Tag: Ukraine

  • Trump takes a pass on brokering peace in Ukraine

    Trump takes a pass on brokering peace in Ukraine

    Has Donald Trump just announced the most consequential foreign policy reversal of his presidency? If so, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky and France’s Emmanuel Macron – the last leaders to speak to Trump just before his epochal announcement – should be careful what they wish for.

    In the mother of all flip-flops, Trump on Wednesday posted on Truth Social that “Ukraine, with the support of the European Union, is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form.” That’s a position that even Biden, in his most optimistic moments, never dared to take. Trump claimed that Russians were finding it “almost impossible” to buy gasoline (by implication, as a result of Ukrainian drone strikes), that “Putin and Russia are in BIG Economic trouble.” To add insult to injury, Trump also called Russia a “paper tiger” that had been “fighting aimlessly for three and a half years a War that should have taken a Real Military Power less than a week to win.” 

    Ouch. That’s about as hard a diplomatic gut-punch that Trump could deliver, short perhaps of calling Putin a coward and a liar. Trump also went out of his way to praise Zelensky at a civil sit-down meeting at the United Nations. “Frankly, Ukraine is doing a very good job of stopping this very large army,” Trump said. “It’s pretty amazing.” That’s a very far cry from Trump’s confrontational “you have no cards” speech to Zelensky in the Oval Office in February. 

    On the face of it, Zelensky got exactly what he wanted from Trump, pushing the line that Moscow faces economic collapse and that Ukraine has a realistic chance of expelling Russian forces from its territory. But in truth Trump’s announcement is terrible news for Kyiv and the future of its war effort. 

    Trump’s statement is not a declaration of support for Ukraine, it’s Trump’s resignation from further participation in the peace process. And the sting in the tail of Trump’s announcement is a crystal-clear declaration that he now considers the Ukraine war Europe’s responsibility. A Ukrainian victory is possible “with the support of the European Union,” wrote Trump. All it will take is “time, patience, and the financial support of Europe and, in particular, NATO.” Except, crucially, that Trump clearly refers to NATO as something distinct from the US, promising that Washington “will continue to supply weapons to NATO for NATO to do what they want with them.” Note the weasel word “they.”

    To be fair to Trump, walking away from trying to make peace in Ukraine was always on the cards. Back on April 18, Trump told reporters at the White House that he wanted to get a peace deal “quickly.” But he also warned that “if for some reason one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re just going to say, ‘you’re foolish, you’re fools, you’re horrible people, and we’re going to just take a pass. But hopefully we won’t have to do that.”

    Turns out Trump did end up taking a pass, just like he promised – and Vladimir Putin is to blame. Despite a reputation in some quarters for being a master manipulator, Putin utterly failed to correctly read Donald Trump. Defying media criticism and resistance from parts of the Republican party, Trump took a major political risk in inviting Putin to Anchorage, Alaska, giving the Russian leader red-carpet treatment and even repeating some of Putin’s talking points. Trump gave Putin respect, face and made him a supremely generous offer essentially to freeze the front lines in Ukraine and allowing Russia to hold on to the occupied territories. 

    Instead of banking that amazing breakthrough and calling it a day in Ukraine, Putin stupidly did not give Trump an inch. Instead of stopping his missile bombardments of Ukraine – something that clearly angered Trump and prompted his angry message “VLADIMIR, STOP!” – Putin instead doubled down and intensified his attacks on Ukrainian cities to unprecedented levels. Instead of continuing talks with Kyiv, Putin high-handedly ignored Trump’s calls for him to meet Zelensky. And instead of winding down the war, the Kremlin has done the opposite, launching a series of incursions into NATO airspace. Seen from the White House, Putin’s recent behavior has not just been murderous and provocative – it’s been downright disrespectful. And Trump does not appreciate being disrespected. 

    There is possibly another, more calculating hypothesis behind Trump’s reversal. It’s been clear for a while now that the peace process with Putin is dead in the water – which means no great oil and gas deals or multi-billion dollar mineral rights that will help make America great again. So it’s time to open the shop doors wide and allow Europeans to buy hundreds of billions of high-end weapons from the US for use by Ukraine. The bill just for Patriot missiles of the kind that Ukraine says it needs to create an Iron Dome-like air defense system is $100 billion for that system alone. That way the US economy gets a different kind of boost, while Trump washes his hands of any political downside.

    If there’s one thing Trump hates more than disrespect, it’s to be seen to fail. With his peace initiative floundering on Putin’s intransigence, small wonder that Trump chose to walk away from the coming train wreck and leave European allies to sort out the mess – and foot the bill. 

    Essentially, Trump has called Europe and Zelensky’s bluff. You say you can defeat Putin? You go for it, buddy. You say you won’t allow aggression to be rewarded in Europe? Sure, guys, knock yourselves out. Trump also made it clear that he’s walking away from sanctions, too, by pointing out the painfully obvious fact that it’s Europe, not just China and India, which remains a major importer of Russian energy and therefore one of the biggest funders of the Kremlin’s war machine. Trump told the Europeans he would not sanction Russia further until they stopped importing Putin’s oil and gas – which the EU can’t and won’t do, despite all their fighting talk. 

    For the whole duration of the war European leaders have been making fine-sounding promises to Ukraine that it expects the US to pay for. That includes Macron and Sir Keir Starmer’s latest idea of creating a “coalition of the willing” which proposes a “reassurance force” on the ground in Ukraine – just as long as its backed by US air-power. With his flip-flop on Ukraine, Trump has clearly signaled that Uncle Sucker isn’t going to play that game any more. Trump may still be willing to defend its NATO allies – but when it comes to Ukraine, Europe is on its own, militarily and diplomatically.  By the same token, the White House is through with listening to any more of Putin’s bull-crap. In the rich Russian phrase, Putin “doprygalsya” – literally, jumped himself into a bunch of trouble. 

    Ukraine, Russia and Europe have nothing to celebrate and a lot to rue. Thousands more people are going to die pointlessly, with little prospect of achieving a significantly different outcome than the one Trump put on the table and Putin rejected. The dogs of war remain off their leashes, and the havoc will continue until Ukraine runs out of men – or Russia runs out of money.

  • Why is Putin probing Poland with drones?

    Provocation, mistake, or something in between? Either Putin sent Russian drones into Poland’s airspace on Tuesday night to test Nato’s reaction, or Ukrainian electronic jamming scrambled the targeting systems on Russian drones and sent them haywire. Or perhaps the Kremlin is playing a grey-zone game, launching an accidentally-on-purpose attack to push Europe’s boundaries. 

