The president said it was unlikely that a missile that killed two people in Poland was fired from Russia.

After he convened an emergency meeting of the Group of Seven and NATO leaders in Indonesia Wednesday morning, Biden spoke.

Biden was asked if the missile had been fired from Russia. It is not likely that it was fired from Russia.

It was unclear if Biden was suggesting that the missile had not been fired by Russia. The S-300 air-defense missile system is still in stock.

While in Indonesia for the Group of 20 summit, the president called the Polish president to express his sympathies for the loss of life. Biden promised full U.S support for and assistance with Poland's investigation.

Biden told the allies that there was total unanimity at the table to support the investigation into the attack.

Biden said he would make sure to find out what happened. We will collectively decide our next step as we investigate.

The leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the European Union met with the U.S. president at a large round table in his hotel.

The missile was made in Russia, according to the Polish Foreign Ministry. The president of Poland said that officials didn't know where it came from or who fired it. He said it was probably made in Russia. It would be the first time since the invasion of Ukraine that a NATO country has been hit by a Russian weapon.

The NATO alliance's foundation is based on the principle that an attack against one member is an attack on everyone else.

The leaders condemned the latest series of Russian missile attacks that have targeted the power grid in Ukraine and caused widespread power cuts, according to Biden.

When the world came together at the G-20 to urge de-escalation, Russia continued to escalate in Ukranian. There were a lot of missile attacks in westernUkraine.

The group's final statement was expected to show that most of the nations in the G-20 condemn Russia's invasion.