February 28, 2025 may well go down in history as the day that the Western Alliance ended and the world was suddenly thrown into an unknown future by a White House bully and his initialled sidekick.
The undynamic duo’s treatment of the president of a country which has sacrificed thousands upon thousands of lives in the cause of the protection of the West shamed the United States and countries who have been in alliance with America.
“Say thank you. Say thank you,” shouted J.D. Vance when he should have been thanking Zelensky for the ultimate sacrifices his countrymen and women have made.
“You are not showing any respect,” said Donald Trump, sounding more like a mafia don then the leader of the Free World. It was draft dodger Trump who should have been respecting wartime leader Zelensky who has—against all odds—held out against the Russian war machine for three years.
Several times Zelensky tried to say thank you and explain his position, but each time he was shouted down by Vance and/or Trump.
At one point Trump pursed his lips shook his head back and forth and repeated in a childishly petulant mocking voice: “I don’t want a ceasefire. I don’t want a ceasefire.”
Again, Zelensky tried to explain that he wants an end to the war but that any ceasefire must come with security guarantees because Putin has broken every ceasefire, treaty and agreement that Ukraine has negotiated with the Russian dictator.
Zelensky flew to Washington to sign a deal which would hand over a major chunk of his country’s mineral rights. Trump said the rare earths that American companies would mine was compensation for the aid that America has given Ukraine. Zelensky agreed to that but also wanted assurances that included in the deal would be future security guarantees. A deal which gave away billions worth of mineral rights in perpetuity without protecting Ukrainian territorial integrity was worthless.
But Trump and Vance were determined to secure the rights and at the same time withdraw American support and bully Zelensky into effectively surrendering to Russia. And it was done before a television audience of billions in what appeared to be an attempt to humiliate the Ukrainian leader. The result was possibly the most disgraceful scene in diplomatic history.
European leaders, Democrats and officials from the first Trump administration seemed to regard it as just that.
John Bolton, Trump’s former National Security Adviser, said on X: “Trump and Vance have declared themselves to be on Russia’s side in the Russo-Ukraine war, This is a catastrophic mistake for America’s national security. And let’s be clear: Trump and Vance now personally own that policy. It is not the view of a majority of Americans of either or no political party.”
>H.R. McMaster another former national security advisor in the first Trump administration, said it is “impossible to understand” why Trump and Vance “seem determined to put more pressure on President Zelensky while they seem to be coddling Putin—the person who inflicted this terrible war in Ukraine.”
Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the ranking member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in a post on X said the “outrageous display” from Trump and Vance was “disgraceful” and “downright un-American.”
French president Emmanuel Macron said: “We should respect those who have been fighting since the beginning,”
“Ukraine, you’ll never walk alone,” Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said via X. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said, “Ukraine, Spain stands with you.” Friedrich Merz, the likely incoming German leader, also said he stands with Zelensky before adding that the “aggressor and victim in this terrible war” must never be confused. Top diplomats for the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, and Finland issued similar messages of support for Kyiv and the Ukrainian president.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen praised Zelensky for his “dignity” and said the bloc will continue working with him “for a just and lasting peace.”
Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said: “Estonia’s support for Ukraine remains unwavering. It is time for Europe to step up. We do not need to wait for something else to happen; Europe has enough resources, including Russia’s frozen assets, to enable Ukraine to continue fighting,”
The diplomatic meltdown at the White House comes as European leaders—including Zelensky—are preparing to meet in London on Sunday to discuss their next moves in the Ukrainian imbroglio. Host Sir Keir Starmer sees Britain as bridge between Europe and America. The problem is that Trump and Vance appear to be intent on burning that bridge.
Here is the transcript of Trump, Zelensky, and Vance’s contentious exchange. It has been edited for length and clarity.
J.D. Vance: For four years, in the United States of America, we had a president who stood up in press conferences and talked tough about Vladimir Putin, and then Putin invaded Ukraine and destroyed a significant chunk of the country. The path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in diplomacy. We tried the pathway of Joe Biden, of thumping our chest and pretending that the president of the United States’ words mattered more than the president of the United States’ actions. What makes America a good country is America engaging in diplomacy. That’s what President Trump is doing.
Volodymyr Zelensky: He [Putin] occupied various parts of Ukraine in 2014. During that time, it was President Obama, then President Trump, then President Biden, and now it’s President Trump and he will stop him [Putin]. But during 2014, nobody stopped him. He just occupied and took. He killed people. From 2014 till 2022, the situation was the same—people have been dying on the contact line and nobody stopped him. We had a lot of conversations with him, including a bilateral conversation. As a new president in 2019, I signed with him a cease-fire deal alongside Macron and Merkel. All of them told me that he will never go. We also signed a gas contract with him. But after all of that, he broke the cease-fire. He killed our people, and he didn’t exchange prisoners. We signed the exchange of prisoners, but he didn’t do it. What kind of diplomacy, J.D., are you speaking about? What do you mean?
