Zelenskiy made case for security guarantees at meeting with Trump
Item 1 of 3 French President Emmanuel Macron, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy attend a trilateral meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris as part of ceremonies to mark the reopening of the Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral, five-and-a-half years after a fire ravaged the Gothic masterpiece, after its restoration, France, December 7, 2024. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw/File Photo
Reuters spoke to a total of five people who were briefed on the meeting.
The three leaders, who talked for 35 minutes without advisers, did not discuss specific details of any vision for peace, but Trump repeated that he wanted an immediate ceasefire and negotiations to end the war quickly, four of the people said.
Trump behaved in a friendly, respectful and open manner and appeared to be in listening mode, one of the sources said. Trump’s team did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.
Neither Trump nor officials close to him dealing with Ukraine have been forthcoming on how exactly they envisage a solution to the war and to Ukraine’s insistence that it has to receive security guarantees as part of any settlement.
“Some key points were mentioned during the meeting – for example, it was said that peace needs guarantees because a ceasefire alone isn’t enough, Putin could break it again, as he has done before, without proper guarantees,” a source in the Ukrainian president’s office said.
Asked how that was received, the source said, referring to Trump, “He’s thinking about all the details.”
The latter message has been consistent even as Zelenskiy has recently acknowledged that a diplomatic end to the war would save lives, softening his earlier insistence that all Moscow’s forces must be expelled from Ukraine in order for peace to be achieved.
BUILDING A RAPPORT
Several officials close to Trump have said he has geared his meetings to building a personal rapport, which is key to how he conducts diplomacy, and that he will ultimately make the call on how to proceed.
Macron and Zelenskiy were on the same page at the Paris meeting, but were careful not to seem like they were cornering Trump, one official said.
The French leader – who over the years has developed a knack for using personal relationships to advance his diplomatic efforts – and Zelenskiy worked in synergy to outline how they viewed the situation, while underscoring that without U.S. support it would be very difficult for Kyiv, the official added.
Zelenskiy believes Putin fears only Trump and possibly China in the international arena and that any lasting peace would require Washington to be “truly strong,” the Ukrainian official said.
Trump has regularly accused European powers of not pulling their weight in NATO security issues on the continent.
Macron used the meeting to make the case that Europeans have done a lot already to support Ukraine and that they were also willing to share the security burden more evenly with the United States, two of the sources said.
Another official said Macron and Zelenskiy explained to Trump that Putin in 2024 was not the same as he was in 2017, when the U.S. president-elect previously dealt with the Kremlin leader while in the White House.
“It was about explanation without pushing Trump into a corner.”
Sign up here.
Reporting by John Irish in Paris and Tom Balmforth in London; Additional reporting by Elizabeth Pineau in Paris and Gram Slattery in Washington; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Matthew Lewis
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Source link
