom. there s no nobler goal than freedom, no higher aspiration than freedom. americans know that, and you know it. and all that we do now must be done so our children and grandchildren will know it as well. jake, when you talk to white house advisers, they acknowledge that they understand this war that is on going shows no sign of ending any time soon. the western coalition painstakingly held toget
it s strengthened in large part because of american leadership and because of the messages we re hearing on the world stage. just today, jake, you heard two vintage presentations. you heard vintage vladimir putin and vintage joe biden. from moscow you heard something that was dark, it was sinister, full of lies and misinformation and disinformation, precisely because the russian president has nothing affirmative to offer his people in the face of these battlefield setback and moscow s strategic failure. from joe biden you heard vintage joe biden. it was affirmative. it was crystallizing the stakes and what s at play here. this is about ukraine in the first instance. but what is happening in ukraine is about the rules-based order. countries around the world are watching very closely to what russia is trying to do, but more so, they re watching the way the rest of the world galvanized by hair khan leadership is standing up for ukraine, standing up against russia and doing so with