    Whatever Putin’s intent, the shooting down of several drones marks the first time ever that Nato warplanes have engaged and destroyed Russian weapons in European airspace. Though Polish prime minister Donald Tusk noted that “there is no reason to claim that we are in a state of war” he did call the incursion “significantly more dangerous than all previous ones” and warned that a military conflict with Russia is “closer than at any time since the second world war.”

    The problem with the Kremlin testing the boundaries theory is that it doesn’t make much political or military sense. Poland’s relations with Ukraine are already souring, which is exactly how the Kremlin wants it. Just days ago Polish President Karol Nawrocki said that he believed that Ukraine’s accession to Nato should be “postponed” because of the risk of automatically involving allies in a conflict with Russia. He added that discussions about Ukraine’s EU membership were “premature,” stressing that such processes “require time and the consideration of economic factors.” Decoded, Nawrocki fears that Poland’s agricultural sector will be undercut by cheap Ukrainian produce, and Kyiv will receive all the EU subsidies that currently go to Warsaw. Poland also recently ended most benefits payments to Ukrainian refugees settled in its territory. 

    Why, when relations between Poland and Ukraine are heading into choppy waters, would Putin wish to rekindle their solidarity by attacking Polish territory directly? 

    Militarily, too, it’s not clear what the purpose of a deliberate Russian “probing attack” might be. The drones seem to have flown in different directions, one ending up 275 kilometres into Polish territory toward Warsaw while the others were shot down around Rzesow in the south-east of the country. A true test of Poland’s air defense would presumably involve a concentrated attack on a specific target. And Shahed drones – and their Russian-made clones, known as Geran – are a strange way to test defenses as they are notoriously slow and heavy, unlike Russian cruise missiles or indeed hypersonic rockets like the nuclear-capable Kinzhal. The military utility of Shahed attacks is to overwhelm air defense batteries by sheer force of numbers, relying on just 10 or 20 percent of the drone swarm getting through. 

    The problem with the Kremlin testing the boundaries theory is that it doesn’t make much political or military sense

    Another piece of evidence that the incursion may not have been deliberate are reports indicating that after the drones went Awol into Polish airspace some Russian strategic bombers aborted their missions, returning to base without launching their cruise missiles against Ukrainian targets. If true, it could suggest that Russian commanders were wary of escalating the war beyond Ukrainian territory.

    This week Russia and Belarus are about to commence scheduled joint military exercise dubbed Zapad-2025, designed to test their response to a western attack on Russia. For decades, the annual ritual of the Zapad war-games have been a moment of heightened tension for Poland and the Baltic states. To deliberately stage a serious provocation against Nato on the eve of the exercise would be a reckless and foolish move by the Kremlin. But then again the whole full-scale invasion of Ukraine was in itself a massive act of recklessness and folly. 

    What is clear is that Putin is very serious about smashing Ukraine’s energy and transport infrastructure before winter sets in. The massive swarms of missiles and drones that Russia has been sending almost nightly set new records for their scale. A major target seems to be military supply hubs for Nato materiel around Lviv, Lutsk and Rivne – all close to Ukraine’s border with Poland. 

    In the wake of the drone incursion Tusk invoked Nato’s Article Four for only the seventh time since the alliance was founded, calling on allies to “consult” in case of a threat. That will be an important test of Donald Trump’s attitude to Nato. Last week Trump had said that “we are with Poland all the way and we will help Poland protect itself.” Blasting Nato’s European members as free riders has been a long-time Trump talking point. But in July EU leaders pledged to up their contributions to 5 percent of GDP – and Nato’s secretary general Mark Rutte called Trump “Daddy.” Whether this has fundamentally changed Trump’s attitude to Nato remains to be seen.  

    European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in her State of the Union address vowed that Europe would apply “more pressure on Russia to come to the negotiating table. We need more sanctions.” France’s Emmanuel Macron called the airspace violation “simply unacceptable… We will not compromise on the safety of our allies.” But so far nothing that Nato, or Europe, has done so far has succeeded in deterring Putin or swerving him from his systematic campaign to crush Ukraine. 

  • Ukraine’s own Wagner Group

    Ukraine’s own Wagner Group

    As peace in Ukraine seems still far and the conflict is witnessing a new escalation of violence, a new breed of private military companies is already emerging, ready for a post-conflict Ukraine. Rooted in a draft legislation “On International Defense Companies” proposed on April 2024, the Ukrainian government aims to channel combat-seasoned veterans into regulated, transparent security firms rather than leave them adrift or, worse, turn them into mercenaries for hire in distant conflicts from the Sahel to the DRC.

    By framing Private Military Companies (PMCs) as legitimate employers under strict oversight, complete with licensing, arms registers and accountability mechanisms, a well-crafted law could both ease demobilisation pains at home and forestall the proliferation of unaccountable fighters abroad. Regulated PMCs could also provide financial stability for former soldiers and create a new revenue stream for Ukraine’s post-war reconstruction budget.

    Moscow has taken notice. Some voices in Russia are already signalling that a condition for any long-term ceasefire could be a ban on Ukrainian PMCs, particularly those operating abroad. The concern is clear: future Ukrainian PMCs are likely to field not just battle-hardened boots on the ground but also elite combat drone operators, especially the frontline drone pilots, skilled intelligence analysts, hackers with cyberwarfare expertise and access to cyber weapons and frontline-experienced medical teams, all for hire.

    In effect, they would form a highly capable force and be a direct competitor to Russia’s Wagner Group, but with even more sophisticated capabilities in modern warfare and, most importantly, being palatable to the West. These PMCs will also capitalize on the combat experience of Ukrainian fighters, turning them into a force multiplier for regular armies worldwide by offering highly sought-after training in battle-tested tactics.

    It is not by chance that at a June 4 news conference in Berlin, President Volodymyr Zelensky signaled he may be open to the creation of private entities in Ukraine, a pointed response to a recent Russian memorandum demanding that Kyiv dismantle all “nationalist formations” and private military companies.

    The danger is that without proper regulation, highly trained and heavily armed veterans could operate abroad in a legal grey zone, behaving more like mercenaries than legitimate private military contractors. History offers a grim preview of what can happen when such forces operate without oversight. Russian veterans returning from the brutal urban combat of the Second Chechen War, many scarred by PTSD, often fell into cycles of addiction or found new purpose in criminal syndicates and mercenary outfits, some enlisted in a little-known outfit at the time, the Wagner Group.

