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Ukrainians can do little to mask fears about a second Trump presidency

By David L. Stern and Serhiy Morgunov

Kyiv: Ukrainian officials’ congratulations of President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday were fast and effusive – but did little to mask the fears and uncertainty that now hangs over Ukraine’s future.

Many Ukrainian MPs recognise that securing the American weapons needed in the war against Russia will require convincing Trump to back a fight that he appears to consider too expensive.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.Credit: Getty

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called it an “impressive election victory.” He reminded Trump of the “great meeting” they had in September in the United States and talked about “ways to put an end to Russian aggression against Ukraine.”

Andriy Yermak, head of the presidential office and Zelensky’s main adviser, echoed his boss’s congratulations, adding that it was “essential that Ukraine has bipartisan support in the US.”

“Russia and autocrats only understand the language of power,” Yermak wrote on Telegram. “Aggressors must be brought back within clear bounds of justice.”

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But the extent to which Zelensky and Trump will find common ground – especially given their fraught history – remains to be seen, especially since Trump has expressed misgivings about continuing to support Ukraine’s war effort.

Zelensky insists that Ukraine must continue fighting and not make any territorial compromises. But the country is critically dependent on economic and military aid from the United States.

Trump, on the other hand, has promised to end the war as soon as possible. In his address on Wednesday, he said: “I’m not going to start wars. I’m going to stop wars.”

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Last month, Trump seemed to blame Zelensky for letting the conflict with Russia begin and called him “one of the greatest salesmen I’ve ever seen.” But Trump also said it did not mean “I don’t want to help him because I feel very badly” for Ukrainians.

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Trump’s dealings with Zelensky and Ukraine has at times been complicated, dating back to 2019, when Trump cut off military aid. That’s also when he held a phone call with Zelensky, allegedly pressuring him to help in Trump’s re-election campaign, leading to his first impeachment.

In the run-up to election day, Zelensky also alienated Trump’s running mate, J.D. Vance, calling him “too radical” after Vance suggested that Ukraine should concede territory to Russia and freeze current battle lines.

But some Ukrainian officials expressed hope that a change in power in Washington could work to Kyiv’s advantage. Although they have been vocally grateful for American support of Ukraine, they also have criticised the slow pace with which the Biden administration has released weapons and the restrictions placed on long-range strikes within Russian territory.

“Now that Trump has become president again, Ukraine becomes a matter of his success or failure. It’s now a personal matter,” said Oleksandr Merezhko, chairman of the Ukrainian parliament’s foreign affairs committee.

Trump and Zelensky meet at the UN in 2019.

Trump and Zelensky meet at the UN in 2019.Credit: AP

“He doesn’t want it to be said in the future that ‘on his watch,’ he lost Ukraine. This is now his personal story, and it will be one of the markers of whether he will be a successful president and go down in history or not,” Merezhko said.

Merezhko said that, in general, Trump had been more supportive of Ukraine than president Barack Obama, who barred Kyiv from receiving lethal American weapons when he was in office.

But Ukrainian officials also acknowledge they must identify arguments to win Trump over and convince him to back them. With his election, US policy could become more transactional.

“The logic of geopolitics will look different,” Pavlo Klimkin, Ukraine’s former foreign minister, told Ukrainian NV radio, adding, that “being a businessman, Trump views geopolitics as a ‘you give me this, I give you that’ exchange.”

Ukrainian opposition parliament deputy Oleksiy Honcharenko said the world was moving “from a rules-based international order to a deals-based international order, [and] under Donald Trump, the global order will be based not on rules but on agreements”.

What Ukraine would be able to offer Trump is an open question. And Russian President Vladimir Putin will also be making arguments and offering proposals.

Ukraine “must stop appealing to values and such and instead demonstrate what we have and why we are needed,” Honcharenko wrote on Telegram. “And we do have something: one of the world’s best armies, a key role in the global food market, technologies – primarily military – and resources,” he wrote.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5kokk