All smoke
but no fire as Zelenskyy emerges unbruised after Trump meet
Ukrainian
president faced a less combative US leader, who was busy exaggerating his
exploits as global peacemaker
Andrew
Roth
Andrew
Roth Global affairs correspondent
Mon 18
Aug 2025 20.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/18/trump-zelenskyy-meeting-ukraine-russia-peace
If there
was a sign that Volodymyr Zelenskyy wasn’t going to be immediately voted off
the island of the Donald Trump diplomacy show, it came early on when a familiar
voice commended his choice of attire.
“President
Zelensky, you look fabulous in that suit,” said Brian Glenn, a pro-Trump pundit
and member of the White House press corps, who had attacked him for wearing
military fatigues during the infamous Oval Office meeting in February. “I said
the same thing,” Trump added.
“You are
in the same suit,” Zelenskyy shot back, earning smiles and laughter from the
room including the US president. “I changed, you did not.”
Thus did
Zelenskyy survive his first media appearance at the White House with Trump on
Monday as the US president focused less on belittling the leader of a wartime
ally than boasting – and in many cases exaggerating – his exploits as a
peacemaker in world conflicts.
Zelenskyy,
dressed reluctantly in a black military-style suit to appease sticklers for
protocol in the White House, largely sat by quietly as Trump claimed to have
hammered out peace deals in six wars including one the veteran real estate
developer said had taken place in the “Republic of the Condo”.
From
Trump there was hyperbole about his ability to broker peace deals, digressions
to internal US political battles over mail-in ballots, nebulous declarations
about how he would end the conflict and evasions over how he would do that
without negotiating a ceasefire.
But there
were no explosions – which meant for Zelenskyy it probably went as well as it
could have.
Luckily,
Zelenskyy had some help, as he was joined by the UK’s Keir Starmer and the
leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Finland and the European Union in order to
keep the discussion on track and to prevent a similar meltdown as took place in
February.
It was
billed as a European summit at the White House on Monday, but it might as well
have been an intervention.
The
European leaders were all smiles as they arrived at the White House on Monday
afternoon, but they were there to steer Trump away from being sweet-talked by
Vladimir Putin into a bad deal on Ukraine and Europe.
Before
Trump rolled out the red carpet (literally) for Vladimir Putin in Alaska last
week, he said that he would know within two minutes of meeting the Kremlin
leader whether it would be possible or not to negotiate with him.
But
within two minutes of meeting Zelenskyy, Trump sent a message when he was asked
early in a press conference whether Russia or Ukraine “had the better cards”.
“I don’t
want to say that,” said Trump, who in February directly told Zelenskyy that he
“didn’t have the cards to negotiate”.
Then, he
went back and played the classics: “Look, this isn’t my war. This is Joe
Biden’s war.”
The
Ukrainian leader’s arrival at the White House on Monday had potentially
threatened the kind of political fireworks – or some could say depth charges –
that scuttled the Ukrainian leader’s last visit to Washington in February.
Then
Trump and vice-president JD Vance teamed up for a brutal takedown of Zelenskyy
during which Trump told him that he was “playing with world war III”.
But on
Monday, Zelenskyy found a far more hospitable welcome from both Trump and
Vance, and he kicked off the meeting with some high-level flattery, thanking
Trump profusely for his efforts to end the conflict and praising Melania Trump
for sending a letter to Putin about abducted Ukrainian children.
There was
little detail about the peace deal that Trump wanted to hammer out, except for
the fact that he wanted to skip past a ceasefire – too difficult to actually
negotiate – and go straight for a peace deal.
And yet
it appeared that all – or at least most – sides were keen to smooth over their
differences in order to prevent Ukraine as being seen as the main obstruction
to peace and of throwing the ball back to Putin.
The EU’s
most substantive pushback (in public at least) came as the leaders all sat
around a table and Germany’s Friedrich Merz and France’s Emmanuel Macron both
called for a ceasefire before talks over territory or a peace deal moved
forward.
Trump
didn’t appear to take umbrage although he had ruled out a ceasefire earlier –
and doubled down after Merz again called for a halt in the fighting.
But the
most white-knuckle moment of the introductory remarks came as Zelenskyy began
to delve into detail on Ukraine’s priorities for ending the war, all good
points that Trump appeared to have little interest in discussing in depth.
As the
minutes ticked by, Macron’s face grew dour. Trump tried to break in but
Zelenskyy continued to speak.
Then
suddenly, as though coming to, the Ukrainian leader straightened up in his seat
and quickly wrapped up his remarks. Mark Rutte, the secretary general of Nato,
quickly jumped in and, as soon as possible, said the main words that Trump
wanted to hear: “Thank you.”

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