Zelensky’s Political Future Is Shaky Amidst His Vicious Rift With Trump

Peloni:  Excellent article!  Korybko provides the full context for Zelensky’s growing feud with Trump.

Andryew Korybko | Feb 20, 2025

Trump has been on the warpath since the inauguration and is politically neutralizing all of his enemies at home so Zelensky should have known better than to become Trump’s newest enemy abroad and risk his wrath.

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Trump came out swinging against Zelensky in a social media post on Wednesday where he accused him of being an unpopular dictator who doesn’t want elections, manipulating America “into a war that couldn’t be won”, and possibly having stolen tens of billions of dollars’ worth of aid from it since 2022. This follows Zelensky accusing him of spewing “Russian disinformation” after Trump earlier claimed that the Ukrainian leader’s approval rating was just 4% when explaining why he won’t hold elections.

Tensions between these two have been brewing for quite a while already and can be traced back to how the Democrats exploited one of their phone calls from Trump’s first term as the pretext for impeaching him. Trump had called Zelensky to inquire about evidence that his government might have been in possession of proving the Biden family’s alleged corruption in Ukraine. That experience left Trump with a very poor but lasting impression of Ukraine in general and Zelensky in particular.

It was gradually reinforced as the Biden Administration openly allied with Zelensky’s throughout the course of the Ukrainian Conflict and even more rumors abounded about other corrupt deals. Credible speculation of misappropriated and even missing funds began to rile Trump as did the obviousness of those their mutual unwillingness to at least freeze hostilities with Russia. Everything became personal once Zelensky let himself be used as a campaign prop by the Democrats in Pennsylvania last September.

His response to Trump’s historic election approximately six weeks later was to try appealing to his ego with insincere praise and even buying him off by offering a vague deal over Ukraine’s rare earth minerals, which Kiev convinced Lindsey Graham over the summer are worth a whopping $10-12 trillion. Zelensky later rebuffed a draft deal from Trump that reports claimed “would amount to a higher share of Ukrainian GDP than reparations imposed on Germany at the Versailles Treaty” if accepted.

Bloomberg then reported earlier this week that Ukraine barely has any rare earth minerals to begin with, thus suggesting that Zelensky was trying to manipulate Trump into providing Ukraine more aid on the false pretext that the US could reap a huge return on its investment via these non-existent resources. To make matters even worse, this came shortly after Zelensky fearmongered on Monday that Ukraine can turn into Afghanistan 2.0 if Trump hastily ends this conflict too, which was meant to get under his skin.

That wasn’t all either since Zelensky had also authorized his forces to bomb partially US-owned oil infrastructure in Russia earlier that day, which came right before the first round of RussianUS talks on Ukraine that he then complained about being excluded from. Those remarks prompted Trump to declare how “disappointed” he was with Zelensky. Instead of shutting his mouth and frenziedly working behind the scenes to repair his troubled ties with Trump, Zelensky accused him of being in cahoots with Russia.

Vice President Vance swiftly warned Zelensky that “badmouthing” Trump will backfire while National Security Advisor Waltz lamented that those two leaders’ ties were “clearly going in the wrong direction.” As can be seen, their vicious rift is entirely due to Zelensky’s unbridled arrogance in thinking that he could manipulate deal-master Trump with false promises of rare earth riches and then inexplicably expecting that public insults will successfully bully him, which are both enormous errors of judgement.

Had Zelensky bit his tongue even after his Afghanistan quip on Monday, then he could have at least tried to claim ignorance of his military bombing partially US-owned oil infrastructure in Russia and blamed his advisors for misinforming him about Ukraine’s rare earth riches, but he dug himself a hole instead. Complaining about being excluded from the Russian-US talks, badmouthing Trump and implying abandonment by the US, and then accusing Trump of spewing “Russian disinformation” were mistakes.

Zelensky is ultimately his own man and must take responsibility for his actions. It’s unimportant who might have speculatively misadvised him since he still went along with what they could have suggested despite Trump’s reputation for never capitulating to those who pressure and especially insult him. Trump has been on the warpath since the inauguration and is politically neutralizing all of his enemies at home so Zelensky should have known better than to become Trump’s newest enemy abroad and risk his wrath.

It’s difficult to imagine any restoration of cordial working relations between Zelensky and Trump after what just happened. In fact, Trump might not even want to talk to Zelensky ever again anymore, but he might still have to as part of the peace process. The only way to avoid the awkwardness that this would entail would be if Zelensky either stepped down, was replaced upon finally holding the elections that he scandalously postponed last year, or was deposed through some other means.

In the interim, Trump might rely on his subordinates like Special Envoy Keith Kellogg to pass along messages between them from here on out unless in the unlikely scenario that Zelensky humiliates himself with a sincere apology and then agrees to do whatever Trump demands of him. Since that’s not foreseeable given his unbridled arrogance, which is arguably connected to the “god complex” that the Democrats and their European allies cultivated in him since early 2022, mediators will have to suffice.

Zelensky might not have much time left to decide what to do, however, since he’s already skating on thin ice given his objective unpopularity (which might not be as bad as Trump claimed but accounts for why he’s against holding elections) and his growing number of rivals at home. As the situation along the front worsens and ties with the US continue deteriorating, both at the personal and national levels, an inflection point might soon be reached whereby a regime change process of some sort is initiated.

Whether this takes the form of him resigning, finally holding elections (in which he might even agree not to run), being pressured to do either of the aforesaid by large-scale protests (which might take on contours of a US-backed Color Revolution), or is deposed through a coup is anyone’s guess. There’s also the possibility that nothing dramatic will happen but that seems improbable given the viciousness of his rift with Trump and the American leader’s vengeful disposition after all that he’s been put through.