    The modern mercenary landscape abounds with such examples: Colombian ex-soldiers linked to the assassination of Haiti’s president, to former ISIS fighters serving as proxies in the Libyan civil war. Together, these forces blur the line between statecraft and criminality, embedding themselves in the global black market that trades in weapons, narcotics and human trafficking.

    At the same time, the legality, accountability and military utility of PMCs are still highly debated. One certainty is that rogue PMCs have the same corrosive effect on societal cohesion as mercenary groups.

    The urgency is clear: the privatisation of warfare is not slowing down, and mercenaries are increasingly deployed as tools of state influence, operating in a legal grey zone where plausible deniability meets profit. The Wagner Group, now rebranded Africa Corps, keeps client government weak and the security situation in flux, ensuring continued demand for their services while securing access to lucrative natural resources. It’s no coincidence that the group’s chilling motto, “Death is our business,” endures, even after its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, perished in a fiery plane crash following his failed coup.

    Today, this privatised model of conflict complicates traditional notions of state-controlled violence. Without clear rules, rogue PMCs can destabilise regions, undermine peacekeeping efforts, and siphon talent from local security forces. Worse, history suggests that mercenaries, driven by profit, are often incentivised to prolong conflicts rather than resolve them. While the societal costs of unaccountable PMCs and mercenaries are borne locally, the consequences ripple globally.

    Yet not all private military firms operate in the shadows. Stringent international standards, accountability and adherence to human rights by PMCs could play a constructive role in regions where states are unable or unwilling to provide security services.

    If Ukraine’s future framework for regulating its veterans succeeds and prevents a mercenary Wild West, it may offer a blueprint for other nations grappling with the aftermath of conflict. The alternative, a world increasingly dominated by shadow armies, risks normalising a privatised form of violence with few checks, vast profits and long-term negative effects on social cohesion.

  • Europe is a paper tiger

    Europe is a paper tiger

    “The purpose of NATO,” Lord Hastings Ismay, the alliance’s first secretary general, once quipped, was “to keep the Americans in, the Russians out, and the Germans down.” That formula defined Europe’s security for decades, and it worked because US power anchored the alliance. But as President Donald Trump’s administration demands its European allies carry their share of the burden, shows little appetite for sending troops to Europe and worries more about the Southeast Asian theater, Europeans are being forced to confront their lack of political will for their own security, underinvestment in defense and dwindling public appetite to fight for their country. 

    Following the meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House, discussions among European leaders and Volodymyr Zelensky began on potential security guarantees for Ukraine, should a peace settlement with Russia be achieved. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni described the proposition similar to NATO’s “Article 5-like” framework, a collective commitment that would assemble a coalition of the willing to deploy European troops. Reportedly, plans envision European states taking a lead in ground deployment, while the United States would focus on providing air support, logistical assistance and other non-combat roles.

    “Nobody believes that NATO countries would join the war. So, the promise of a NATO Article 5 is a red herring,” Matthew Savill, director of military sciences at the London-based Royal United Services Institute told The Spectator. “They talk about air policing, but what does that mean? Are you going to shoot down Russian jets?”

    That goes to the heart of the issue: would a European force genuinely deter Moscow, or merely create the appearance of resolve?

    During the Cold War, deterrence stood where troops stood. More than 300,000 US troops were stationed across Europe, on the ground in Germany (250,000) and elsewhere, ready to fight if the Soviet Union moved west. By the time Russia launched its full-scale war in Ukraine in 2022, that number had dwindled to about 60,000.

    As the Western European nations prospered through the 1960s and 70s, defense budgets rarely matched economic growth, and after the Soviet collapse in the 1990s, spending plummeted further. Only a handful of countries, such as France, the UK and Poland, kept spending close to NATO’s 2 percent target. Others including Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands let defense spending fall to just 1 percent of GDP. Decades of neglect left the industry on the continent scrambling. Arms industries were neglected, with little investment in air and naval power, and NATO’s eastern flank continues to rely on Washington’s backbone.

    “We decided that we weren’t going to face a major war,” Savill explained. 

    In Europe tens of billions of euros were redirected each year to other priorities, particularly social welfare. Germany alone saved more than €20 billion annually compared with what it would have spent at higher levels of military investment. 

    “If tomorrow Russia would invade NATO, the only army that would be ready to fight is Turkish,” a Ukrainian senior official who spoke on the condition of anonymity told The Spectator. “All the other ones are good for parades, not for real war.”

    The continent is now playing catch up. The European Union announced that it will mobilize €800 billion for defense investments, a plan Brussels wants to spread over four years through higher deficits, joint borrowing and redirected EU funds. Germany voted for historic military investments, while Italy ramps up arms production and Poland wants to double its military. 

    “The big problem Europeans have is that when you point at something they have and say, ‘oh, this is quite good,’ they just don’t have much of it, and much of it isn’t at a high level of readiness. It takes time before you can deploy it or use it. France and the UK have maintained very good armed forces, but they are small,” Savill points out.

    At the NATO summit in the Hague in June of this year, NATO allies agreed to raise defense spending to 5 percent. But few leaders are willing to touch the social spending that makes up one-fifth of the EU budget.

    “It turns out that Germany has lots of jets that don’t fly. Their army isn’t that deployable,” Savill said. “It will take several years to ramp production back up. Rheinmetall can’t suddenly produce shells, and MBDA can’t suddenly produce missiles. The trend has been reversed, but it will take years.” 

    Much of Europe spends more than twice as much on defense as Russia, but money doesn’t translate into military strength. Moscow pays its soldiers far less and maintains equipment at a fraction of Western costs. When adjusted for what each side can actually buy, the picture flips: Russia fields almost five times the military power of France’s defense budget, and six times that of Germany or the UK.

    Budgets and capabilities are not Europe’s only challenge. Public spirit is just as much of a problem. Gallup polls show the EU with the lowest readiness worldwide: only a third of citizens say they would fight for their country while non-EU states report far higher levels – a vulnerability money alone cannot solve. 

    As Europe begins to learn from its mistakes, Russia already has. It has rebuilt its military industry and armed forces, while fighting a high-intensity war. By late 2024, more than 600,000 Russian soldiers were on the frontlines, nearly double the initial invasion force. Moscow’s defense industry has been put on a war footing, opening new factories and converting civilian production lines. This has allowed Russia to replace its battlefield losses: in one year alone, it’s expected to roll out 1,500 tanks, 3,000 armored vehicles, and 200 Iskander missiles, while producing 250,000 artillery shells every month. Stockpile three times greater than the US and Europe combined. 

