First of 3 parts
SEVERAL interpretations are going around the internet of that Feb. 28, 2025, White House press conference involving Trump and Zelenskyy. From where one sits, the protagonists are seen in a different light. This first column of three parts paints Trump as seen by many — subjective, at best, as the performance of a despicable and uncouth host, with Zelenskyy absorbing the abuse.
The presscon was initially to announce the Trump/Zelenskyy bilateral agreement on US investment in Ukraine's minerals and other valuable resources. Roughly, the deal was for Ukraine to pay off the US for the financial aid and weapons infused during the war. Trump wants $500 billion worth of Ukrainian minerals as compensation. Zelenskyy claims that US military aid has totaled nowhere close to $500 billion.
Zelenskyy offers Ukraine's strategic resources in exchange for continued military support and security guarantees. Trump's transactional approach to international diplomacy was at his extortionate best. Sign up or he walks out.
Press conference — wrong format
From the outset, Trump and Zelenskyy were already in disagreement on translating the meeting's agenda. The minerals deal was the opening gambit for peace negotiations. But this was the wrong forum open to the international press, with the fine print still unresolved.
Trump was to showcase this meeting as his triumphant start to put an end to the Ukraine-Russia war — an election promise. Zelenskyy, the subordinate client, was to play a crucial albeit a supporting role.
To recall, Trump disparaged Zelenskyy as an "... unelected dictator... he should have stopped the war and never started it." A total prevarication, perhaps as a gesture to his buddy Putin, who must have been gleeful at Trump's historical revisionism.
Zelenskyy with the world's eyes on him went off-script and played to his audience for continued US and NATO support to stop Putin and have his troops withdrawn, forthwith; in effect prolonging the war. With his customary military fatigues at the oval office and once the rockstar of the Democrats, he tried to use the same playbook with the MAGA crowd. It didn't work. Trump stopped him in his tracks.
Vance interjected, echoing his mob-boss, berating a caporegime for not having ever said thank you once — a mafia-like fixation on obeisance. From there, the presscon went downhill fast. Social and mass media have gone to town muddling the more substantive part of what was perceived to be a start of negotiations to end the war.
Roots of Ukraine-Russian war
I have written extensively on this war since March of 2022 depicting its genesis. We were unequivocal in asserting that Russia's invasion in 2022 was the sum total of NATO's and America's relentless encroachment over the years that included the CIA-sponsored Euromaidan Revolution in 2013 resulting in a regime change in Ukraine, which in turn gave Putin the alibi to annex Ukraine's southern peninsula of Crimea in 2014 and recognize the Russian-sponsored separatist states of Donetsk and Luhansk in the southeast, collectively known as the Donbas region.
The Ukraine war should not have happened. But the West, particularly the neocons in D.C., propagated the fiction that Putin is an imperialist bent on reviving the old USSR. This was really just conjecture. Putin came to power only in 2000 a decade after the Cold War ended. It took another two decades for the Ukraine crisis to erupt in 2014 induced by NATO intrusion into the former Warsaw Pact countries, enticing them into NATO memberships shortly after the USSR collapsed.
A predominantly Christian Orthodox non-Islamic country, Ukraine was one of the 15 constituent republics of the Soviet Union from its 1922 founding until its dissolution in 1991; whereupon it reverted back to a status as an independent republic. It was the biggest and the most populous after Russia itself and the USSR's westernmost border. Here the complications begin as it played footsies with the archenemy of Russia — the US-led NATO. NATO's overture to Ukraine after the USSR's collapse is tantamount to providing a casus belli for Putin's acts.
Current status and a possible exit
After three years of war, all sides are exhausted. All want out, looking at diplomacy to end the war. One possible scenario is proposed by Victor Davis Hanson described in his webpage as "an American classicist, a military historian, and conservative political commentator on modern and ancient warfare and contemporary politics for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, National Review and the Washington Times."
Hanson's intriguing take is that this is the closest that the three protagonists have arrived at ending the war with this minerals agreement. The real issue at hand is separating Russia now from Ukraine and the US participation. The relevant question is how far Putin can be pushed back from his current position in the occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhya oblasts.
That's why this minerals agreement was so innovative because most of the key deposits are along this disputed area where Europeans and Americans can come in and have their mining concessions and personnel on the ground. These are not American "boots on the ground" that Zelenskyy salivates for but will have the same deterrent effect as security guarantees. Putin will not go in there and kill Americans or disrupt mining operations. A prosperous mining business is advantageous for all sides. For this to be acceptable to all parties, these are the "sine qua nons":
One, Ukraine can't be a NATO member, ever. Trump himself does not want this. Even Europe doesn't want Ukraine in NATO. Ukraine by then will be better armed, better militarily trained than any of the 32 countries in NATO. And Putin knows this.
On Zelenskyy's part, he must understand that he is a subordinate and that the US is key to his survival and has "all the cards" as intimated by Trump.
Two, nobody ever said that Ukraine will be helped militarily by NATO to take back Donbas or Crimea. No American president will give Ukraine the military wherewithal to reclaim these occupied territories. Putin knows this too.
Three, Trump needs to persuade his buddy to agree to go back as close as possible to where Putin launched his Feb. 22, 2022, invasion. This could be established as a Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Not only can Putin get out from this war of attrition but can brag that he has legitimized and institutionalized the acquisition of Donbas, the oblasts and Crimea. America and NATO can lift the economic sanctions and invite Russia to reenter the family of nations.
And these should be the negotiating parameters. Zelenskyy does not have a choice. His main sponsor plays by his own rules and is a bully! Cutting a beneficial deal on the minerals concessions creates a de facto commercial "trip wire" along the DMZ. This could be the basis for a lasting peace.
But this is just one side of the ramifications of the Trump-Zelenskyy reality TV spat. Part 2 next week is another façade of the bigger picture — where in the end Trump with his "Art of the Deal" could really pull this off.