
Trump’s About-Face on Russia-Ukraine War Leaves More Questions Than Clarity
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Trump’s About-Face on Russia-Ukraine War Leaves More Questions Than Clarity
President Donald Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that Ukraine is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form. Experts remain divided on whether or not the about-face signals a genuine policy shift toward giving Ukraine what it needs to win. The announcement could be intended as a strategic play, experts said. On one hand, it could potentially nudge the Kremlin into a negotiating position if it believes the U.S. is no longer hewing to its narrative. On Monday, Trump refused to comment on if he still trusted the Russian leader, saying only “I’ll let you know in about a month from now, okay?”“I would not discount Trump’s rhetorical overtures as cheap talk,” said Mikhail Troitskiy, a visiting professor of security studies at Tufts University. “The fact that Putin was lying to President Trump so many times also made a difference between us,’’ said Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow at Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.
For Trump, the announcement could be intended as a strategic play, experts said. On one hand, it could potentially nudge the Kremlin into a negotiating position if it believes the U.S. is no longer hewing to its narrative. On the other, by specifically naming the EU as Ukraine’s military benefactor, Trump can distance the U.S. from a negotiation process that, despite months of shuttle diplomacy and a high-profile summit with Putin in Alaska, has not produced even a meeting between Putin and Zelensky. “So the narrative around what he is saying has shifted but he still seems to be making it about distancing the U.S. from leading on the conflict,” Neil Melvin, director of International Security at the Royal United Services Institute, told Reuters. “He’s putting it back onto Europe all the time.” The U.S., Ukraine and three European countries recently inked a multimillion dollar weapons agreement to keep American munitions flowing to Kyiv, whose cost is estimated at $825 million. Zelensky welcomed Trump’s support, noting that the two leaders have improved their relationship since their Oval Office falling-out in February. “I think we have a better [relationship] than before,” he said after meeting with Trump earlier this week. “I think the fact that Putin was lying to President Trump so many times also made a difference between us.”
Donald Trump. Harrison Koeppel / The White House
Conversely, Trump has voiced increasing frustration with Putin. On Monday, he refused to comment on if he still trusted the Russian leader, saying only “I’ll let you know in about a month from now, okay?” In his post, Trump attributed his revelation to his evolving understanding of Ukraine and Russia’s military and economic situations. Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, wrote that Trump’s shifting thinking on the war indeed reflects “new realities.” “This spring and summer, doubts grew in the West that Ukraine could hold out,” Stanovaya wrote on social media. But despite incremental gains in eastern Ukraine, the Russian military failed to achieve a strategic breakthrough this summer, and it is difficult to imagine the Ukrainians ever accepting Putin’s conditions for ending hostilities. Moreover, Russia’s economy is on increasingly unsteady footing, something that could guide Putin’s efforts to eventually seek an end to the war. Troitskiy, the Tufts University professor, noted Trump’s frustration with the lack of progress since his one-on-one meetings last month with Putin and Zelensky. “Disappointed with progress in peace negotiations — and in particular the Kremlin’s uncompromising stance — Trump was likely asking his advisors about possible ways to apply additional pressure on Moscow,” he said. “Now Trump’s informed advisors told him that if specific types of weapons are supplied to Ukraine, Kyiv may have a shot at recapturing land from Russia.”
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