    Zelensky, fearing another onslaught, insists on 100,000 foreign troops in Ukraine under any settlement. Military arithmetic makes that impossible. A front-line force requires three times as many in reserve and support. Europe might muster 10,000 quickly but it would be a political gesture more than a shield and would still rely heavily on US enablers. The 100,000 Zelensky wants would take months, if not years, and expose shortages in weapons and ammunition, and be unsustainable without Washington.

    Germany and Italy have already ruled out deployments. Britain and France may be willing, but their forces are too small for long-term operations. The Europeans hope to resolve the dilemma with so-called “tripwire” assurances which entails that even small deployment on the Ukrainian soil, can trigger larger intervention if attacked, preferably from the United States. 

    With its grand claims to be able to protect Ukraine, Europe has become a paper tiger. And Putin is very well aware. However guarantees are dressed up, they will rest not on Brussels but on Washington, and on a president whose stance, observers note, often shifts depending on who spoke to him last.

  • Will Germany actually send troops to Ukraine?

    Will Germany actually send troops to Ukraine?

    As Donald Trump presses on with his breathless efforts to secure an end to the war in Ukraine, the leaders of Europe face a task of their own. In the event of a peace deal with Russia, how will they – in place of an America that can’t be trusted as a reliable ally – provide Kyiv with the security guarantees against Russian aggression that it craves? And even if they are willing, are they capable of delivering them?

    The idea of sending a peacekeeping force to Ukraine at some point in the future has split Germany down the middle

    Stepping out of the White House following Monday’s hastily arranged summit with Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders, German chancellor Friedrich Merz signaled that yes, his country was willing and able to provide Ukraine with security guarantees.

    “It is clear to me that we, as the Federal Republic of Germany, also have a strong interest and a strong responsibility to participate in this,” he said. He caveated his declaration of intent by saying he would be discussing everything with European allies and that any final decision regarding German boots on the ground in Ukraine would be put to a vote in the Bundestag as per German law.

    In what is increasingly becoming a pattern of this fairly new Chancellor’s governance, Merz’s comments stirred the political hornets’ nest in Berlin within hours. By the time he had landed back in Germany, a full-throated debate on the Bundeswehr’s potential support for Ukraine was under way.

    The idea of sending a peacekeeping force to Ukraine at some point in the future has split Germany down the middle. According to a poll conducted by the research institute Civey, 51 percent of Germans think including the Bundeswehr in a peacekeeping mission to Ukraine is a bad idea. Just 36 percent of respondents think it is a good one.

    Russia’s invasion feels much closer to home for the average German – with just one country, Poland, separating them from the conflict. As such, right from the start of the war in February 2022, there has been a lingering sense of unease about politicians in Berlin dragging Germany into a war it did not start. The country’s Nazi past – still very much at the forefront of the national consciousness – makes the idea of proactively sending German troops into territory its predecessors did their best to annihilate barely 80-odd years ago sit uncomfortably with many, even if the circumstances are now vastly different. A survey from May showed that 64 percent of Germans were at least “very worried” about the return of war to Europe.

    Both the German far right and the far left have jumped on Merz’s comments as an example of what they want to portray as his warmongering credentials. Alice Weidel, co-leader of the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party branded his words “dangerous and irresponsible.”

    By Tuesday, the AfD had mocked up an unnerving new post for their social media. Sending soldiers to Ukraine “would not be peacekeeping, but a permanent escalation against Russia,” it reads. Accompanying this was a sepia-toned image showing five frowning youths being loomed over by Merz, his smile fixed in a maniacal grin and the tips of his fingers touching in a steeple. Underneath, the slogan: “Merz wants to send YOU to Ukraine? We don’t!”

    While superficially the image makes Merz look like a cartoon villain, it has prompted disgust for how evocative it is of the anti-Semitic propaganda distributed during the Nazi era portraying Jewish people as power-hungry villains. Many have seen this as yet further confirmation of how the AfD is growing increasingly comfortable flirting with the symbolism and rhetoric of Germany’s National Socialist past.

    Sahra Wagenknecht, the far-left leader of the eponymous Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW) also hopped on the bandwagon. In a video posted to social media on Wednesday, she warned: “Your father, your brother, your son could soon be fighting Russia in Ukraine.” Merz’s willingness to consider sending troops to Ukraine is “dangerous” and “completely oblivious to history.” “Should the conflict break out again, Germany would immediately become a party to the war,” she added. She has called for a “peace rally” in Berlin on 13 September 13 to “stop the federal government’s war course.”

    If such warnings of escalation in the conflict sound familiar, that’s because they are. Following the Ukraine summit in Washington on Monday, the spokesperson for the Russian foreign ministry Maria Zakharova addressed Ukraine’s allies in a statement. Reinforcing the Kremlin’s rejection of any NATO troops being sent into Ukraine to keep the peace, Zakharova said “this risks uncontrollable escalation with unpredictable consequences.” The AfD and BSW have made little effort to distance their messaging from that of Moscow’s.

    Despite sitting on opposite sides of the political spectrum, both the AfD and BSW have, over the years, acquired reputations for being pro-Russia. They are both in favor of dropping sanctions against Moscow and restoring diplomatic relations. Both oppose sending weapons to Ukraine. But their calls for peace are also tinged with cynicism: the largest voter bases for both parties are predominantly located in the former East Germany, where cultural memory of the GDR means distrust of NATO and likewise a fear of Russian aggression are higher. Both the AfD and BSW are quite comfortable using the debate around a peacekeeping force in Ukraine to stoke fear with their voters.

    Merz has had little help from his own cabinet in backing up his commitment to Ukraine. As the Chancellor was flying to Washington, his foreign minister Johann Wadephul unhelpfully declared that sending German troops to Ukraine would “probably overwhelm” the Bundeswehr alongside its commitment to creating a new brigade of 5,000 in Lithuania – expected to be operational by 2027. The German army has been chronically under-resourced for years: it is currently approximately 20,000 soldiers short and is struggling to replace much of the vital equipment donated to Ukraine over the past 3.5 years. While Merz eased the country’s state debt rules on coming into power, which will allow a huge boost for military spending in the coming years, it will nevertheless take a while for the full benefits to be felt.

