Zelensky takes apparent dig at Trump for calling Putin
The Ukrainian leader questioned the value of peace talks when “the powerful” fail to be tough with Russia
[image id=286410]
US President Donald Trump speaks on the phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin © Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky has claimed that there is no value in trying to reach a peace deal with Moscow if powerful countries do not put pressure on Russia, in an apparent reference to US President Donald Trump’s recent phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
On Wednesday, the Russian and American leaders held a 75-minute call to discuss the Ukraine conflict. Trump described the conversation as “good,” but noted that it would not lead to “immediate peace” after Putin had told him “very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on [Russian] airfields.”
Ukrainian drones struck several Russian airbases across five regions on Sunday, ranging from Murmansk in the Arctic to Irkutsk in Siberia. Kiev claimed to have destroyed or damaged some 40 aircraft, including long-range bombers. Moscow has denied both the numbers and the extent of the damage.
Writing on X on Wednesday, several hours after Trump disclosed the content of his conversation with Putin, Zelensky claimed that “many have spoken with Russia at various levels. But none of these talks have brought a reliable peace, or even stopped the war.”
READ MORE: Trump views Zelensky as ‘bad guy’ – NYT
The Ukrainian leader criticized “those who still hesitate to increase pressure” on Russia and suggested that if “the powerful do not stop Putin, it means they share responsibility with him,” apparently referring to Trump and the fact that he has yet to impose additional sanctions on Moscow.
Zelensky’s post comes after the New York Times reported, citing sources, that Trump regularly describes the Ukrainian leader as a “bad guy” who is pushing the world closer to a nuclear conflict. Advisers told the outlet that while Trump has grown “exasperated” with both Moscow and Kiev, he “reserves special animosity” for Zelensky.
Meanwhile, Russian officials have repeatedly expressed their appreciation for Trump’s efforts to end the conflict and have reiterated Moscow’s openness to negotiations. However, Russia has insisted that a final peace deal with Kiev would have to take into account the realities on the ground and address the root causes of the conflict, such as Kiev’s efforts to join NATO, the spread of neo-Nazism within the country, and the infringement of the rights of Ukraine’s Russian-speaking population.