Analysis
How JD
Vance emerged as the chief saboteur of the transatlantic alliance
Andrew Roth
in
Washington
Vance snaked
his way in first to the row between Trump and Zelenskyy, his second intrusion
this month after Munich
Sat 1 Mar
2025 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/28/jd-vance-volodymyr-zelenskyy
JD Vance was
supposed to be the inconsequential vice-president.
But his
starring role in Friday’s blowup between Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy –
where he played a cross between Trump’s bulldog and tech bro Iago – may mark
the moment that the postwar alliance between Europe and America finally
collapsed.
Trump and
Vance teamed up to goad Zelenskyy into a feud in the Oval Office. But it was
Vance that snaked his way in first, riling up the Ukrainian president by
telling him that he was leading “propaganda tours” of the destruction wrought
by Russia’s invasion.
“I think
it’s disrespectful to come into the Oval Office and try to litigate this in
front of the American media,” Vance said, his voice rising. “You bring people
on a propaganda tour, Mr President … Do you think that it’s respectful to come
to the Oval Office of the United States of America and attack the
administration that is trying to prevent the destruction of your country?”
“During the
war, everyone has problems,” Zelenskyy replied. “But you have nice ocean and
don’t feel now. But you will feel it in the future.”
“You don’t
know that,” Trump interjected angrily. “You don’t know that. Don’t tell us what
we’re going to feel.”
The rest, as
Trump would later call it, was “great television”. By design, it was disastrous
for Ukraine.
This was
Vance’s second great intervention this month. His Eurosceptic worldview came
into focus in Munich, where he accused shocked European leaders of stifling
free speech telling them that “if you’re running in fear of your own voters,
there is nothing America can do for you”.
At the time,
Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, said: “Listening to
that speech … they try to pick a fight with us and we don’t want to a pick a
fight with our friends”.
But on
Friday, Vance finally got his fight. The US vice-president is quietly
assembling a foreign policy team with a deeply skeptical view of Kyiv’s value
as a future ally. And European officials have lined up to back Zelenskyy,
saying that the Trump team’s performance in the Oval Office indicated that the
US was truly siding with Vladimir Putin in the war.
“Now is the
moment to stay calm, but not carry on,” wrote Camille Grand, a distinguished
policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations and former assistant
secretary general for defense investment at Nato. “The US ally has now
officially decided to take a stance inconsistent with our traditionally shared
interests and values. This might be temporary or lasting but this will have
profound and enduring consequences.”
There is a
thing in Washington that many people understand but that few will say: that the
Trump administration was looking for a pretext to ruin its relationship with
Ukraine, and that the canned messaging that followed the Oval Office feels
oddly coordinated and premeditated.
“That was a
train wreck by design,” said Sam Greene, a professor of Russian politics at
King’s College London. “The quiet conversation since Munich has been about
setting Ukraine up for a fall. If a real deal was going to be unattainable,
right, that somebody would need to take the blame for it, and it would likely
be the Ukrainians, right?”
By Friday
afternoon, the Trump administration was briefing reporters that it was so
offended by Zelenskyy’s conduct that it would consider cutting all military aid
to Ukraine, including ammunition, vehicles and missiles awaiting shipment. The
official told the Washington Post that the conflict with Zelenskyy had not been
premeditated.
But the
commentary from party allies was oddly formulaic and repetitive. Lindsey
Graham, who had posed for a photo with Zelenskyy just hours earlier, tweeted:
“America was disrespected and the deal is off. I have never been more proud of
President @realDonaldTrump and Vice President @JDVance for standing up for
America First.”
Marco Rubio,
the secretary of state, who has been one of Ukraine’s strongest backers up
until his confirmation, tweeted: “Thank you @POTUS for standing up for America
in a way that no President has ever had the courage to do before. Thank you for
putting America First. America is with you!”
Keith
Kellogg, Trump’s envoy to Ukraine, tweeted: “Was honored to be with @POTUS,
@VP, and [Rubio] in the Oval today during the bi-lateral with President
Zelensky. As the President has ALWAYS done-he stood for America....America
First.”
It is
difficult to know who is more contemptible: those who wanted this or those who
merely went along with it. There is a picture in the Oval Office of Rubio and
Vance sitting side by side as Trump rips into Zelenskyy. Rubio looks deeply
uncomfortable, his hands clasped and his face downcast. Vance looks ecstatic.
He finally got the fight he wanted to pick.
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