    There is, of course, also the question of what Germany’s role in any peacekeeping force would look like in Ukraine. The defense minister Boris Pistorius has kept his cards close to his chest, saying “what a German contribution to the security guarantees will look like has not yet been determined.” There is every chance that, should opposition to boots on the ground prove too fierce for Merz to push through the Bundestag, this could be watered down to see the German army simply provide Ukraine with, for example, reconnaissance data and intelligence, further arms deliveries or training for its soldiers.

    With little prospect of a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine any time soon, Merz has time to rally his government, prepare the army and fight off his opponents on the political fringes. But if the first seven months of Trump’s second term have taught the Chancellor and his fellow European leaders anything, it is that predictability and caution don’t come naturally to the American president. A peace deal with Moscow could be foisted on Kyiv by Trump at a moment’s notice. Merz has his work cut out ensuring Germany is prepared for that moment when it arrives.

  • Putin has yet to make any real concessions

    Putin has yet to make any real concessions

    After the jaw-dropping spectacle of the Putin-Trump summit in Alaska, there was another full day of theater on Monday as Trump hosted European leaders and President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House. Yet the results of this three-day diplomatic pageant are embarrassingly modest.

    In the absence of a breakthrough on this important question, Trump’s diplomacy is little more than a fireworks show

    One of Trump’s trumpeted achievements is Russia’s alleged agreement to western security guarantees for Ukraine. It was President Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff who first announced this breakthrough, with some fanfare, in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper. “We sort of were able to… get an agreement,” Witkoff said, “that the United States could offer Article 5 protection [for Ukraine], which was the first time we had ever heard… the Russians agree to that.”

    The word “sort of” does a lot of heavy lifting here because Russia’s unprecedented concession is not a concession at all, or certainly not Russia’s concession. It is the United States that, ignoring Zelensky’s pleas, has refused to provide tangible security guarantees to Ukraine for fear that doing so could lead to a direct conflict with Russia. But, ever the salesman, Trump has managed to sell a US concession to Ukraine as Russia’s major concession and an indication that Putin is willing to talk peace.

    As for Putin, it remains to be seen what he has actually agreed to. During his joint press conference with Trump, the Russian President referred vaguely to the importance of assuring Ukraine’s security. “Of course, we are willing to work on this,” he offered.

    But it is important to remember that already in the spring of 2022, during the ill-fated talks in Istanbul, the Russians provisionally agreed to a security mechanism for Ukraine that would involve the United States and other western powers. However, Putin made it clear then that he expected to have the right to veto any collective action to help Ukraine. It is unclear whether this expectation was brought up during his brief interaction with Trump in Anchorage. Thus constrained, any US security guarantee would not be worth the paper it’s written on.

    The other major uncertainty pertains to Russia’s willingness (or not) to permit Western contingents in Ukraine as part of a peace settlement. Moscow has repeatedly rejected the idea of troops on the ground in Ukraine if these troops are from NATO member states.

    The latest rebuttal came even as Trump was meeting European leaders in Washington in the form of a scornful comment by the eccentric spokesperson of the Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova who criticized Great Britain – which, along with France, has been one of the leaders of the so called “coalition of the willing” and has broached the subject of sending contingents to Ukraine – for “risky and ill-thought-through geopolitical gambits” and for trying to “obstruct the careful work of the Russian and American negotiators.”

    Helping Maria Zakharova’s case, President Trump has not been very forthcoming with concrete details of US participation. His message – as he put it in a joint press conference with President Zelensky – is that Europe would be “the first line of defense… but we’re gonna help them out also.” What that “help” may amount to remains to be seen. For now, at least, Trump’s security promise sounds rather hollow.

    So, the big question – what kind of security guarantees Russia has agreed to, and what kind of security guarantees the United States might be willing to offer – remains completely obscure. In the absence of a breakthrough on this important question, Trump’s diplomacy is little more than a fireworks show: it offers a momentary distraction from the grueling reality of war.

    Trump has now kicked the ball back over to the Russians and the Ukrainians. He expects Putin and Zelensky to meet in person and just work it out among themselves. In a middle-of-the-night phone call with Trump, Putin promised – per Russian readout – to “consider the possibility of raising the level of representatives of Ukrainian and Russian sides… participating in direct negotiations.” In the meantime, Russian forces continued pummeling targets across Ukraine.

    Putin has offered no concrete evidence that he is willing to make a deal on terms that would fall short of Ukraine’s capitulation. “If there aren’t concessions, if one side gets everything they want, that’s called surrender,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared on August 17, shortly after Alaska. But he has failed to show what concessions Putin has made. By all indications, Putin has promised nothing in the way of substance, yet just enough for Trump to drop all talk of “severe consequences” for Russia if he continued to drag his feet.

    Shortly before his meeting with European leaders, Trump was caught in a hot mic moment: “I think he wants to make a deal for me,” he said. “Do you understand? As crazy as it sounds.” Trump may be crazy to believe Putin’s good intentions, but he has had us all glued to TV screens in the hope that somehow, against all evidence to the contrary, he will in the end pull a rabbit out of the hat and finally deliver peace. There has been nothing in the hat so far.

  • Can Friedrich Merz save Germany from irrelevancy?

    Can Friedrich Merz save Germany from irrelevancy?

    Friedrich Merz arrived in Washington this week alongside Europe’s most senior leaders, ostensibly to coordinate the continent’s response to Trump’s Ukraine designs. Here was Germany’s moment to demonstrate the leadership it perpetually claims to seek – a chance to shape the conversation that will determine Europe’s security architecture for years to come. Instead, before the Chancellor could even present his case to Americans, his own foreign minister Johann Wadephul delivered a masterclass in diplomatic self-sabotage from Berlin.

    Germany must play “an important role” in any future peacekeeping mission in Ukraine, declared the CDU politician, before categorically ruling out German soldiers on Ukrainian soil. “That would presumably overwhelm us,” he explained with the sort of defeatist precision that has become his government’s signature. In a single sentence, Wadephul had kneecapped his own Chancellor’s negotiating position, advertising Germany’s limitations rather than its capabilities to anyone listening.

    Nothing feeds populists like politics’ inability to address change

    This wasn’t merely unfortunate timing – it was the latest installment in a pattern of cabinet colleagues undermining Merz’s already tentative efforts at international leadership. Whether on defense spending, migration policy or economic reform, the Chancellor finds himself repeatedly ambushed by ministers who seem determined to advertise Germany’s unwillingness to shoulder serious responsibilities. One might call it capitulation before the first battle was fought, but this represents something more systematic: the crystallization of a political culture that has made strategic irrelevance into an art form.

