The US president believes his Russian counterpart is ready to make a deal, unlike the Ukrainian leader
RT: FILE PHOTO © Joe Raedle / Getty Images
US
President Donald Trump has singled out Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky as
the main obstacle to a peace agreement to end the conflict with Russia,
in an Oval Office interview with Reuters.
Trump has repeatedly
expressed frustration that his attempts to broker a ceasefire between
Russia and Ukraine over the past year have been unsuccessful,
alternately blaming both Moscow and Kiev for the deadlock.
Asked on Wednesday who was stalling the negotiations, Trump responded with a single name: “Zelensky.”
“I just think he’s... having a hard time getting there,” he added. “I think [Russian President Vladimir Putin] is ready to make a deal… I think Ukraine is less ready to make a deal.”
The relationship between Trump and Zelensky, who he once called “a dictator without elections,” has been volatile ever since the notorious White House meeting early last year. Trump reiterated on Sunday that Zelensky “has no cards” in the conflict and negotiations with Russia. “He didn’t have them from day one. He’s only got one thing – Donald Trump,” he told the New York Times.
Meanwhile,
Moscow is open to further contact with Trump and his senior envoys,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov confirmed on Wednesday. Russian
officials, including Putin, have repeatedly stated that Moscow would
prefer to resolve the Ukraine conflict through diplomatic means, but
will have to continue using force if its key objectives cannot be
achieved through diplomacy alone.
Last month, Trump said a peace deal was “95% ready,” apparently
referring to a leaked plan envisioning Kiev ceding the remainder of
Donbass to Russia, renouncing its NATO ambitions, and capping its
military. The original 28-point draft, criticized by Kiev and its
European backers as favoring Moscow, was later cut to 20 points, but key
issues remain unresolved – with Zelensky reluctant to concede territory
or hold elections without robust NATO-like security guarantees.
Zelensky’s
presidential term expired in May 2024. He refused to hold a new
election, citing the conflict with Russia. Moscow subsequently declared
him “illegitimate.”
Russian officials have warned that
Zelensky’s status would be a major legal obstacle to signing a peace
agreement. Earlier this week, Zelensky submitted two draft bills to
parliament to extend martial law and general mobilization for another 90
days, effectively postponing elections once again.