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Trump challenges Zelenskyy for saying war's end is far away

Aliaksandr Kudrytski and Piotr Skolimowski, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

President Donald Trump tore into Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy again Monday, saying, “This guy doesn’t want there to be peace.”

The comment came after Zelenskyy expressed a willingness to meet with Trump again, despite Friday’s open confrontation at the White House, if the U.S. president invites him for a “serious” encounter. But Zelenskyy also was quoted as predicting that the end of Ukraine’s war with Russia is “very, very far away.”

“This is the worst statement that could have been made by Zelenskyy, and America will not put up with it for much longer!” Trump said in a social media post. He said, “This guy doesn’t want there to be Peace as long as he has America’s backing and, Europe, in the meeting they had with Zelenskyy, stated flatly that they cannot do the job without the U.S. — Probably not a great statement to have been made in terms of a show of strength against Russia. What are they thinking?”

In yet another of their exchange of posts, Zelenskyy responded: “Ukraine, Europe, the United States — only together can we restore security for all our people, and this is really possible.”

Zelenskyy’s clash in the Oval Office on Friday with Trump and Vice President JD Vance left attempts to keep the U.S. administration on Kyiv’s side in tatters. It also set off a scramble among Europeans to get the two leaders back to the table as they tried to demonstrate broad support for Ukraine at a security summit in London.

“We are worthy of an equal dialog,” Zelenskyy said Sunday after attending the summit. If the U.S. president invites him “for a constructive dialog, to solve real problems, for serious issues and real, decisive actions and answers — I will arrive,” he said.

Despite Zelenskyy’s defiant tone, he said his country was ready to accept a natural resources deal with the United States. The accord was left unsigned after the Oval Office bust-up that marked the most serious crisis between Ukraine and its biggest military supporter since Russia’s full-scale invasion began three years ago.

Holding such a conversation in public wasn’t a good thing for either the U.S. or Ukraine, the Ukrainian president said, declining a reporter’s request to switch to English to avoid any misinterpretation. But in a clear attempt to turn the page on the dispute, he added: “I am convinced that the situation will pass and more important things are ahead.”

Zelenskyy has repeatedly argued that Russia cannot be trusted to respect the terms of a potential truce unless it’s backed by security guarantees from Western allies. Last month, he said he provided Trump with a list of 25 ceasefires that Moscow broke since its initial invasion of Ukraine in 2014.

European leaders led by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron spent the weekend in a diplomatic whirlwind as they tried to mend the break with the U.S. They also fast-tracked efforts to improve their own defense capabilities in the wake of Trump’s outreach to Russian President Vladimir Putin to end the war in Ukraine — potentially over their heads.

Their hope is to persuade Trump to stay engaged with Europe and Ukraine before his peace talks with Putin advance further.

The United Kingdom and France are seeking to build what Starmer called a “coalition of the willing” to participate in peacekeeping forces and help reassure Kyiv about the durability of any peace. Britain, France and “one or two” other countries will work with Ukraine on a “plan to stop the fighting,” Starmer said Sunday.

Macron told Le Figaro newspaper after the gathering that the EU should provide 200 billion euros ($208 billion) to boost its military capabilities, a topic that will be discussed by leaders at an emergency summit in Brussels on March 6.

But some disagreements have also started to emerge. Macron told Le Figaro that he and Starmer are working on a plan to reach a one-month truce in Ukraine that would include air and maritime operations as well as securing energy infrastructure.

 

A British official disputed that such a truce had been agreed to as part of the plan, adding that there hasn’t been any agreement on a timeline for a ceasefire.

In his interview, Macron said that soldiers would only be deployed on the ground in a second phase — “there will be no European troops on Ukrainian soil in the coming weeks” — and that the areas he outlined for a possible truce would be verifiable if there were breaches. He acknowledged it would be very difficult to do so along the eastern frontline.

Kremlin Responds

The Kremlin, in its first official response, said Monday that the “unprecedented” flare-up at the White House between Trump and Zelenskyy showed that Western unity is starting to fall apart.

Zelenskyy’s stance means it will be much harder to reach a settlement of the Ukraine conflict, said Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, according to Interfax. “The Kyiv regime and Zelenskyy do not want peace, they want the continuation of the war,” he said.

In this situation, Washington’s efforts and Moscow’s readiness are clearly not enough, as a very important element is missing, Peskov said. Speaking about Putin’s reaction, the Kremlin spokesman said: “He took into account what happened.”

Zelenskyy responded Monday, writing on his Telegram channel, that “those who want talks do not strike people on purpose with ballistic” missiles. More than 1,050 drones, almost 1,300 bombs and more than 20 missiles were launched at Ukraine last week, he said.

“We need more strength of the world to force Russia end the strikes,” Zelenskyy wrote. “Justice must prevail.”

The debacle in Washington hinted at the personal animus between Zelenskyy and Trump, and quickly escalated the U.S. political assaults on Ukraine’s president. U.S. Vice President JD Vance branded Zelenskyy disrespectful and suggested that his intransigence, rather than Moscow’s aggression, was the impediment to a U.S.-brokered ceasefire with Russia.

Zelenskyy, though, has no plans to leave office, according to his aides. His political future is a matter for the Ukrainian people and no one else, he said, telling UK media on Sunday that “given what is going on, given the support, simply replacing me will not be simple.”

While Zelenskyy recognized Ukraine’s dependence on U.S. support, expressed his thanks and respect for Trump, both main political parties and the U.S. as a whole, he steered clear of apologizing for Friday’s events.

He defended his right to stand up for the dignity of his country and its people, and urged partners to show understanding for the suffering endured by Ukraine at the hands of Russia.

“I’m ready for any format of constructive relations with the U.S.,” Zelenskyy said.


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