    Here lies the exquisite tragedy of modern Germany: a nation trapped between its aspirations and its neuroses, too large to be irrelevant yet too terrified to actually lead. While Merz and other European leaders huddle in the White House, desperately hoping to dissuade Trump from striking a deal at Kyiv’s expense, political Berlin sends its familiar signal: Yes, we speak of responsibility. No, we won’t actually take it.

    The coalition has made itself thoroughly comfortable in this culture of irresponsibility. Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil offered a textbook example of political evasion in his recent television interview, declaring that “naturally we must also assume responsibility as Europeans when it comes to security guarantees.” Whether this involves troops, training, money or something else entirely “must all be clarified in the coming days.” What sounds like commitment is actually an escape hatch – the political equivalent of agreeing to meet for lunch “sometime soon.”

    Few politicians dare acknowledge the challenges that Russian imperial ambition actually poses to Germany. CDU foreign policy expert Roderich Kiesewetter represents a rare voice of clarity, reminding his colleague Wadephul that European peace cannot be guaranteed without military backing – including ground troops if necessary. Germany, Kiesewetter argues, cannot lead from Central Europe whilst simultaneously refusing engagement where it matters. The mathematics are brutal but simple: you cannot exercise leadership whilst advertising your unwillingness to pay its price. Yet this is precisely Germany’s chosen strategy, demanding a seat at the top table whilst openly declaring vast swathes of policy off-limits.

    Chancellor Merz understands that Germany cannot define its role through economic power alone. Since taking office, he has tentatively begun moving Germany back towards leadership responsibility. But the resistance is formidable – within his own party, throughout the coalition, and amongst a public that has grown comfortable with foreign policy free-riding. The result is that Germany is stuck in an interstitial position: too significant to be ignored, too anxious to genuinely lead. Whilst Washington discusses Ukraine’s and Europe’s future, Berlin resembles a spectator at its own continent’s strategic deliberations. It wanted to be an actor yet seems content remaining in the audience.

    This dysfunction extends far beyond foreign policy. The coalition’s domestic paralysis mirrors its international timidity. When asked about the government’s future direction, Klingbeil couldn’t even feign enthusiasm for his own coalition. Rather than articulating any compelling vision, he made clear that he views this partnership as little more than a marriage of convenience – one held together primarily by fear of the far-right Alternative für Deutschland party (AfD). Defining oneself solely in opposition to populists represents political dwarfism of the highest order. Those serious about defeating populism cannot practice politics purely ex negativo. They must offer positive alternatives, compelling visions, genuine leadership. Instead, Klingbeil offered warmed-over social democratic orthodoxy: higher taxes for high earners.

    But lack of revenue isn’t Germany’s problem. Rather, astronomical debt and a bloated welfare state burden the republic with obligations that will eventually crush future generations. Precisely when populists will find their richest hunting grounds. If Klingbeil genuinely wants to defeat populism, he must confront Germans with uncomfortable truths: they will need to work more and longer to save the pension system. Social spending must be cut – the state cannot continue housing every applicant in city centers. Real change requires discomfort for those who have arranged their lives at public expense.

    Klingbeil should also cease attacking coalition partners who dare speak inconvenient truths. When Trade Minister Katherina Reiche recently demanded Germans work harder, this wasn’t pandering to the right – it was acknowledging a bitter reality. The coalition catastrophically underestimates German citizens by assuming they cannot handle genuine reforms. The necessary cuts would be entirely explicable. Everyone understands that deterring Russia carries costs. Everyone can calculate that fewer young workers cannot indefinitely finance more retirees’ pensions. This requires basic arithmetic, not advanced mathematics.

    The irony is exquisite: by merely managing stagnation, the coalition achieves precisely what Klingbeil claims to oppose. Nothing feeds populists like politics’ inability to address change. If the Union and SPD continue this path, they can watch the AfD overtake them in the next election. Germany’s predicament extends beyond coalition politics to a fundamental crisis of strategic imagination. The country that once produced visionaries like Adenauer and Erhard, the architects of post-war European integration, now struggles to articulate any coherent vision of its role in a rapidly changing world.

    This matters far beyond Germany’s borders. Europe desperately needs German leadership as it confronts Russian aggression, Chinese economic warfare, and American strategic uncertainty. Instead, it receives hesitation, half-measures and the perpetual promise that someone else will handle the difficult decisions. The tragedy is that Germany possesses the resources, influence and historical experience necessary for genuine leadership. What it lacks is the political courage to embrace the responsibilities that leadership entails. Until Berlin overcomes its preference for strategic irrelevance over strategic engagement, Europe will remain dangerously dependent on powers whose interests may not align with European security.

    Germany’s choice is stark: lead or become irrelevant. The current strategy of wanting influence without responsibility represents the worst of both worlds and is a recipe for strategic marginalization disguised as pragmatic restraint. The question is whether German politicians will recognize this reality before their nation’s window for meaningful leadership closes entirely. Current evidence suggests they may prefer the comfort of managed decline to the challenges of actual leadership. If so, Germany’s partners should plan accordingly.

  • The joy of Giorgia Meloni

    The joy of Giorgia Meloni

    There are not, as far as I know, any Italian top-flight poker players. Italians are hardly renowned for their ability to suppress their facial expressions or conceal what they’re really thinking. In this regard they are unusually well-represented by their Premier, Giorgia Meloni.

    Upon becoming Italy’s Prime Minister in 2022, Ms Meloni was written off by the bien-pensant Anglophone press as a far-right extremist, destined for her rag tag coalition to crash like so many Italian governments before. Contra this narrative, she took her seat beside President Trump at the leaders’ round table in Washington DC yesterday. He even complimented her longevity in a famously unstable political climate: “You’ve been there for a long period of time relative to others. They don’t last very long; you’ve lasted a long time. You’re going to be there a long time.”

    Such prominence for an Italian leader would have been unthinkable a little while ago. Italy’s schizophrenic political culture and its resolute failure to commit to NATO defense spending goals had made it easy for the France-German alliance to usher the Italians into a side room alongside the Spanish, Greeks and other “full partners” in the European enterprise.

    Not so now. Meloni is not only making positive moves on defense and standing firm on the issue of Ukraine (earning her the ire of the actual Italian far right), but she is also overseeing one of Europe’s only successful economies. She is seen by many as a Trump whisperer, able to wrap the notoriously erratic and bizarre President around her finger.

