KYIV, Ukraine — Relations between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Trump deteriorated rapidly Wednesday as Zelensky said Trump was living in a Russian-made “disinformation space” and Trump called Zelensky “a dictator without elections” in comments that were sure to complicate efforts to end the war.
Zelensky also said he would like Trump’s team “to be more truthful” as he offered his first response to a series of claims that Trump made a day earlier, including falsely suggesting that Kyiv was to blame for the war, which enters its fourth year next week.
The comments were a staggering back-and-forth between leaders of two countries that have been staunch allies in recent years under Trump’s predecessor. While former President Biden was in the White House, the U.S. provided crucial military equipment to Kyiv to fend off the invasion and used its political weight to defend Ukraine and isolate Russia on the world stage.
The Trump administration has started charting a new course for the U.S., reaching out to Russia and pushing for a peace deal. Senior officials from both countries held talks Tuesday to discuss improving ties, negotiating an end to the war and potentially preparing a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin after years of frosty relations.
Trump lashed out at Zelensky in a social media post that apparently referred to the fact that Ukraine has delayed elections due to the invasion and the subsequent imposition of martial law in accordance with the Ukrainian Constitution. Trump suggested Ukraine ought to hold elections.
Trump also called Zelensky “a modestly successful comedian” who “talked the United States of America into spending $350 Billion Dollars, to go into a War that couldn’t be won, that never had to start, but a War that he, without the U.S. and ‘TRUMP,’ will never be able to settle.”
The president went on to say that the only thing Zelensky “was good at was playing Biden ‘like a fiddle.’” He said Zelensky should “move fast or he is not going to have a Country left.”
Meanwhile, Putin said he would like to meet with Trump.
Russia’s army crossed the border with Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, in an invasion that Putin sought to justify by asserting that it was needed to protect civilians in eastern Ukraine. He also accused the U.S. and its allies of ignoring Russia’s demand to prevent Ukraine from joining NATO and to offer Moscow security guarantees. Ukraine and its allies denounced the assault as an unprovoked act of aggression.
“I would like to have a meeting, but it needs to be prepared so that it brings results,” Putin said Wednesday in televised remarks. He added that he would be “pleased” to meet with Trump but noted that the U.S. president has acknowledged that a settlement on Ukraine could take longer than he initially hoped.
Putin says he wants to rebuild U.S.-Russia relations
The Russian leader hailed Tuesday’s talks between senior Russian and U.S. officials in the Saudi capital of Riyadh as “very positive.” He said officials who took part in the talks described the U.S. delegation to him as “completely different people who were open to the negotiation process without any bias, without any condemnation of what was done in the past,” and determined to work together with Moscow.
Putin said “the goal and subject” of Tuesday’s talks “was the restoration of Russia-U.S. relations.”
“Without increasing the level of trust between Russia and the United States, it is impossible to resolve many issues, including the Ukrainian crisis. The goal of this meeting was precisely to increase trust between Russia and the United States,” Putin said.
He brushed off Zelensky’s complaints about Ukraine being left out of the U.S.-Russian talks, saying that Kyiv’s reaction was “unfounded.”
“President Trump told me during our phone call that the United States are proceeding from the assumption that the negotiations process will involve Russia and Ukraine,” Putin said. “No one is going to exclude Ukraine out of it.”
Putin also added that he was surprised to see Trump showing “restraint” regarding the European leaders who backed his rival in the U.S. election.
“All European leaders effectively intervened directly in the U.S. elections,” he said, adding that some had “directly insulted” Trump. “Frankly speaking, I’m surprised to see the newly elected U.S. president’s restraint regarding his allies, who have behaved in a boorish way to put it straight.”
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that it was “wrong and dangerous” to deny Zelensky’s democratic legitimacy. Germany has been Kyiv’s second-biggest weapons supplier after the U.S.
“That no orderly elections can be held in the middle of the war corresponds to the stipulations of the Ukrainian Constitution and election laws. No one should say anything different,” Scholz told news outlet Der Spiegel.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke Wednesday to Zelensky and “stressed the need for everyone to work together,” according to Starmer’s office, which added that it is “perfectly reasonable” to suspend elections during wartime, as the U.K. did during World War II.
Putin reiterated the Kremlin’s official line that Russia has never rejected the possibility of talks with Kyiv or its European allies. “The Europeans have stopped contacts with Russia. The Ukrainian side has forbidden itself to negotiate,” he said in a reference to Zelensky’s 2022 decree that rejected any talks with Moscow.
Ukrainian president meeting with U.S. special envoy
Zelensky’s remarks Wednesday came shortly before he was expected to meet with Keith Kellogg, U.S. special envoy for Ukraine and Russia as part of the administration’s recent diplomatic blitz.
Ukraine and its European supporters have expressed concern that they weren’t invited to the talks between top American and Russian diplomats in Saudi Arabia, amid larger worries that the deal taking shape could be unfavorable to Kyiv.
At a news conference Tuesday, Trump showed little patience for Ukraine’s objections to being excluded. He also said, without providing the source, that Zelensky’s approval rating stood at 4%, while telling reporters that Ukraine “should have never started” the war and “could have made a deal” to prevent it.
Zelensky replied Wednesday at his own news conference: “We have seen this disinformation. We understand that it is coming from Russia.” He said that Trump “lives in this disinformation space.”
Zelensky said he hoped Kellogg would walk through Kyiv and ask Ukrainians “if they trust their president. Do they trust Putin? Let him ask about Trump, what they think after the statements made by their president.”
The Ukrainian leader also referred to “the story” that 90% of all aid received by Ukraine comes from the United States. He said, for instance, that about 34% of all weapons in Ukraine are domestically produced and over 30% of support comes from Europe.
In other developments, a poll released Wednesday by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology put public trust in Zelensky at 57%. The survey was conducted Feb. 4 to Feb. 9 among 1,000 people living across Ukraine in regions and territories controlled by the Ukrainian government.
The institute’s executive director, Anton Hrushetskyi, described the result as “very good” for a democratic society. In addition to public trust, he said, Zelensky “retains his legitimacy.”
Russian state TV and other state-controlled media reacted with glee to what they portrayed as Trump’s cold shoulder to Zelensky.
“Trump isn’t even trying to hide his irritation with Zelensky,” the Rossiya channel said at the top of its newscast.
“Trump steamrolled Zelensky for his complaints about the talks with Russia,” the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda said.
The battlefield has brought more grim news for Ukraine in recent months. A relentless onslaught in eastern areas by Russia’s bigger army is grinding down Ukrainian forces, who are slowly but steadily being pushed backward at some points on the 600-mile front line.
American officials have signaled that Ukraine’s hopes of joining NATO to ward off Russian aggression after reaching a possible peace agreement won’t happen. Zelensky says any settlement will require U.S. security commitments to keep Russia at bay.
Arhirova and Spike write for the Associated Press.