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US President Donald Trump and his vice-president, J.D. Vance, are spinning Fridayâs Oval Office clash with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a show of American strength towards an ungrateful supplicant. However, their joint dressing down of Zelensky will go down in history and live in infamy as a shameful moment of American betrayal.
Trump and Vance berated the leader of a nation thatâs been fighting for its existence for three years. âHave you said âthank youâ once?” Vance asked Zelensky. In fact, Zelensky has thanked the US, as well as Trump, several times since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his war of aggression against Ukraine, and he did so again after the meeting.Â
Also Read: A deal between Trump and Putin wonât ease global energy costs much
Itâs just that Zelensky always adds that he needs even more support for his country to survive, and more security guarantees in any future peace negotiations to deter Putin. As Zelensky pointed out during the meeting, Putin has broken previous ceasefires.
That caveat was too much for Trump. âItâs going to be very hard to do business like this,” he told Zelensky. âYouâve got to be more thankful,” Trump continued. âBecause let me tell you, you donât have the cards. With us, you have the cards, but without us you donât have any cards.”
That observation is manifestly true: Without US support, Ukraine really is desperate, even as other Western allies such as France and Britain (whose leaders also visited the Oval Office last week) increase their aid to Kyiv. That just makes Trumpâs threat to withdraw support all the more inexcusable.
Trumpâs humiliation of Zelensky didnât just start today. It began two weeks ago, when Trump arranged for bilateral talks between the US and Russia aimed at a general reset between Washington and Moscow. Putinâs genocidal war against Ukraine is just one element of this. Trump has excluded Americaâs European allies and Ukraine from peace talks in a volte-face of US policy since 2022.
Trump continued his diplomatic rampage with a press conference and social-media posts in which he repeated long-standing Kremlin propaganda: that Zelensky (rather than Putin) lacks democratic legitimacy and is a âdictator”; and that Ukraine (rather than Russia) started the war and stands in the way of peace. Trump also repeated the lie that the US has given more aid to Ukraine than Europe (in fact, Europeans have sent more).
Also Read: Mint Quick Edit | Russia-US solidarity at the UN: Will it give peace a chance?
At the United Nations last week, the US joined Russia, Belarus, Sudan and a few other autocracies in refusing to condemn the Russian invasion of February 2022.
Worse yet, both Trump and his defense secretary pre-emptively removed their best bargaining chips from any future negotiating table. The US, they said, will not let Ukraine join Natoâan option that Washington has kept open since 2008ânor will it put âboots on the ground” in Ukraine.
Nobody in Ukraine, or any other country formerly under Moscowâs boot, believes that Putin will honour the terms of a cease-fire without credible guarantees backed by US military might. Thatâs what Zelenskyâ and the French and British leadersâwere trying to convey to Trump last week in the Oval Office.Â
But the US president wasnât hearing it. âIâm not worried about security,” he said. âIâm worried about getting the deal done.” As ever, Trump is all about making a deal, and who knows, by the time you read this, he may well have changed his tune about Zelensky to get one.
The deal that Trump wants right now includes an arrangement in which Ukraine would give the US access to much of its mineral wealth and rare earths. The details were to be announced at a joint press conference after Fridayâs Oval Office meeting. That was called off, obviously.
The winner of that clash, and in all of Trumpâs catastrophic missteps of the last month, is Putin. If the West had stayed united in backing Kyiv, Russia would not have been in a strong position when peace negotiations began. Its economy is in dire straits and victory on the battlefield remains elusive. But with Trump essentially defecting from the West and siding with Moscow, Putin has an opening.
Also Read: Mint Quick Edit | White House quarrel: US power is at stake
Gone is any notion that America still stands for the sovereignty of nations like Ukraine, for international rules and norms, for the right of victims of aggression to defend themselves.
âYouâre either going to make a deal or weâre out,” Trump told Zelensky with the cameras rolling and Putin undoubtedly watching. âAnd if weâre out, youâll fight it out. I donât think it is going to be pretty.”
No, it wonât beâand not just for Ukraine. The blow-up was remarkable not because it was âgreat television,” as Trump called it, but because it recorded for the public and posterity one of Americaâs worst betrayals ever of a friendly nation. ŠBloomberg
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