Biden will meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the second day of the NATO summit on Wednesday. Turkey agreed the day before to drop its opposition to the NATO bids of Sweden and Finland, and a formal invitation is expected Wednesday, putting the alliance on the cusp of growing to 32 members and highlighting how Russia’s war in Ukraine is transforming regional security. In a phone call with Erdogan on Tuesday, Biden encouraged him to “seize this moment” and get a deal done, a senior U.S. official said.
In eastern Ukraine, Russian forces are making incremental gains as they try to encircle the strategic city of Lysychansk, Britain’s Defense Ministry said in its Wednesday update. Lysychansk’s twin city, Severodonetsk, fell to Russia on Saturday.