    Ms Meloni’s facial expressions at the Washington summit were a delight. Whether it was the eye roll during the pompous, drawn-out remarks of the German chancellor or her perma-scowl and crossed arms in the Oval Office, she has a remarkable ability to steal the show – and make her feelings abundantly clear – even in a room that contains more than its fair share of divas.

    Her visible hatred of Emmanuel Macron is often conveyed through withering stares; she looks at the French President as if he’s something that she has just stepped in on the notoriously unclean pavements of Rome.

    One person, by contrast, who couldn’t even make his words convey meaning, was the British Prime Minister. Sir Keir’s turn came on the round table and he duly filled his designated two minutes with waffle. The observation that “this conflict has gone on for three and a bit years” was one of his more profound contributions. During his speech, Ms Meloni flicked her hair, pursed her lips and explained considerably more than Sir Keir ever could.

  • The Trump-Zelensky meetings offered a show of Western unity

    The Trump-Zelensky meetings offered a show of Western unity

    Did President Trump make any progress toward ending the war in Ukraine after successive meetings with Vladimir Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky and key NATO partners? 

    The short answer is “yes – but it’s very slight, and there are still formidable obstacles, which could block a final deal.” The biggest obstacles are Ukraine agreeing to cede sovereign territory and Russia agreeing to the presence of a combined European-American military force within Ukraine, meant to prevent another Russian attack. 

    The joint military force is the most important proposal to emerge from Monday’s meeting. We already knew Ukraine would have to cede territory – or “swap it” as Trump delicately puts it. 

    The fact that we know anything from Monday’s meeting is a stark contrast to Trump’s earlier meeting with Putin. The Alaska meeting yielded no significant public comments. Yes, Putin spoke, but he said nothing. Trump didn’t take questions and, of course, Putin didn’t. Neither the principals nor their aides leaked to the press.  

    The absence of any real information didn’t stop the talking heads on cable news from pontificating. After all, they have 24 hours to fill, even if they have nothing to say. 

    Their vacuous blather was like the tale of a man who finally consented to see a psychiatrist for his serious psychosexual troubles. The best way to diagnose the issue, the psychiatrist said, would be to get the patient’s response to some inkblots. After looking at one after another, the patient refused to speak. Finally, the exasperated doctor said he needed some kind of response. “Look,” the patient said, “I didn’t come here to look at dirty pictures.” 

    That reflexive response is exactly how the cable-news channels and major national papers covered the Alaska summit. They had only an inkblot to look at, no hard news to report, so they said the meeting illustrated whatever they already thought about Trump, good or bad. Senators and Congressmen did the same thing. Low-information commentary. 

    Monday’s meeting with Zelensky was different. It yielded some hard news for two reasons. One was familiar. Trump posted some informative “readouts” on Truth Social, something he didn’t do after Alaska. The second reason was very public and very important: we have never seen so many pillars of the NATO alliance come to the White House at one time.  

    Equally important, we have rarely seen them express such unity in the post-Cold War era. Europe’s leaders avoided any hint of disappointment or cleavages within the alliance. That’s good news for the Western Alliance and bad news for Putin. Why? Because he has consistently tried to drive a wedge between Washington and Europe and because a joint US-European military force is likely to be a central feature of any final deal.  

    That prospect of Western troops in Ukraine is not a happy one for Putin, who denies Ukraine is even a country or deserves to be one. It’s still rightly part of Russia, he says – openly and repeatedly. That’s why Russia immediately rejected any “NATO-like” security guarantees for Ukraine, which are implicit in stationing US and European forces near Ukraine’s borders with Russia. The only wiggle room is that the rejection came from a Kremlin spokesman, not from Putin himself. So far. 

    Western unity also implies how NATO members will react if they believe Russia, not Ukraine, is blocking a settlement. Much as Trump wants to avoid a deeper commitment to the war, he may conclude that Putin will bargain only if he faces more punishment. That would mean more Western arms for Ukraine and stiff sanctions on Russia oil exports. Trump would still expect Europe to foot the bill for American armaments. 

    Why is Putin so opposed to Western troops in Ukraine, even if that country is not admitted to NATO or given a formal “Article 5” security guarantee, which states that an attack on one member is considered an attack on all? 

    Putin has good reasons, both symbolic and tangible. The symbolic reason is that Western troops would be a visible symbol that Ukraine is now part of Western Europe, joining states that were once part of the Warsaw Pact and dominated by Moscow.  

    The tangible reason is that Western troops would prevent Putin from reneging on any territorial deal and launching another war to take Ukrainian territory. This deterrence is not based on the ability of Western troops in Ukraine to defeat a Russian invasion. There might not be enough initially to defeat a major invasion. Rather, Western troops would serve as a tripwire, ensuring any full-scale Russian invasion would kill Western troops and guarantee a brutal military response. The key word here is “guarantee.” No Western government could tolerate the unprovoked slaughter of its soldiers.  

    The same kind of tripwire was the implicit rationale for stationing US troops in West Germany during the Cold War. There weren’t enough troops there to stop the much larger Red Army, but there were plenty to serve the tripwire function. Their death at Soviet hands would guarantee Washington would enter the war, just as it did when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.  

    Putin understands both the symbolic and tangible effects of stationing Western troops in Ukraine. That’s why he won’t easily agree to it. 

    On Tuesday, President Trump significantly weakened the tripwire element of any deal by stating, unambiguously, that the United States would not place any troops on the ground in Ukraine. That means only European NATO members would have troops stationed there. But, since Ukraine wouldn’t be a NATO member and since no US troops would be vulnerable to a Russian attack, the tripwire element on any deal is significantly weaker. The US might well ramp up support for Ukraine if Russia breached the agreement, but only lethal attacks on US troops could guarantee a powerful, lethal response from Washington, making American troops a far better deterrent than those from its European partners.

    So, what’s the next step to try and end the war? Another meeting, this one with Putin, Zelensky and Trump. Trump hopes it can be held quickly, within two weeks, but Putin has never sat down with Zelensky and considers meeting him as an equally major concession. We simply don’t know if he will agree to meet now or what pressure Trump will exert on him if he balks. 

    Nor do we know if Ukraine’s Parliament (the unicameral Verkhovna Rada) will approve giving Russia almost one fifth of its territory, including all of Crimea and most of the eastern Donbas area, all of which was taken by force.  

