After meeting Zelenskyy, Trump asks Ukraine & Russia to 'stop where they are' and end war
Trump's latest rhetoric on Tomahawks was certainly disappointing to the Ukrainians.
PTI
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It was the fifth face-to-face meeting for Trump and Zelenskyy since the Republican returned to office. (PTI)
Washington, 18 Oct
US President Donald Trump on Friday called on Kyiv and
Moscow to "stop where they are" and end their brutal war, following a
lengthy White House meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Trump's frustration with the conflict has surfaced
repeatedly in the nine months since he returned to office, but with his latest
comments, he edged back in the direction of pressing Ukraine to give up on
retaking land it has lost to Russia.
"Enough blood has been shed, with property lines being
defined by War and Guts," Trump said in a Truth Social post not long after
hosting Zelenskyy and his team for more than two hours of talks. "They
should stop where they are. Let both claim Victory, let History decide!"
Later, soon after arriving in Florida, where he is spending
the weekend, Trump urged both sides to "stop the war immediately" and
implied that Moscow would keep territory it has taken from Kyiv.
"You go by the battle line wherever it is -- otherwise
it is too complicated," Trump told reporters. "You stop at the battle
line and both sides should go home, go to their families, stop the killing, and
that should be it."
The comments amounted to another shift in position on the
war by Trump. In recent weeks, he had shown growing impatience with RussianPresident Vladimir Putin and expressed greater openness to helping Ukraine win
the war.
After meeting with Zelenskyy in New York on the sidelines of
the annual UN General Assembly last month, Trump even said he believed the
Ukrainians could win back all the territory they had lost to Russia since Putin
launched the February 2022 invasion. That was a dramatic shift for Trump, who
had previously insisted that Kyiv would have to concede land lost to Russia to
end the war.
Zelenskyy after Friday's meeting said it was time for a
ceasefire and negotiations. He sidestepped directly answering a question about
Trump nudging Ukraine to give up land.
"The president is right. We have to stop where we are,
and then to speak," Zelenskyy said when asked by reporters about Trump's
social media post, which he had not seen.
Trump's tone on the war shifted after he held a lengthy
phone call with Putin on Thursday and announced that he planned to meet with
the Russian leader in Budapest, Hungary, in the coming weeks.
The US president also signalled to Zelenskyy on Friday that
he is leaning against selling him long-range Tomahawk missiles, weaponry that
the Ukrainians believe could be a game changer in helping prod Putin to the
negotiating table.
Zelenskyy at the start of the White House talks said he had
a "proposition" in which Ukraine could provide the United States with
its advanced drones, while Washington would sell Kyiv the Tomahawk cruise
missiles.
But Trump said he was hesitant to tap into the US supply, a
turnabout after days of suggesting he was seriously weighing sending the
missiles to help Ukraine beat back Russia's invasion.
"I have an obligation also to make sure that we're
completely stocked up as a country, because you never know what's going to
happen in war and peace," Trump said. "We'd much rather have them not
need Tomahawks. We'd much rather have the war be over to be honest."
In an interview with Kirsten Welker of NBC's "Meet the
Press", Zelenskyy suggested the door was not closed.
"It is good that President Trump did not say no, but
for today, did not say yes," he said.
Zelenskyy also said "we need Tomahawks" because "it
is very difficult just to operate only with Ukrainian drones".
Trump's latest rhetoric on Tomahawks was certainly
disappointing to the Ukrainians. In recent days, Trump had shown an openness to
selling Ukraine the Tomahawks, even as Putin warned that such a move would
further strain the US-Russian relationship.
But following Thursday's call with Putin, Trump began
downplaying the prospects of Ukraine getting the missiles, which have a range
of about 995 miles (1,600 kilometres).
Zelenskyy had been seeking the Tomahawks, which would allow
Ukrainian forces to strike deep into Russian territory and target key military
sites, energy facilities and critical infrastructure. Zelenskyy has argued that
the potential for such strikes would help compel Putin to take Trump's calls
for direct negotiations to end the war more seriously.
Putin warned Trump during the call that supplying Kyiv with
the Tomahawks "won't change the situation on the battlefield, but would
cause substantial damage to the relationship between our countries",
according to Yuri Ushakov, Putin's foreign policy adviser.
It was the fifth face-to-face meeting for Trump and
Zelenskyy since the Republican returned to office in January.
The US president said on Friday it was "to be
determined" if Zelenskyy would be involved in the upcoming talks in
Hungary -- suggesting a "double meeting" with the warring countries'
leaders was likely the most workable option for productive negotiations.
"These two leaders do not like each other, and we want
to make it comfortable for everybody," Trump added.
But Zelenskyy told reporters that the animus toward Putin
"is not about feelings".
"They attacked us, so they are an enemy for us. They do
not intend to stop," Zelenskyy added. "So they are an enemy. It is
not about someone just hating someone else. Although, undoubtedly, we hate the
enemy. Undoubtedly."
Trump, going back to his 2024 campaign, insisted he would
quickly end the war, but his peace efforts appeared to stall following a diplomatic
blitz in August, when he held a summit with Putin in Alaska and a White House
meeting with Zelenskyy and European allies.
Trump emerged from those meetings certain he was on track to
arranging direct talks between Zelenskyy and Putin. But the Russian leader has
not shown any interest in meeting with Zelenskyy and Moscow has only
intensified its bombardment of Ukraine.
Asked on Friday if he was concerned that Putin was stringing
him along, Trump acknowledged it was a possibility but said he was confident he
could handle the Russian leader.
"I have been played all my life by the best of them,
and I came out really well," Trump said. He added, "I think I am
pretty good at this stuff."
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