For that reason, observers shouldn’t take Zelensky’s rule over Ukraine for granted since something might suddenly happen, whether it’s naturally occurring, the result of Trump ordering his intelligence services to “take care of” Zelensky, or a blend thereof in the case of US-backed protests or coup attempts. Vance will thus likely be vindicated in warning that Zelensky’s “badmouthing” of Trump will backfire. but it remains to be seen what form that’ll take and whether it’ll succeed in moving along the peace process.

February 20, 2025 | 8 Comments »

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8 Comments / 8 Comments

  1. https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2025/02/21/trumps-embrace-of-the-kremlin-throws-russian-elites-and-propagandists-into-disarray-a88117

    This article, from the Moscow Times, claim that manyRusssian politicians, journalists and broadcasters are having trouble processing Trump’s seeming embrace of Russia and his abandonment of Ukraine, andto some extent Europe, Some of them suspect is leading Russia into a trap by prtending to support Russia, but is actually planning to “pounce” on Russia and hand it over to the “deeps state” to strip it of its assets and enable American corporate giants to buy up and take over the Russian economy. Others dismiss these fears as paranoia and thinks that Trum’s extending an olivebranch is genuine and sincere.

  2. This is from the web site Ukrainska Pravda

    Survey shows 65% of Ukrainians trust Zelenskyy, but even more trust former Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhnyi
    Yevhen Kizilov — Friday, 21 February 2025, 20:02
    5066

    Survey shows 65% of Ukrainians trust Zelenskyy, but even more trust former Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhnyi
    Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Photo: Getty Images
    The level of Ukrainians’ trust in President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has risen from 57% in January to 65%.

    Source: a survey by the Rating sociological group

    Details: Meanwhile, 34% of surveyed Ukrainian citizens do not trust Zelenskyy.

    Valerii Zaluzhnyi is trusted by 76% of respondents, and 16% do not trust him.
    Serhii Prytula – 34% trust, 51% do not trust.
    Petro Poroshenko – 22% trust, 76% do not trust.
    Dmytro Razumkov – 19% trust, 41% do not trust.
    Yuliia Tymoshenko – 11% trust, 86% do not trust.

    SOURCE: Rating sociological group
    Survey participation: Ukrainian citizens aged 18 and older across all oblasts, except for the temporarily occupied territories of Crimea and Donbas, as well as areas where Ukrainian mobile network was unavailable at the time of the survey. Sample size: 1,200 respondents.

    The survey was conducted on 20-21 February using computer-assisted telephone interviews based on a random sample of mobile phone numbers.

    The margin of error of the survey, with a confidence level of 0.95, does not exceed 2.8%.

  3. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/french-president-issues-nine-word-warning-to-donald-trump-as-russia-tensions-surge/ar-AA1zwMwT?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=c9e6fef0873a4e4aa6d194cb4919cd46&ei=13

    France’s president Macron says France will continue to support Ukraine even if the U.S. deserts it. He says he will to visiting Trump in Washington over the next few days to warnhim that his current “subserevience” to Putin will destroy the NATO alliance, “which will “take a long time to rebuild,” and destroy American influence in Europe for the foreseeable future.”

    He says he has no intiention of sending French forces to Ukraine while the war is still going on, but would consider sending French soldiers as part of a “peacekeeping “” or “peacemaking” force once a cease-fire is achieved.

  4. The guy whose podcast I have been referencing calls himself “Fredo Rockwell.” The process that he thinks might happen in the middel-term future he calls “Russian disintegration.” He calls the process that he thinks might trigger this disintegration “mercenary federalism.” By this he seems to mean support for a more ‘federal” structure for Russia that it motivated not by any sincere desire to enable Russia’s regions to be more self-governing, but by a belief that these officials that will be able to steal a lot of money from the public purse while this process of decentralization is under way.’ “Doing the right thing for the wrong reasons,” as the poet T.S. Elliot described it.

  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x6Mm0P0esI4

    I have given up my attempt to reason withthe Putinists, whether Trump or others closer to hime. The English proverb, “there are none so blind as those who
    will not see”In any case, my rapidly deteriorating health makes it impossible for me to this dialogue. However, I will continue to post the URLs of podcasts that provide new perspectives on Russia and/or Ukraine that I think Israpundit readers may find of interest.

    The podcast referenced above is someone who calls himself “redo” as his first. (I have already forgotten his last name even though I was just looking at it a few moments ago.)

    He claims that political and societal conflicts are likely to result in Putin’s fall from power eventually, even though they are not connected with the Russo-Ukraine war. The gist of his argument is that Putin very long tenure of has prevented Russian politicians and civil servants from advancing to higher office, and/or gaining more real independent power in the regions that Putin has them to administer. Eventually, this will put pressure on Putin to retire, and will lead to a wild struggle for power among Putin’s “princelings.” And that, Fredo claims, could lead the disintegration of Russia as its many constituent republic, such as Bashkortostan, declare their independence.
    I have no idea whether this guy’s opinions have any substance to them or not, But I I think they are worth a look,

  6. I’ll be waiting for fair elections to take place in Russia. Ukraine critics never speak of the corruption and lack of democracy in Russia. They never speak about the opponents of Putin being shoved out of high story windows or being imprisoned and killed.

  7. Zelensky has been playing games with the leaders of NATO for years now and for reasons that have not been made public so far, those leaders have been going along with it. Trump is the first to stop the gravy train. Now that Zelensky explained that he has no idea where all the money went, the whole war is likely to go up in smoke.
    Since the USA have been shoveling money into Ukraine for years now while all the rest have been keeping up appearances, all the rest are very likely to be left holding the baby (Ukraine) while the USA leaves them to sort it out for themselves. Apparently, despite the obvious messages, they still don’t believe it.