Sunday, 23 November 2025

Trump, Zelenskyy and European leaders under pressure over peace deal.

Extract from ABC News

Analysis

By Laura Tingle

Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has pushed back against the 28-point US plan.

At pains not to provoke Trump

European leaders, and other Ukrainian allies including Australia, issued a statement from the sidelines of the G20 in Johannesburg over the weekend. It remained couched in the language of polite and more "normal" diplomacy, which sounds particularly weak and ineffective in contrast to the bombast of Trump.

The statement came after an earlier meeting between French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Like Zelenskyy, the 14 leaders who signed the statement seemed at pains not to provoke Trump.

The "initial draft" of the deal included "important elements that will be essential for a just and lasting peace", it said.

"We believe therefore that the draft is a basis which will require additional work." 

Volodymyr Zelensky, Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron stand at Memorial Wall of Fallen Defenders of Ukraine

European leaders, and other Ukrainian allies including Australia, issued a statement from the sidelines of the G20 in Johannesburg over the weekend.  (AP: Stefan Rousseau/PA)

But it said they were "clear on the principle that borders must not be changed by force".

"We are also concerned by the proposed limitations on Ukraine's armed forces, which would leave Ukraine vulnerable to future attack."

They also insisted that the commitments in the draft plan, that Ukraine could not join NATO or the EU, needed the consent of EU and NATO members, respectively.

"We take this opportunity to underline the strength of our continued support to Ukraine," it said.

For his part, Putin said in a televised meeting with his security council that "Ukraine and its European allies are still living under illusions and dreaming of inflicting a strategic defeat on Russia on the battlefield".

It is true that the slow and haphazard European response at the military level, and on the issue of using Russian assets frozen in European banks to help fund the Ukrainian war effort, give cause for considerable scepticism about what will happen next.

This is despite the fact that there is now a belated, major rearming of Europe underway in its factories and government budgets, and that western European countries now feel much more directly threatened by Russia with the increasing presence of drones identified as being linked to Russia above their cities.

Donald Trump

A crucial issue in what happens next could be the response from Trump's increasingly fractured base. 

'A terrible deal'

A crucial issue in what happens next could be the response to the move by an increasingly fractured Trump base at home, and within the Republican Party.

Well-known Trump critics within Republican ranks like veteran senator Mitch McConnell and congressman Don Bacon have been scathing in their response to news of the plan in recent days.

"Rewarding Russian butchery would be disastrous to America's interests," McConnell said in an X post.

Bacon said it was "a terrible deal".

"I'm embarrassed as an American that our president would try to force this agreement on Ukraine — giving up territory, cutting its army by more than half by never allowing them in NATO and not allowing foreign troops on their soil. It's a surrender to a Russian invasion," he said.

"Congress needs to inject itself into this appeasement by the administration towards Russia."

Other Republican representatives were also looking for paths for Congress to reject the plan.

Trump's collapsing public polling position, and the erosion of his base over the Epstein files represented by the split — and now departure — of former ally Marjorie Taylor Greene leaves the impact of domestic pushback on Trump's foreign policy a much more open question than it has been in the past.

Laura Tingle is the ABC's global affairs editor.

No comments:

Post a Comment