Vance: I’m talking about the kind of diplomacy that’s going to end the destruction of your country. [Zelensky begins to respond] Mr. President, with respect, I think it’s disrespectful for you to come to the Oval Office and try to litigate this in front of the American media. Right now, you guys are going around and forcing conscripts to the front lines because you have manpower problems—you should be thanking the president for trying to bring an end to this conflict.
Zelensky: Have you ever been to Ukraine to see what problems we have? Come once.
Vance: I’ve actually watched and seen the stories, and I know what happens is you bring people on a propaganda tour, Mr. President. Do you disagree that you’ve had problems bringing people in your military, and do you think that it’s respectful to come to the Oval Office of the United States of America and attack the administration that is trying to prevent the destruction of your country?
Zelensky: First of all, during the war, everybody has problems, even you. But you have a nice ocean and don’t feel [the problems] now. But you will feel it in the future.
Donald Trump: You don’t know that.
Zelensky: God bless, you will not have war.
Trump: Don’t tell us what we’re going to feel. We’re trying to solve a problem.
Zelensky: I’m not. I’m answering the question that…
Trump: You’re in no position to dictate what we’re going to feel. We’re going to feel very good.
Zelensky: You are going to feel influenced…
Trump: We’re going to feel very good and very strong. You’re, right now, not in a very good position. You’ve allowed yourself to be in a very bad position. You don’t have the cards right now with us. [Zelensky continues speaking] You’re gambling with the lives of millions of people. You’re gambling with World War Three. You’re gambling with World War Three, and what you’re doing is very disrespectful to this country that’s backed you far more than a lot of people say they should have.
Vance: Have you said thank you once?
Zelensky: A lot of times.
>Vance: No, in this entire meeting, have you said thank you? You went to Pennsylvania and campaigned for the opposition in October. Offer some words of appreciation for the United States of America and the president who’s trying to save your country.
Zelensky: Please, you think that if you will speak very loudly…
Trump: He is not speaking loudly. Your country is in big trouble.
Zelensky: I know. Can I ask…
Trump: No, no, you’ve done a lot of talking. Your country is in big trouble.
Zelensky: I know.
Trump: You’re not winning this. You have a damn good chance of coming out okay because of us.
Zelensky: Mr. President, we are staying strong in our country. From the very beginning of the war we’ve been alone and we are thankful. I said thank you in this cabinet.
Trump: We gave you, through this stupid president, $350 billion. We gave you military equipment. Your men are brave but they have used our military equipment. If you didn’t have our military equipment, this war would have been over in two weeks.
Zelensky: In three days, yes. I heard it from Putin.
Trump: It’s going to be a very hard thing to do business like this.
Vance: Just say thank you.
Zelensky: I said thank you—I say thank you to the American people.
Vance: Accept that there are disagreements, and let’s go litigate those disagreements, rather than trying to fight it out in the American media, when you’re wrong. We know that you’re wrong.
Trump: You see, I think it’s good for the American people to see what’s going on. I think it’s very important. That’s why I kept this going so long. You have to be thankful. You don’t have the cards. You’re buried there. You people are dying. You’re running low on soldiers. Listen, you’re running low on soldiers. It would be a damn good thing. Then you tell us, “I don’t want to cease fire. I don’t want to cease fire.” If you could get a cease-fire right now, I tell you, you take it so the bullets stop flying and your men stop getting killed.
Zelensky: Yes, of course I want to stop the war. But, as I’ve said to you, with guarantees. Ask our people about the cease-fire, what do they think.
Trump: That wasn’t me. That was with a guy named Biden, who was not a smart person. That was with Obama, who gave you sheets. I gave you javelins. I gave you the javelins to take out all those tanks. Obama gave you sheets. In fact, the statement is Obama gave sheets and Trump gave javelins. You got to be more thankful, because, let me tell you, you don’t have the cards. With us, you have the cards, but without us, you don’t have any cards. It’ll be a tough deal to make because the attitudes have to change.
* Tom Arms is foreign editor of The Liberal Democrat Voice. He is also a regular contributor to “The New World” (formerly “The New European”) and the author of “The Encyclopaedia of the Cold War” and “America Made in Britain.”
11 Comments
Trunp and Vance are a disgrace to the USA. Unfortunately, the USA and the world are stuck with them at least until January 20th 2029. They act as though they are agents of the Kremlin and maybe should be treated as such.
