Current Affairs

Trump is set to meet Zelensky with a new ambition for peace in Ukraine


When Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visits the White House on Friday, he will be greeted by an American president who only weeks ago seemed to have washed his hands of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“I wish both countries well,” Donald Trump said in a social media post on September 23, signaling what was widely interpreted as the end of his efforts to bring peace to a conflict he once claimed he could resolve within 24 hours.

But now, with the landslide victory of the Gaza ceasefire and hostage release agreement, Mr. Trump has set his sights on ending the war in Ukraine again — but with a twist.

Why did we write this?

President Donald Trump appears to have drawn a lesson from the ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel: To achieve peace, you have to rely heavily on the combatants. Now, he is applying this approach to Russia, to force it to end its invasion of Ukraine.

Analysts say that the president believes that his hard-line stance and the exercise of American force played a decisive role in pushing Hamas and Israel to “yes” to reaching an agreement. He is now considering a similar approach to ending the war in Ukraine.

If the “peace through war” approach has worked in the Middle East – Figure 1 shows how US participation in Israel’s 12-day war against Iran persuaded a weak Iranian state to pressure its client Hamas to reach an agreement – ​​then why not try to apply it to the Ukraine war?

Over the past week, Trump has indicated that he might change course and supply Ukraine with long-range Tomahawk missiles that would put Moscow within range of the Ukrainian military. “I might say [to Russia]Look, if the war isn’t settled, I’ll sell [the Ukrainians] “Tomahawk,” he told reporters traveling with him to the Middle East on Sunday.

Tomahawk missiles are loaded onto the fast attack submarine USS Jefferson City at Naval Base Guam, May 6, 2025.

Leaks from the administration in recent days indicate that the White House is considering other offensive (and defensive) systems for Ukraine, as well as technical assistance for targeting with any new weapons. Publicly, administration officials, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, have adopted an increasingly aggressive rhetoric toward Russia, especially since the president’s triumphant trip to the Middle East.

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