Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un and other world leaders who have not acknowledged a Biden win

Even after some leaders who are aligned with Trump, including Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, joined the congratulatory chorus, Turkey, Russia and others held back, citing Trump’s legal challenges questioning the results.

Here are some of the leaders who have remained silent.

Russian President Vladimir Putin

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said no statement of congratulations was to be offered because “there will be certain legal proceedings which were announced by the incumbent president.”

The decision to hold off could foreshadow frosty relations between Biden and Putin. Their ties are already strained by allegations, which the Kremlin denied, that Russia was behind pro-Trump disinformation campaigns ahead of the 2016 and 2020 elections.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

On Monday, Omer Celik, a spokesman for Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party, said, “We are waiting for the election results to be officially announced because eventually there are objections, other arguments, and things like that.”

The remarks came after days of silence from government officials over an election result that is widely seen as a blow to Erdogan.

Whereas Erdogan’s consolidation of power went unchallenged by Trump, the Turkish government appears concerned that Biden “will reintroduce a democracy and human rights promotion discourse into the bilateral relationship,” according to Asli Aydintasbas, a fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Opposition figures welcomed Biden’s victory. Kemal Kilicdaroglu, one of Erdogan’s most prominent adversaries, said he was looking “forward to strengthening Turkish-American relations and our strategic alliance.”

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador

“With regard to the U.S. election, we are going to wait until all the legal matters have been resolved,” López Obrador said at a news conference Saturday, Reuters reported. “I can’t congratulate one candidate or the other. I want to wait until the electoral process is over.”

The United States is Mexico’s top export market.

“President Trump has been very respectful of us, and we have reached very good agreements, and we thank him because he has not interfered and has respected us,” López Obrador said Saturday, according to the Associated Press.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro

Bolsonaro’s silence on Biden’s victory did not come as a surprise.

Few world leaders have associated themselves more closely with Trump than Bolsonaro, the formerly fringe politician who won the Brazilian presidency in 2018, mimicking many of Trump’s campaign tactics.

“I hope, God willing, to soon appear at the inauguration of President [Trump] in the United States,” Bolsonaro said late last month.

But last week, Bolsonaro appeared to adjust to a new reality. “I am not the most important person in Brazil, just as Trump is not the most important person in the world, as he himself says,” Bolsonaro said Friday.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un

North Korean state media has refrained from making mention of the U.S. election.

As a matter of course, the North Korean government restricts the flow of information on political freedoms elsewhere.

Whereas Trump claims to have enjoyed a “special friendship” with Kim, meeting with him thrice and engaging in diplomatic talks, Biden’s election could be an unwelcome development for Pyongyang. North Korean state media has said Biden deserves “merciless punishment” for insulting the country’s dignity.

Chinese President Xi Jinping

“I noticed that Mr. Biden has declared victory of the election,” China Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said Monday, stopping short of acknowledging a result. “We understand that the presidential election result will be determined following U.S. laws and procedures.”

As Biden led the vote count last week, a senior ministry official hinted that China was eager to turn a new page. The next U.S. administration should “meet halfway” with Beijing on matters of disagreement and collaborate whenever possible, Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng said in remarks that some state media outlets framed as a desire to move past the rancor and trade wars of the Trump years. But many in Beijing fear that Biden will take a tough line on China — perhaps more so than Trump.

Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa

Moving past the Trump presidency might prove awkward for Jansa, who prematurely congratulated Trump last week and has doubled down since.

“It’s pretty clear that American people have elected @realDonaldTrump and @Mike_Pence for #4moreyears. More delays and facts denying from [the mainstream media], bigger the final triumph for #POTUS,” Jansa wrote on Twitter last week.

He has shown no indication that he will follow other European Union leaders in acknowledging a Biden win and has instead continued to cast doubts on the election outcome.

But on Tuesday, he tweeted a different sort of message to the United States: a congratulations to the U.S. Marine Corps on its 245th birthday.

This report has been updated.

Isabelle Khurshudyan in Moscow, Simon Denyer in Tokyo, Terrence McCoy in Rio de Janeiro, Gerry Shih in Taipei, Eva Dou in Seoul and Kareem Fahim in Istanbul contributed to this report.

Source: WP