    The US and NATO have significant leverage here if Ukraine refuses. If they consider Ukraine the main roadblock to peace, the Western partners can pause or even stop arms shipments and stop sharing signals intelligence. Zelensky’s army cannot continue its fight without them. 

    For now, Ukraine’s assent is not the pressing issue. The question won’t come before its Parliament until the bilateral deal is set. Until then, expect to hear strenuous voices of opposition to ceding any territory. 

    The more pressing question is whether Putin will agree to meet with Zelensky, or even come to the same location, perhaps with Trump shuttling between rooms to meet with each one. The follow-up question is what Trump will do if Putin refuses. The likely answer is to provide more arms to Ukraine, paid for by the Europeans, and begin imposing sanctions on buyers of Russian oil.  

    Those sanctions would infuriate Putin, but they might also get him to the table. After all, Russia may have imperial dreams, but it’s really just a gas station with borders. 

  • Between Trump and Zelensky, there was no breakthrough

    Between Trump and Zelensky, there was no breakthrough

    What a lovely meeting Volodymyr Zelensky and his European allies had with Donald Trump. The US President complimented Zelensky on his outfit, German Chancellor Merz on his “great tan,” and said that Finnish President Alexander Stubb was “looking better than I’ve ever seen you look!” Everyone – especially Zelensky – laughed uproariously at all Trump’s jokes. And all eight leaders present were at great pains to pretend that they were on the same page when it came to achieving peace in Ukraine. 

    But there was one small thing missing from this White House festival of bonhomie and mutual flattery, and that was a substantive discussion of the actual nuts and bolts of a deal that Vladimir Putin would be prepared to accept. 

    One of the elephants in the room was the question of whether Zelensky would be prepared to cede more territory in the Donbas as the price of peace. Another was whether Zelensky was ready to recognize formally part or all of the territories occupied by Putin since 2014 as parts of Russia. Indeed any questions to which Zelensky would be likely to say “no way!” remained tactfully un-discussed

    Trump seemed to have taken a page from the great diplomatist Bing Crosby’s playbook – you’ve got to accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative and (preferably) not mess with Mr. In-Between. Which is preferable, all agreed, to the course Trump took during Zelensky’s last visit to the Oval Office in February where the Ukrainian president was browbeaten, talked over, insulted and then dismissed. So in that important sense relations have improved considerably. True, unlike Putin, Zelensky got no red carpet, nor a ride in Trump’s presidential limousine. But he did at least receive a warm welcome and immediate words of praise for having worn a suit this time. 

    Anyone who hoped that Monday’s meeting would achieve a major breakthrough was disappointed. Trump repeatedly made it clear that it was he and Putin who were the main deciders of the peace process, Europe’s leaders the subordinates. He told his European visitors that he had spoken to Putin just before their meeting and would be calling him again right after. Trump was in his element as he acted as master of ceremonies, treating the European leaders like a CEO consulting his board members before top-level negotiations with a rival company. 

    There was one clear signal, though, of the key issue which will be pivotal in the endgame of the war – security guarantees for Ukraine from its Western allies. Putin, in his remarks after his meeting with Trump in Alaska, mentioned that he was “naturally prepared to work on” security guarantees to Ukraine. Trump later claimed in calls to his European colleagues that Putin had “agreed” to such guarantees – and later leaks from the White House suggested that the US would also be amenable to signing up too. 

    In the White House on Monday Giorgia Meloni led the charge on trying to define what those guarantees would look like, suggesting that they should mirror NATO’s Article 5 that calls for (but, importantly, does not oblige) members to regard an attack on one as an attack on them all. Sir Keir Starmer suggested that “we’re talking about security not just of Ukraine, we’re talking about the security of Europe and the United Kingdom as well.”

    In TV appearances, both Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trump’s special envoy to Russia Steve Witkoff have emphasized the idea of security guarantees to Ukraine as a major breakthrough. In truth, such proposed covenants are nothing new. In Istanbul in April 2022 several draft agreements drawn up in the course of talks between Ukraine and Russia included detailed clauses on the scope and nature of possible Western security guarantees outside the framework of NATO. But those peace talks were abandoned in favor of isolating Russia and encouraging Ukraine to defeat Moscow’s forces in the field.  

    Crucially, in Istanbul the Russians had – absurdly – demanded to be a guarantor of Ukraine of future security, just as they had been in the Budapest Memorandum of 1994, and to have a veto over any international intervention. That would obviously have rendered the whole idea of a security guarantee ridiculous. It remains to be seen if Putin chooses to reprise that extraordinary, deal-breaking demand. But more likely the Kremlin will suggest that China be one of the future guarantors of Ukraine’s security, which will pose a mind-bending new set of challenges for Ukraine’s allies. 

    Overall, though, all sides can be content with the Washington conference. There was no breakthrough, but neither was there a trainwreck. Importantly, Trump forbore from browbeating the Europeans for freeloading on US military budgets, for failing to pull their weight in arming Ukraine, or for failing to stop the war when they could have – all previous MAGA talking points. And Trump also did not push back on a single European argument, even when France’s Emmanuel Macron and Merz both spoke of returning to the idea of a ceasefire before final peace talks. That point had already been jettisoned by Trump at Anchorage when he bought into Putin’s new timetable, but he was tactful enough not to remind his guests of that. 

    The Europeans, for their part, did not blast Trump for abandoning Ukraine by cutting off weapons and money, nor accuse him of selling Kyiv’s interests down the river, nor did they denounce him for giving an indicted war criminal the red carpet treatment or demand why Putin had not been arrested on arrival in Anchorage. In short, everyone in the room – including Trump himself – was on best behavior.  

    Is best behavior the same as actual Western unity? It is as long as nobody raises the difficult questions such as land giveaways, Russian language rights, return of stolen children, payment of reparations, lifting of sanctions on Russia, unbanning pro-Russian political parties and TV stations, lifting Ukrainian sanctions on five thousand of Zelensky’s political opponents, or holding long overdue elections, to name just a few of the thorny issues that stand on the road from war to peace. 

    Trump’s next step, he says, will be to organize a trilateral meeting with himself, Putin and Zelensky. It’s a tall order – not least because Putin has made it clear that he doesn’t consider Zelensky a legitimate leader and Zelensky passed an actual law in 2022 forbidding negotiations with the Putin regime. And if it does happen, we can be sure that all the thorniest of questions will be asked right up front – and nobody will be on their best behavior.