Zelensky says he can’t predict Trump’s actions on Ukraine if elected US president
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he hoped Donald Trump would keep supporting Ukraine in its defence against Russia.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on July 9 that he could not predict what Donald Trump would do if he regains the US presidency in November, but that the whole world, including Russian leader Vladimir Putin, was awaiting the outcome of the ballot.
Mr Zelensky, speaking in Washington as world leaders gather for this week’s Nato summit, said he hoped Trump would not quit the 75-year-old Nato alliance and that America would keep supporting Ukraine in its defence against Russia’s more than two-year-old invasion.
“I don’t know (him) very well,” Mr Zelensky said of Trump, adding he had “good meetings” with him during Trump’s first presidency but said that was before the 2022 invasion.
“I can’t tell you what he will do, if he will be the president of the United States. I don’t know.”
Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for the US presidential election in November, has frequently criticised the size of the US’ military support for Ukraine – some US$60 billion (S$81 billion) since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 – and called Mr Zelensky “the greatest salesman ever”.
Two of his national security advisers have presented Trump with a plan to end US military aid to Ukraine
Trump’s dealings with Mr Zelensky became the subject of his first impeachment as president by the US House of Representatives in 2019. He was accused of pressing Mr Zelensky to help smear current US President Joe Biden
On policy towards Nato, Trump has said he would “encourage” Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” to any alliance member that did not spend enough on defence, and he would not defend them.
The Nato charter obliges members to come to the defence of those who are attacked.
Mr Zelensky on July 9 urged US political leaders not to wait for the outcome of America’s November presidential election to move forcefully to aid his country, as he called for fewer restrictions on the use of US weaponry.
“Everyone is waiting for November. Americans are waiting for November, in Europe, Middle East, in the Pacific, the whole world is looking towards November and, truly speaking, Putin awaits November, too,” Mr Zelensky said.
“It is time to step out of the shadows, to make strong decisions... to act and not to wait for November or any other month.”
Earlier on July 9, Mr Biden pledged at the Nato summit to forcefully defend Ukraine.
But the 81-year-old US President is reeling from 12 days of withering questions about his fitness for office, as some of his fellow Democrats on Capitol Hill and campaign donors fear he will lose the election following a halting debate performance on June 27
Trump is leading Mr Biden by 2.1 percentage points nationally, according to a polling average maintained by website FiveThirtyEight.
Asked about Mr Putin’s views of Mr Biden and Trump, Mr Zelensky said cautiously: “Biden and Trump are very different. But they are supportive of democracy. And that’s why I think Putin will hate both of them.”
Mr Zelensky’s choice of venue, the Ronald Reagan Institute, could be another sign of Ukraine’s effort to reach out to Republicans.
Mr Andrew Weiss from the Carnegie Endowment think-tank said Kyiv has been trying to build “as many bridges to the Republican mainstream establishment as possible”.
“There’s a process under way in Kyiv of trying to think through the implications of a possible Trump return to the White House,” Mr Weiss said.
Mr Zelensky was introduced by top US Senate Republican Mitch McConnell, who lauded the Ukrainian leader and strongly supported greater assistance to Kyiv.
“They need the tools to defend themselves to impose costs on their aggressors and to negotiate from positions of strength,” Mr McConnell said. REUTERS

