US President Donald Trump cut short a meeting with Volodymyr
Zelensky on Friday and said the Ukrainian leader is “not ready” for peace with
Russia in an extraordinary meltdown in the Oval Office that threw question
marks over chances for a truce.
Zelensky was meant to be making a full White House visit to
sign a US-Ukrainian deal for joint exploitation of Ukraine’s mineral resources,
as part of a post-war recovery in a US-brokered peace deal.
Instead, an ugly clash blew up almost immediately in the
Oval Office where Trump and Vice President JD Vance shouted at Zelensky, accusing
him of not being thankful for US help in the three-year war against Russian
invasion.
Trump berated Zelensky, telling him to be more “thankful”
and that without US assistance Ukraine would have been conquered by Russia.
“You’re either going to make a deal or we’re out,” Trump
added. “And if we’re out, you’ll fight it out and I don’t think it’s going to
be pretty.”
Zelensky left in his motorcade shortly after, without
holding a planned joint press conference.The resources deal was left unsigned,
the White House said
Trump took to his Truth Social platform to castigate
Zelensky saying “he disrespected the United States of America in its cherished
Oval Office.”
Zelensky is “not ready for Peace,” Trump wrote. “He can come
back when he is ready for Peace.”
Compromise row
The extraordinary meltdown came after Trump said Ukraine
will have to make “compromises” in a truce with Russia, which has occupied
swaths of Ukraine, destroying entire cities and towns along the way.
“You can’t do any deals without compromises. So certainly
he’s going to have to make some compromises, but hopefully they won’t be as big
as some people think,” Trump said.
But showing Trump pictures of war atrocities and referring
to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Zelensky said there should be “no
compromises with a killer on our territory.”
“Crazy Russians,” he said, deported Ukrainian children and
committed war crimes during their three-year invasion of his country.
The dramatic public breakdown in the long-tense relationship
between Zelensky and Trump came after their meeting — in front of a large group
of journalists — had appeared to get off to a friendlier start.
Zelensky had said, “I think President Trump is on our side.”
Truce talks in doubt
The clash left in doubt efforts led by Trump to cast himself
as mediator in the war.
The leaders of France and Britain also came to the White
House this week, seeking to persuade Trump not to take the Russian line and to
bolster US support for Ukraine in a future truce.
After the drama in the White House, Poland’s Prime Minister
Donald Tusk told Zelensky: “You are not alone.”
Trump has alarmed Kyiv and European allies with his abrupt
U-turn in US policy, ending what had been full-throated support for Ukraine’s attempt
to defeat the Russian invasion and casting himself as a mediator between Putin
and Zelensky.
Trump said in the Oval Office that he had “spoken on
numerous occasions” to Putin — more than has been publicly reported beyond the
lengthy call between the two leaders earlier this February.
Speaking before the shouting match erupted, Trump told
Zelensky that a truce is “fairly close.”
The US leader also said that the proposed minerals deal
would be “very fair.”
The proposal was to give Washington financial benefits for
helping Ukraine in a truce, even if Trump has repeatedly refused to commit any
US military force as a back-up to European troops who might act as
peacekeepers.
Dictator without
elections’ –
The clash came after Trump has flip-flopped in his tone on
Zelensky.
Trump called him a “dictator” last week and has repeatedly
blamed Ukraine for Russia’s February 2022 invasion and echoed a series of
Kremlin talking points about how the war started.
But on Thursday, Trump said at a joint press conference with
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer: “I have a lot of respect for him.”
“We’re going to get along really well,” he said.
Trump, who has repeatedly expressed admiration for Putin,
said this week he trusts Putin to “keep his word” on any ceasefire.
Senate Democrats accused Trump and Vance of siding with
Putin.
They are “doing Putin’s dirty work. Senate Democrats will
never stop fighting for freedom and democracy,” Democratic Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer posted on social media.
“Disgraceful,” said Senator Chris Van Hollen.
As tensions between Moscow and Washington escalated,
Russia’s assault on Ukraine continued.
Russian infantry were on Friday storming the Ukrainian
border from the Russian region of Kursk, near areas of the region that were
seized last summer by Ukrainian forces, Kyiv said Friday.