RT.com
20 Feb 2025, 04:15 GMT+10
The Ukrainian leader has claimed that the US president was trafficking in Russian disinformation
Attacking US President Donald Trump will not do Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky any favors in the White House, Vice President J.D. Vance has warned.
Vance made his comments after Zelensky suggested that Trump was living in Russian "disinformation space." In an interview published in the Daily Mail on Wednesday, Vance said that such rhetoric was unacceptable.
"The idea that Zelensky is going to change the president's mind by badmouthing him in public media, everyone who knows the president will tell you that is an atrocious way to deal with this administration," Vance said.
"We obviously love the Ukrainian people," but "we obviously think that this war needs to come to a rapid close," he added. "That is the policy of the president of the United States. It is not based on Russian disinformation."
Zelensky earlier expressed frustration that the US-Russia talks in Riyadh on Tuesday were arranged without his advice or approval. Speaking to reporters hours after the meeting, Trump claimed that Zelensky had a 4% domestic approval rating and suggested that Ukraine should hold new elections, given that Zelensky's five-year presidential term expired in May 2024.
Zelensky fired back by citing a recent poll that suggested that 57% of Ukrainians have confidence in him. "So if somebody wants to replace me now, it will not happen," he said on Wednesday. Ukrainian officials previously stated that it was impossible to hold an election under martial law.
Vance argued that it was "a little rich for some of our European friends" to criticize Trump for highlighting the need to hold elections in Ukraine. "The idea that you cannot have elections in the midst of a war is, I think, kind of a preposterous idea," he told the publication The National Pulse on Wednesday.
Trump continued to blast Zelensky on Wednesday, claiming that he was doing a "terrible job" of running the country and accusing him of mismanaging US financial aid. "A dictator without elections, Zelensky better move fast or he is not going to have a country left," Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. "In the meantime, we are successfully negotiating an end to the war with Russia," he stressed.
The meeting in Riyadh was a rebuke to the policies of Trump's predecessor, former President Joe Biden, who waged a global campaign to "isolate" Russia on the world stage. Both the White House and the Kremlin hailed the talks as an important step in normalizing bilateral ties.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that he no longer views Zelensky as a legitimate leader of Ukraine. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters this week that future agreements address "the possibility of challenging Zelensky's legitimacy."
(RT.com)
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