Zelenskyy to meet US envoy on Thursday
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he will meet US envoy Keith Kellogg on Thursday.
Zelenskyy, in his daily evening address on Wednesday, said he hopes for “constructive” work with the US.
We are scheduled to meet with General Kellogg tomorrow, and it is very important for us that the meeting and our work with America in general be constructive.
“Together with America and Europe, peace can be more reliable, and this is our goal,” he added.
Key events
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Closing summary
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Donald Trump says Zelenskyy could have gone to Saudi talks if he wanted to
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Summary of the day so far
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Vance warns Zelenskyy against ‘bad mouthing’ Trump
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Starmer expresses support for ‘democratically elected’ Zelenskyy
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Zelenskyy to meet US envoy on Thursday
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Starmer and Macron to visit Washington amid Ukraine talks – reports
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Scholz says Trump’s comments about Zelenskyy ‘wrong and dangerous’
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Summary of the day so far
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Ukrainian drone attack kills one in Russia’s Belgorod region, governor says
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Leading human rights official criticises Vance’s ‘problematic’ take on Europe
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Trump calls Zelenskyy a ‘dictator without elections’
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Zelenskyy ‘better move fast’ or he won’t have a country left – Trump
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Denmark needs ‘massive rearmament’ to avoid war – Frederiksen
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Canada insists Ukraine must be part of US-Russia talks
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Putin’s claims of new offensive from Kursk region a ‘lie’ – Ukraine official
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Putin says Russian troops crossed into Ukraine from Kursk region overnight
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Trump told me Ukraine will take part in talks, Putin says
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Russia ready to negotiate on Ukraine, Putin says
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Trump’s Ukraine claims – factchecked
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Zelenskyy’s comments on Ukraine, Trump – video
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Sweden, Poland agree to strenghten civil protection, defence cooperation
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France ‘doesn’t understand logic’ of Trump’s Ukraine comment, spokesperosn says
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No plans for emergency EU summit ‘at this point’
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No peace deal without involving Ukraine, Europe in talks, EU foreign policy chief says
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Trump’s comments not intended to be accurate, but to shock, UK’s ex-PM Johnson says
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Ukrainians, what do you think about US-Russia peace talks and Trump?
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Zelenskyy’s comments on Ukraine’s situation and Trump – summary
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Talks with EU on funding Ukraine army ongoing, Zelenskyy says
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Nato remains strongest guarantee for Ukraine, Zelenskyy says
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You can’t whitewash Russia’s responsibility for war, Zelenskyy says
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We are ‘stronger than at beginning of war,’ Zelenskyy says
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‘I can’t sell Ukraine away,’ Zelenskyy says on US draft minerals deal
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It’s Russia’s war against us, not ‘conflict,’ Zelenskyy says
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US helps bring Russia out of global isolation, Zelenskyy says
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Zelenskyy says Trump ‘lives in disinformation bubble’ with discord sowed by Russia
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Focus on what Europe can do next, Zelenskyy says
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Ukraine’s Zelenskyy speaking now
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Sweden and Poland to sign agreement on civil defence
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Russian officials seize on Trump’s false claim on Zelenskyy’s approval rating
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‘No alternative to eradicating root causes of Ukrainian crisis,’ Lavrov says
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Russia and BRICS ‘stopping West from imposing Ukrainian agenda’ globally, Lavrov says
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Lavrov hails Russia’s ‘unprecedented’ alliance with China
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Lavrov says Russia moves with ‘multipolar world,’ attacks ‘selfish’ West
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New EU sanctions on Russia
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Putin and Trump could meet before end of February, Kremlin says
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Pope Francis had ‘peaceful night’ in hospital as he battles double pneumonia, Vatican says
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US Ukraine envoy Kellogg arrives to Kyiv
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EU agrees new round of sanctions against Russia
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Morning opening: Trump confuses Europe, again
Closing summary
This blog is closing now but you can find our latest full story on the falling out between the US and Ukraine here and all our Ukraine coverage here. Here’s a recap of the latest developments:
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The US and Ukraine appear to be heading towards an irreconcilable rift after Donald Trump escalated his attacks on Volodymyr Zelenskyy, calling him a “dictator” and warning the Ukrainian leader “better move fast” or he “won’t have a country left.” The US president also accused Zelenskyy – without evidence – of benefiting from continuing US financial and military support. Trump’s latest comments cast serious doubt on future US aid to Ukraine and mark the most explicit threat yet to end the war on terms favourable to Moscow.
