Opinion
Trump Is
Hiding Something on Ukraine
March 5,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/04/opinion/trump-ukraine-putin-speech.html
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas L.
Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
Whenever
President Trump talks about Ukraine there is always something off, something
missing, that makes you wonder what he is really up to — and his brief remarks
on Ukraine to a joint session of Congress Tuesday night were no exception.
He crazily
exaggerated how much the U.S. has contributed to Ukraine’s war effort as
opposed to what our European allies have given. When he talked about the human
toll of the war, he first mourned “Russian young people” and then “Ukrainian
young people” — as if they were both hit by a meteor, the one before the other.
And he declared that he has received “strong signals" from Vladimir Putin
that he wants peace, but offered no details.
If there is
one thing that I have learned in journalism it is that when you don’t call
things by their real name, there is usually a reason — you are hiding
something, some motivation, some intent.
How to
explain that in Trump’s case? Well, he is either the most pliant Western
negotiator against the enemies of liberty since Neville Chamberlain, making
concessions to the aggressor before talks have even started, or he actually
prefers the friendship of Putin over our European allies and courageous
Ukrainian democrats.
Because
right now the Trump administration is behaving in ways that trouble a great
many patriotic Americans — sticking a knife in the back of a nation struggling
for liberty, Ukraine, by cutting off its vital U.S. weapons supplies and trying
to extort its minerals, before Russia has even agreed to a cease-fire.
Imagine
Trump was trying to sell a Trump Tower to a Russian — let’s call him Vladimir —
and Trump brought along his banker. What would Trump think if, before the
negotiating began, his banker proclaimed, “Donald, you have no cards, we’ve
just cut off your line of credit, and before we even let you start negotiating
to sell this building, you need to take out a second mortgage on it and give me
all the money.”
That is
exactly what Trump did to Volodymyr Zelensky. Something doesn’t smell right in
this story. I don’t know where it ends, but I think I know where it starts:
When it comes to the defense of liberty, President Trump does not share the
values of the best of his 44 predecessors. And if that is right, Ukrainians, in
the end, will never buy what Trump is selling. Our European allies won’t,
either.
Only Putin
might, but, as Trump said in his speech, to make peace, “You have to talk to
both sides.” He meant Putin, but Trump should actually start with our own
allies. They are the ones who don’t understand him. Putin does.
Thomas L.
Friedman is the foreign affairs Opinion columnist. He joined the paper in 1981
and has won three Pulitzer Prizes. He is the author of seven books, including
“From Beirut to Jerusalem,” which won the National Book Award. @tomfriedman •
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