National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said U.S. President Donald Trump was “very, very frustrated” with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, as he highlighted the growing rift between the Trump administration and Kyiv.
Waltz singled out “the fact that” Zelenskyy “hasn’t come to the table, that he hasn’t been willing to take this opportunity.”
“He eventually will get to that point, and I hope so, very quickly, but President Trump, as we made clear to our Russian counterparts, and I want to make clear today, he’s focused on stopping the fighting and moving forward, and we could argue all day long about what’s happened in the past,” Waltz told reporters at the White House.
“If there’s anybody in this world that can go toe to toe with Putin, that could go toe to toe with Xi, that could go toe to toe with Kim Jong Un and you could keep going down the list, it’s Donald J. Trump. He is the deal maker in chief. There is no question that he is the commander-in-chief. And I think all Americans, and around the world, should have no doubt about his ability to not only handle Putin but to handle the complexity of driving this war to an end,” he added.
He was referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Zelenskyy held what he described as a “productive meeting” earlier Thursday with U.S. Special Envoy Keith Kellogg in Kyiv, expressing gratitude for Washington’s assistance and bipartisan support for Ukraine amid its war with Russia.
“It’s important for us — and for the entire free world — that American strength is felt,” Zelenskyy said in a statement on X. He noted that the meeting focused on the battlefield situation, efforts to bring Ukrainian prisoners of war home and discussions on effective security guarantees.
“From the very first second of this war, Ukraine has sought peace. We must and can ensure that peace is strong and lasting — so that Russia can never return with war,” said Zelenskyy.
A joint news conference, however, that was to be held at the end of the talks was canceled at the US’ request, according to Zelenskyy’s office.
Still, his remarks represent a stark break from days of pointed criticisms being exchanged between the American and Ukrainian presidents after the US engaged in peace talks with Russia in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday that excluded Kyiv.
Zelenskyy expressed frustration, saying Trump is living in a Russian “disinformation bubble.” That prompted the U.S. president to issue a full-scale broadside against the Ukrainian leader, accusing him of being a “Dictator without Elections,” and accusing Kyiv of starting the war with Russia despite the fact that it was the Kremlin launched what it calls a “special military operation” against Ukraine in February 2022.
The initial push saw Russian forces close in on the Ukrainian capital before they were pushed back. Frontlines have shifted greatly in the past three years, with Russia establishing a firm foothold in the east where it had been propping up separatist forces since 2014, the same year it illegally annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.
Waltz pushed back on criticism from Ukraine of Trump’s approach to ending the war, saying “some of the rhetoric coming out of Kyiv, frankly and insults to President Trump were unacceptable.” He reiterated the Trump administration’s insistence that it is “unacceptable that the United States, and the United States taxpayer continues to bear the burden, not only of the cost of the war in Ukraine but of the defense of Europe.”
“We fully support our NATO allies. We fully support the Article Five commitment, but it’s time for our European allies to step up,” he said.
“We’ve got other domestic priorities. That’s unacceptable. President Trump’s made that clear, and the minimum needs to be met. We need to be at 100%… and then let’s talk about exceeding it, which is what President Trump has been talking about, with 5% of GDP, Europe needs to step up for their own defense as a partner, and we can be friends and allies and have those tough conversations,” he added.
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