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Trump’s fiery Truth Social rant on Wednesday came after Zelenskyy accused the US leader of being “trapped” in a Russian “disinformation bubble”. The Ukrainian president said Trump was pushing “a lot of disinformation coming from Russia,” and accused Washington of bringing Russia out of global isolation through bilateral talks earlier this week in Riyadh. Zelenskyy also disputed Trump’s comments that most of Ukraine’s support comes from the US. US vice-president JD Vance warned Zelenskyy against “bad mouthing” Trump, saying criticising the president would not help his cause.
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Zelenskyy’s comments at a press conference came in response to Trump’s claims that Ukraine was to blame for Russia’s 2022 invasion, remarks that echoed the Kremlin’s narrative. Trump said he was “disappointed” that the Ukrainian leader complained about being left out of talks between the US and Russia over ending the Ukraine war, and increased pressure on Zelenskyy to hold elections – echoing one of Moscow’s key demands. Trump’s former vice-president, Mike Pence, challenged him in a post that said: “Mr. President, Ukraine did not ‘start’ this war … . The Road to Peace must be built on the Truth.”
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In a speech to business leaders in Miami later, Trump repeated his attacks on Zelenskyy and claimed that he “could have come [to the talks in Saudi Arabia] if he wanted”. Zelenskyy has said he was not invited to the talks.
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Vladimir Putin said Ukraine would not be excluded from negotiations to end the war, and rejected claims that Moscow had rejected talks with Europe or Kyiv. On Trump, the Russian leader said the US president had begun receiving “objective information” about the war in Ukraine, which led him to “change his position.” He added that he was happy to meet with Trump, and said he “highly rated” the results of the Russia-US summit in Riyadh.
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Zelenskyy said he would meet with Trump’s Ukraine envoy, Keith Kellogg, in Kyiv on Thursday. Kellogg, who is seen as Trump’s most pro-Ukraine adviser, arrived in Kyiv for talks with Ukrainian leaders on Wednesday. “Together with America and Europe, peace can be more reliable, and this is our goal,” Zelenskyy said in his daily evening address on Wednesday.
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Keir Starmer expressed his support for “Ukraine’s democratically elected leader” during a call with Zelenskyy on Wednesday evening. German chancellor Olaf Scholz said that it was “wrong and dangerous” to deny Zelenskyy’s democratic legitimacy. The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, said there can be no Russia-Ukraine peace deal without the participation of Ukraine and Europe.
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Starmer and French president Emmanuel Macron are set to visit Washington next week, according to reports. Macron will meet with Trump at the White House, a US official said. Starmer is also expected to visit Washington next week, amid other meetings aimed at bringing an end to Russia’s war in Ukraine, US national security advisor Mike Waltz said.
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Sweden and Poland agreed to “strengthen and deepen cooperation” politically and in civil protection and civil defence, citing the worsened security situation across Europe. The statement of intent pledges to work together to improve national resilience and preparedness strategies, provide Ukraine support on strengthening national resilience and improve resilience and security in the Baltic region – particularly on critical infrastructure.
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Denmark’s prime minister Mette Frederiksen announced the country needs a “massive rearmament” to avoid war as she announced Denmark will spend 50bn DKK over the next two years on defence. The investment brings Denmark’s defence spending up to 3% of GDP in the next two years (up from 2.4% in 2024). It comes after coming under huge pressure from the Trump administration over Greenland and its recent comments on cutting support to Europe and Ukraine.
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Europe’s leading human rights official criticised US vice-president JD Vance’s “very problematic” speech on European democracy, offering an implicit rebuke to Vance’s take on free speech and politics across the continent. The Commissioner for Human Rights at the Council of Europe, Michael O’Flaherty, challenged Vance’s claim that Europe had abandoned its values in an interview with the Guardian.
