Half everybody -- or maybe it's three-quarters by now -- has their own take on the meeting yesterday between Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Donald Trump, Vice-President J. D. Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and various assistants, flacks, hangers-on and the Press.
It's not news that things did not go as expected. Word was that Ukraine had agreed to a deal swapping access to their rare earth deposits in exchange for past and future U. S. help.
Everybody went off-script.
Here's the thing: while such agreements are usually worked out well in advance by underlings, who can have all manner of deep and vociferous disagreements in private, and then put forth by their principals in carefully-planned press events, that particular assortment of national leaders is remarkably lacking in political experience. Sure, Mr. Trump was President for one term already, but before that? Real estate promoter. Reality TV star. Mr. Zelenskyy was a professional comedian. Mr. Vance spent part of one term as a U. S. Senator, after dabbling as a memoirist, venture capitalist and attorney. The only long-term expertise in the front row at that meeting was Secretary Rubio, and it didn't appear to me that anyone was looking to him for guidance.
Everybody's got some opinion about who was out of line and who was merely standing up for their side, but what I have to add is just this: these are not old hands at diplomatic give and take. I did not get the impression any of them were playing a carefully calculated game. They surprised themselves and each other.
I'm not much inclined to give President Trump or any member of his Administration the benefit of the doubt, and I do my best to take that into account. Conversely, I'm overly aware that Zelenskyy has had his back against the wall since the Russians first invaded. But no matter how I feel about the participants, that meeting was a cock-up, in full view of the Press.
And you'd have to be entirely ignorant of at least the last three or four hundred years of history to know that when major powers fail to oppose aggressive territorial expansion in Europe, it always grows to become a huge problem.
Update
2 months ago
3 comments:
Well, once again you nailed it. That was a perfect example of some folks attempting to one-up each other for the benefit of the press, but they stepped on each other's toes requiring back-pedaling and butt-covering because "mine's bigger than yours". What an embarrassing example of amateur political manipulation. Geeze. :-(
It's been noted by Hoffer that 'rudeness is the weak man's imitation of strength'. Which pretty much says everything about Trump.
Nothing you wrote is remotely incorrect. The problem is WE hired the unqualified people who failed. This is OUR fault.
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