I often disagree with Tom, but the realpolitik of this situation is as he says it is. Starmer now looks like a complete fool. If he puts an iota of trust in Trump’s word, then he is an even bigger fool.
Nato is a busted flush and Europeans will now have to deal with Putin without the USA. They could start with real sanctions and actually enforce them. Then they could tackle the arms dealers. Of course, they won’t do anything that might actually work but will rattle sabres and waste billions on an arms race that will achieve little.
Today we woke up to a different world. In 2008, we woke up to the credit crisis. In 2025, we woke up to a Diplomacy crisis. Starmer has 48 hours to decide on a new direction for his government. I look forward to what will come from his meetings with European leaders tomorrow.
As we in the Liberal part of the world start to build a new diplomatic framework against the two illiberal global powers (The USofA and China) and two illiberal regional powers (Russia and Israel), we should invite Japan into the fold. Otherwise poor Japan is isolated – it has Australia and New Zealand and Canada but is separated by huge oceans from each of them.
Mick, I haven’t noticed you disagreeing with me that much. Oh well, I had better pay more attention.
Tom, I often disagree but don’t often post about it!
Tom you write: ‘“You are not showing any respect,” said Donald Trump, sounding more like a mafia don than the leader of the Free World.’ So very true.
I am blessed with three grandchildren in the USA. They have each married great Americans: one Sicilian American, one Irish American and one Jewish American. The head of the Sicilian Family recently died. At his funeral his daughter, in the eulogy, apologised to the family of an assassinated journalist for her father carrying out the Prime Minister’s request.
I have commented before that Musk’s fascist salute was more Mussolini than Hitler. Musk’s great love of Ancient Rome and his behaviour as a Medieval Doge – and now Donald the Don confirms my view that Ed’s speech that the UK must build bridges with Europe and that this must be a top priority immediately.
Good to see the UK political parties seemingly coming together to support Ukraine.
I hope that they can come together on how to fund additional spending on defence. I hope the the wider Europe can agree to a plan to defend Ukraine and ourselves in the process.
The prospect of a world not governed but ruled by three men in China, Russia and the USA is frightening. I regret to say that I believe that is Trumps long term plan.
What the world saw in the Oval Office was bullying, pure and simple. If there is a plus to be drawn from this sorry episode, it is that the American people can now have no doubt about the character of their President and Vice-President.
Trump and Vance are bullies, pure and simple. Bullies are also cowards. They have simply given in to a bigger bully, Vladimir Putin.
What the answer is, I don’t know. I think we just have to ramp up defence spending and put up with any tax increases.
Trump has long espoused the view that the US was being taken advantage of by other countries both in terms of trade deficits and budget deficits which he ascribed to the maintenance of US bases overseas (much the same problem the UK faced with its overseas committments after WW2).
In the 1970’s he was complaining about the cost of providing security for the Persian Gulf and wanted the Oil rich gulf states to pick-up that tab. Similarly, in the 1980s he wanted an economically booming Japan to cover the cost of maintaining US military forces in East Asia and Europe to pick-up the tab for Nato and its own defence. These views have not changed.
It is a transactional and mercantilist approach with little concern for the economics of international trade and devoid of moral conscience.
This is what the American public has endorsed in its elections and the rest of the world must come to terms with it.
European nations understand the importance of containing a revanchist Russia, but it is still not clear that outside of Britain and France, the political will exists to rapidly develop the hard power required to deter further Russian aggression.
One area that does not appear to being exlplored is that of Turkey who has the 2nd largst army in Nato behind the USA and has been firm in its support of Ukraine’s territorial integrity.
A coalition of the willing comprised largely of Britain, France and Turkey backed by US intelligence assets and air power in the rear (paid for by US mineral rights in Ukraine) may be adequate to the task. Russia might not be too happy about agreeing to what looks like a re-run of the Crimean War, but if Putin really wants peace, then this is the price he will have to pay.
Let us give a thought to the numerous societies on which the West has tried to inject our style of democracy. Given that this system has twice produced Trump imagine the dreadful leaders the so-called democratic vote has delivered up in places with far less robust institutions. The failures of Iraq and Afghanistan are just two examples. Much of the Global South has experienced first-hand the Mafia-style U.S. bullying now being felt in Europe and North America. Amid outrage and whining, let us save some bandwidth for thinking how best to reform democratic mechanisms to give us quality leaders and good, accountable governance. Despite, Trump, Johnson, Truss etc., there are no identifiable moves in this direction whatsoever.
The world owes a deep sense of gratitude to Ukraine for holding the line against Russia. Zelenskyy has frog jumped accross the globe pleading for arms and logistical support. Finally it seems Europe at least, understands the task at hand and is beginning to respond.