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EU sanctions against Russia will be extended to cover aluminium imports and dozens more “shadow” vessels covertly exporting Russian oil below a price cap imposed by western allies. The new package, 16th since the full scale invasion in 2022, includes a ban on imports of Russian aluminium into the EU, said by EU officials to generate significant revenues for Russia. The approval of the package carries extra weight, amid fears in Brussels that Trump will seek to lift US sanctions against Russia as part of his effort to make a peace deal.
Russia has unleashed a mass drone attack on Ukraine’s southern city of Odesa for the second night running, knocking out power for thousands of residents and plunging parts of the city into darkness, the regional governor has said. Reuters reports:
Governor Oleh Kiper, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said the latest night-time strikes had triggered a blackout for some 5,000 residents.
Kiper said nearly 90,000 people had been left in the dark in Odesa district in and around the city from the successive nights of attacks. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said a similar number was without heating.
Kiper also said the strikes had triggered a fire at a restaurant and a storage facility and damaged an administrative building. One person was injured.
Photos on social media showed areas of the city in darkness.
Trump also complains that the US “had a deal [with Ukraine] based on rare earth and things but they broke it” two days ago. This is a reference to a deal the US pushed Zelenskyy to sign that would have given the US 50% ownership of Ukraine’s rare minerals with no security guarantees for Ukraine.
He complains that “Europe gets their money back in the form of a loan but we don’t” and “this war is far more important to Europe than it is to us”.
This is mostly not true. On the website of the EU delegation to the US, it says the EU and its member states have committed $145bn in financial, military, humanitarian, and refugee assistance to Ukraine and by 2027, it will have committed over $174bn. In addition, the EU agreed to provide $50bn in loans to Ukraine in October, it says, financed by seized Russian assets.
Donald Trump says Zelenskyy could have gone to Saudi talks if he wanted to
Donald Trump also lays into Volodymyr Zelenskyy again, saying he’d “better move fast or he’s not going to have a country left” adding that he “could have come [to the talks in Saudi Arabia] if he wanted”, although it does not appear Zelenskyy was invited.
He also repeats comments about Zelenskyy’s alleged low poll ratings (in fact levels of trust in the Ukrainian president are high at home) and the lack of elections in Ukraine, which has been under martial law since the war began three years ago. Trump also says,
It’s hope that my greatest legacy will be as a unifier and as a peacemaker.
It seems an odd comment given his recent comments on Ukraine and the Middle East, where he was threatened to displace the entire population of Gaza, in what would amount to the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian population.
Donald Trump has been speaking at a meeting of finance and tech leaders in Miami. He’s gone through many of his favourite topics but now he’s on to Ukraine, where he warns “there’s no profit in having world war three and we’re not so far way from it,” before adding: “now it’s not going to happen.”
He thanks Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman – who not long ago was an international pariah over the chopping up of a Washington Post columnist in the Saudi consulate in Turkey – for hosting “historic talks” between Russia and the US over Ukraine, saying they were “very, very well”.
“It’s a big step,” he says, adding that satellite images of Ukraine show “a modern day version of Gettysburg”.
Here’s a bit more analysis on the outburst by the Ukrainian president, who said Donald Trump was living in a “disinformation bubble”, courtesy of our senior international correspondent, Julian Borger:
It is hardly surprising Zelenskyy lost his cool. Part of the reason he has a 57% confidence rating in the latest poll (13% above Trump’s own current standing) is because he has led his country through years of war with his heart vividly on his sleeve. Having been subjected to eight years of Russian aggression, followed by an entirely unprovoked full-on invasion which has killed tens of thousands of Ukrainian citizens, and then to be told on the world stage that: “You should have never started it”, would be too much for most people.
When slighted and sprayed with Trumpian falsehoods, other world leaders, with much less at stake, have resorted to a “smile-and-wave” default strategy, deflecting direct questions and changing the subject to some aspect of relations with Washington that is still functioning normally.
