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Zelenskyy Tells The Truth About Trump

Kyiv’s White House wooing implodes as Zelenskyy tells the truth about Trump

Julian Borger/The Guardian

All America’s allies know that Trump is trapped in a disinformation bubble, but Zelenskyy said it out loud.

All the effort Kyiv had expended in wooing the White House, combining flattery with bribery and a share of Ukraine’s mineral wealth, imploded in minutes when Volodymyr Zelenskyy broke the fundamental rule of the new global reality: he told the truth about Donald Trump.

All America’s allies, the great majority of Republican leaders who have bowed to him, and a good number of his own cabinet, know full well that Trump is trapped in a disinformation bubble, but Zelenskyy said it out loud at a press conference on Wednesday.

In this new world where the foreign policy of the most powerful country on Earth has been rapidly reorganised around the fragile ego of a sullen and resentful old man, you might as well launch missiles at America’s eastern seaboard as utter a few words of rebuke.

Zelenskyy was aware of this. On Tuesday, he had complained that his country was being excluded from talks about its fate between the US and Russia in Riyadh. They were “about Ukraine but without Ukraine”, he said.

It was a fair point. What happened in Riyadh was an upending of western policy towards Ukraine, but none of that matters any more. This is year zero as far as Trump, Elon Musk and their supporters are concerned. The Ukrainian president’s gripe triggered a meltdown in Mar-a-Lago, where Trump told stunned reporters that Ukraine had started the war, and that Zelenskyy had a 4% approval rating.

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.

Trump’s tirade on his own app, Truth Social, is a distillation of the greatest hits of Russian disinformation from the past three years. He said Zelenskyy was “A Dictator without Elections” (something Trump has never said about Putin) who had hoodwinked the Biden administration into a $350bn war of choice, which only “TRUMP” could fix. The president’s repeated references to himself in the third person and all caps erased any lingering doubts about the single unifying compulsion now driving Trump foreign policy.

The child who guilelessly points out the emperor has no clothes is the hero of the folk tale, but the emperor in Hans Christian Andersen’s story did not have a vast nuclear arsenal and the world’s mightiest army. Telling the truth is cathartic, but getting into a personal spat with Trump amid the dizzying euphoria of his restoration to the Oval Office risks serious damage to your country.

That begs the question: what will work with Trump now? He admires autocrats and is eager to please them, but that is not really an option for the world’s remaining democracies. The hope in western European capitals, based on patchy evidence from the first Trump term, is that if they can make discreet common cause with the calmer heads around Trump he can be gently steered away from his more extreme whims.

In that regard, they have some faith in Marco Rubio and Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff. They may be able to talk the president out of his stated plan to own and ethnically cleanse Gaza, if only because it would be so disastrous for the US. But from the evidence of Trump’s rants, the poison about Ukraine has seeped deeper into the president’s nervous system.

Zelenskyy’s best option might be to persevere with the offer of an American share in Ukraine’s rare earths. Trump’s first offer was to take half of the spoils with no security guarantees in return. But the absurd opening offer is likely to be just part of his “art of the deal” brinkmanship. Further negotiations may distract him, like a dog with a bone, from his profound pro-Putin impulses.

It is a long shot. It is also an act of faith to believe this Trump episode in American history will eventually pass. But we are not even one month into his chaotic second term. For a country like Ukraine, facing an existential threat, it is going to be a very long four years.
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Reason10 · 70-79, M
When Zelinsky decides to give his country LEGAL ELECTIONS he'll have room to talk.

Right now, he's just another Saddam Hussein.
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
@Reason10 more like an Erdogon (Turkey ) IMO.
Slicker24 · 26-30
@Reason10 Now I'm not a big trump supporter or anything like that But at the beginning of the war all you could hear is why isn't the U.S. Doing more to help, gimme. gimme, gimme. Now that he has been in office For a month the other N.A.T.O Countries ,that aren't Over 1/4 of a world away, are starting to help out. France, sending Some airplanes ; Germany, now sending over some tanks, now the UK sending over some stuff .
22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Reason10 Difficult to hold elections when you're at war. Especially when the invading force is targeting civilians.
And btw, when will Putin hold some free and fair elections, or possibly just stop murdering political opponents, maybe even critical journalists?
22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Slicker24 Europe has been supplying Ukraine from the start.
Slicker24 · 26-30
@22Michelle I'm talking their fair share. You do know this is their back door not ours. Now, just what do you think it cost to send military equipment Over a quarter of away around the world? What do you think, we got Amazon Prime, is free shipping, lol.
22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Slicker24 So what is their fair share and how is it calculated? Do you include the refugees accepted, housed and fed etc? And for arnaments are we talking real value or an assumed value of older equipment which was slated for scrap?
Slicker24 · 26-30
@22Michelle You haven't understood one word of what I have said.

1.) They are their neighbors, not ours. Of course they should take in the refugees.
2.) I am not talking the cost or the condition of anything. I am talking the cost in shipping.

In 2022, I take a look at a map of Ukraine. I see about 1/5 of the eastern part,plus the Crimean Peninsula, are occupied by Russia. During that time, until now I hear, Russia's biggest oil plant destroyed. Putin in panic mode, the largest energy plant hit. Moscow in flames, as Massive Ukrainian Air Attack. It's all over now, Poland just joined the war. I take another look at an updated map, and I see about the same thing.
I'm going to take a break from this war, forget it even is going on. I will come back in October and take another look at it, and see if it has changed,
22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Slicker24 So what do you categorise as "neighbours". The UK doesn't have a border with Ukraine, but has taken in Ukranian refugees, as has most European countries.
And as for costs, why is it shipping costs that you are focused on? Such costs are dependent on several factors. One being the distance obviously, so Australia bears such costs. However, is the shipping specifically for the military aid or are similar matetials being shipped to that area already. Since the USA has several European bases there is already a shipping system in place.
The war is has not really moved much since the initial invasion by Russia and is about who is prepared to accept the greater casualties.
As for the attacks on Russia they are mostly in retaliation for the daily attacks on Ukranian infrastructure and civilians. And, if you start a war you have to expect retaliation and casulties.
As for Poland joining in I have no idea what you mean by that. Poland has been accepting refugees and supplying material assistance since the initial invasion. They are not however a combatant.
Slicker24 · 26-30
@22Michelle You should really re-read and correct your spelling. Like I said I will be back in September or October and see if anything has changed. Right now it looks like two puppy dogs laying on the ground Chewing at each other.
22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Slicker24 Don't hurry back.
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22Michelle · 61-69, T
@Slicker24 Well next time try and have your posts make some sense, and be connected to reality.