UK gives
royal welcome to Zelenskyy after White House meltdown
King Charles
to hold official audience for Ukrainian president as show of support after
Trump clash
Toby Helm,
James Tapper, Luke Harding in Kyiv, David Smith in Washington
Sat 1 Mar
2025 20.50 CET
King Charles
will hold an official audience at Sandringham with the Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday as the UK and EU demonstrate their “unwavering”
support after his humiliation at the hands of Donald Trump and JD Vance in the
White House.
Keir Starmer
will also host European heads of government and the leaders of Canada and
Turkey at a special defence summit aimed at presenting a united front on the
Ukraine crisis.
On arrival
in Downing Street for a meeting with Starmer on Saturday night, just 24 hours
after Trump and his vice-president Vance subjected him to a 10-minute tirade in
the Oval Office, Zelenskyy said he was “very happy” that the king had agreed to
the meeting.
The offer of
a royal audience was seen at Westminster as a deliberate move to give the
Ukrainian president equal treatment to Trump, who was presented during his
meeting at the White House on Wednesday by Starmer with an invitation to a
second state visit to the UK, including a meeting with King Charles.
Last night
there were reports that the UK would show further solidarity by unlocking
billions of pounds of frozen Russian assets to Ukraine. The Sunday Times
claimed Rachel Reeves would divert money earmarked for green investment in the
UK to the defence industry. It would be the first time that money from frozen
Russian assets would contribute towards military spending.
The irate
exchanges between Trump and Vance, on the US side, and Zelenskyy, which led to
the Ukrainian president being told to leave the White House before any formal
talks took place, led to fears among European and other world leaders of
irreparable damage to the western alliance, and to the hopes of peace in
Ukraine’s war with Russia. At today’s defence summit, which demonstrates the
increasingly central role being played by the UK in Europe’s defence and
security, Starmer will be clear that Europe must stand united against President
Putin.
Starmer said
last night: “Three years on from Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine, we are at
a turning point. Now is the time for us to unite in order to guarantee the best
outcome for Ukraine, protect European security and secure our collective
future.”
Yesterday,
as Zelenskyy touched down in the UK on his way back from the US, he appeared
intent on trying to repair the damage caused by the diplomatic showdown in the
Oval Office. He posted on social media that he was “thankful to President
Trump, Congress for their bipartisan support, and the American people”, adding
that Trump’s support was “crucial”.
On Friday
evening, Trump and Vance had accused him of not being grateful to the US for
the huge sums they had spent on helping Ukraine to defend itself following the
Russian invasion in 2022.
In stark
contrast to the White House meeting, Zelenskyy arrived at Downing Street to be
met with cheers from crowds standing on Whitehall.
And in a
clear sign that Starmer wanted to demonstrate his sympathy for Zelenskyy, the
prime minister took the unusual step of walking along the pavement to greet
him. The two men then embraced before the prime minister gestured towards the
crowds.
Inside No
10, Starmer told his guest that the cheering outside was “the people of the
United Kingdom coming out to demonstrate how much they support you, how much
they support Ukraine”.
Starmer said
he had “absolute determination … to achieve what we both want to achieve, which
is a lasting peace – a lasting peace for Ukraine based on sovereignty and
security for Ukraine, so important for Ukraine, so important for Europe and so
important for the United Kingdom”.
Zelenskyy
replied: “We count on your support, and we’re really happy that we have such
partners and such friends.”
Among the
key issues to be discussed at today’s defence summit will be the extent to
which Europe can beef up its military support for Ukraine, and maintain the
strength of Nato if the US is seen to be reducing its involvement in European
defence.
The leaders
will also discuss how to increase economic pressure on Russia in order to hit
Putin’s military machine. Many western experts say that the weakness of the
Russian economy means that it has, at most, a year of being able to sustain its
operations on the borders of Ukraine.
King Charles
met Zelenskyy during the Ukrainian president’s surprise visit to the UK in
February 2023, when the king told him: “We’ve all been worried about you and
thinking about your country for so long.”
Zelenskyy
also used his address to parliament during that visit to thank the UK for its
steadfast support, finishing by saying: “God bless Great Britain and long live
the king.”
On Friday,
in their curtailed meeting, Trump had claimed Zelenskyy was “gambling with
world war three” as he became increasingly angry with what he thought was
Zelenskyy’s resistance to his plans for peace with Russia. The meeting ended
with a proposed deal on exchanging Ukrainian mineral rights for American arms
being put on ice.
After
Starmer’s meeting with Zelenskyy, which lasted an hour, the prime minister
escorted the Ukrainian president to the motorcade outside No 10 and waited to
wave him off – in contrast to his lonely departure from the White House 24
hours earlier.
With
European leaders believing the rift with the US over issues from security to
trade could present an existential threat to the bloc, they will meet on
Thursday, aiming to reinsert themselves into the US-led peace efforts on
Ukraine. But they will insist that Ukraine be at the heart of any talks,
something that the Trump administration has remained equivocal about.
“There can
be no negotiations on Ukraine without Ukraine,” states the draft summit text
seen by the Observer. “There can be no negotiations that affect European
security without Europe’s involvement. Ukraine and Europe’s security are
united.”
Summing up
the sense of crisis, one EU diplomat said: “If this is not a wake-up call, then
I don’t know what is. It is extremely important that the EU now moves from
talking the talk, to also walking the walk in a much more focused and diligent
way.”

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