Zelenskyy did not do this on Wednesday. Instead, he said out loud the bit that European leaders keep quiet. Trump, he observed, is “trapped in this disinformation bubble”. He was stating the obvious, but not even Zelenskyy could have known how fetid the air inside Trump’s bubble has become. Now we know.
Read more below:
Summary of the day so far
It’s 1am in Kyiv, 2am in Moscow and 6pm in Washington. Here’s a recap of the latest developments:
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The US and Ukraine appear to be heading towards an irreconcilable rift after Donald Trump escalated his attacks on Volodymyr Zelenskyy, calling him a “dictator” and warning the Ukrainian leader “better move fast” or he “won’t have a country left.” The US president also accused Zelenskyy – without evidence – of benefiting from continuing US financial and military support. Trump’s latest comments cast serious doubt on future US aid to Ukraine and mark the most explicit threat yet to end the war on terms favourable to Moscow.
-
Trump’s fiery Truth Social rant on Wednesday came after Zelenskyy accused the US leader of being “trapped” in a Russian “disinformation bubble”. The Ukrainian president said Trump was pushing “a lot of disinformation coming from Russia,” and accused Washington of bringing Russia out of global isolation through bilateral talks earlier this week in Riyadh. Zelenskyy also disputed Trump’s comments that most of Ukraine’s support comes from the US. US vice-president JD Vance warned Zelenskyy against “bad mouthing” Trump, saying criticising the president would not help his cause.
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Zelenskyy’s comments at a press conference came in response to Trump’s claims that Ukraine was to blame for Russia’s 2022 invasion, remarks that echoed the Kremlin’s narrative. Trump said he was “disappointed” that the Ukrainian leader complained about being left out of talks between the US and Russia over ending the Ukraine war, and increased pressure on Zelenskyy to hold elections – echoing one of Moscow’s key demands. Trump’s former vice-president, Mike Pence, challenged him in a post that said: “Mr. President, Ukraine did not ‘start’ this war … . The Road to Peace must be built on the Truth.”
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Vladimir Putin said Ukraine would not be excluded from negotiations to end the war, and rejected claims that Moscow had rejected talks with Europe or Kyiv. On Trump, the Russian leader said the US president had begun receiving “objective information” about the war in Ukraine, which led him to “change his position.” He added that he was happy to meet with Trump, and said he “highly rated” the results of the Russia-US summit in Riyadh.
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Zelenskyy said he would meet with Trump’s Ukraine envoy, Keith Kellogg, in Kyiv on Thursday. Kellogg, who is seen as Trump’s most pro-Ukraine adviser, arrived in Kyiv for talks with Ukrainian leaders on Wednesday. “Together with America and Europe, peace can be more reliable, and this is our goal,” Zelenskyy said in his daily evening address on Wednesday.
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Keir Starmer expressed his support for “Ukraine’s democratically elected leader” during a call with Zelenskyy on Wednesday evening. German chancellor Olaf Scholz said that it was “wrong and dangerous” to deny Zelenskyy’s democratic legitimacy. The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, said there can be no Russia-Ukraine peace deal without the participation of Ukraine and Europe.
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Starmer and French president Emmanuel Macron are set to visit Washington next week, according to reports. Macron will meet with Trump at the White House, a US official said. Starmer is also expected to visit Washington next week, amid other meetings aimed at bringing an end to Russia’s war in Ukraine, US national security advisor Mike Waltz said.
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Sweden and Poland agreed to “strengthen and deepen cooperation” politically and in civil protection and civil defence, citing the worsened security situation across Europe. The statement of intent pledges to work together to improve national resilience and preparedness strategies, provide Ukraine support on strengthening national resilience and improve resilience and security in the Baltic region – particularly on critical infrastructure.
-
Denmark’s prime minister Mette Frederiksen announced the country needs a “massive rearmament” to avoid war as she announced Denmark will spend 50bn DKK over the next two years on defence. The investment brings Denmark’s defence spending up to 3% of GDP in the next two years (up from 2.4% in 2024). It comes after coming under huge pressure from the Trump administration over Greenland and its recent comments on cutting support to Europe and Ukraine.
-
Europe’s leading human rights official criticised US vice-president JD Vance’s “very problematic” speech on European democracy, offering an implicit rebuke to Vance’s take on free speech and politics across the continent. The Commissioner for Human Rights at the Council of Europe, Michael O’Flaherty, challenged Vance’s claim that Europe had abandoned its values in an interview with the Guardian.
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EU sanctions against Russia will be extended to cover aluminium imports and dozens more “shadow” vessels covertly exporting Russian oil below a price cap imposed by western allies. The new package, 16th since the full scale invasion in 2022, includes a ban on imports of Russian aluminium into the EU, said by EU officials to generate significant revenues for Russia. The approval of the package carries extra weight, amid fears in Brussels that Trump will seek to lift US sanctions against Russia as part of his effort to make a peace deal.
The US’s Ukraine envoy, Keith Kellogg, met with the head of the Ukrainian president’s office, Andriy Yermak, in Kyiv on Wednesday.
According to a readout from Zelenskyy’s office, Yermak “emphasised the importance of Keith Kellogg having full and objective information about the frontline developments” and said the US would be “briefed directly by the military command and local commanders”.
Yermak also noted that “Russia continues to use information manipulation and seeks to sow discord among [Ukraine’s] partners” and said Ukraine must be part of peace talks.
Yermak also told Kellogg that “no one wants to end this war more than Ukrainians” but that they needed to have a “just and lasting peace”, according to the readout.
Jedidajah Otte
Yan Patsenko, who is originally from Kyiv but now lives in Spain, told the Guardian they felt ambivalent about the Trump administration-led talks with Russia to end the war in Ukraine.
“I have very mixed feelings about the peace process initiated by the Trump administration. On the one hand, I welcome the willingness of Russians and Americans to start talking to each other because I believe that much of this war’s roots lie in the Cold War-era perceptions they still hold about one another – to everyone’s detriment. I also welcome the intention to end the war in Ukraine through diplomatic means. After three years of bloodshed, this is what our families long for the most.
“On the other hand, I worry when I see these discussions happening behind closed doors, solely between representatives of Russia and the US. And I question how much of what they share publicly actually reflects the content of their private conversations.
“My biggest concern is that what is being presented as a peace process may, in reality, be nothing more than an attempt to negotiate between two competing imperial ambitions on how to divide Ukraine. I worry that this process remains entirely in the hands of a small circle of politicians who are the least affected by the consequences of their decisions.”
30-year-old Ivan, who is currently living in Los Angeles on a student visa, said:
“I voted for Zelenskyy last time and will vote for him again. So will my entire family and all my friends. There are people both in the country and abroad who are dissatisfied with the president, but in such challenging times, that’s not surprising.”
He agreed with many others that Ukrainian elections were impossible to hold while fighting continued. “There are hundreds of thousands of soldiers on the front lines. How would they vote? In the trenches?
“It looks like Trump doesn’t care about peace but rather about fulfilling his promise to ‘end the war’ for his voters, who don’t care what price Ukraine has to pay. A ceasefire without security guarantees, on the aggressor’s terms, is not peace – it’s just a short pause for Putin before his next offensive.”
Vance warns Zelenskyy against ‘bad mouthing’ Trump
US vice-president JD Vance warned Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy against “bad mouthing” Donald Trump, saying criticising the president would not help his cause.
In comments to the Daily Mail after Zelenskyy said Trump was living in a Russian-made “disinformation space”, Vance said:
The idea that Zelenskyy is going to change the president’s mind by bad mouthing him in public media, everyone who knows the President will tell you that is an atrocious way to deal with this administration.
Vance added that Zelenskyy had been getting “bad advice” on how to deal with the Trump administration. “We obviously love the Ukrainian people … but we obviously think that this war needs to come to a rapid close,” he continued.
That is the policy of the President of the United States. It is not based on Russian disinformation. It’s based on the fact that Donald Trump, I think, knows a lot about geopolitics and has a very strong view, and has had a strong view for a very long time.