
Story by Alexander Temerko, opinion contributor
Nov 3, 2024

Opinion: How a Trump peace ultimatum could end the Russia-Ukraine war
Last week, North Korea’s elite “Storm Corps” furnished Russian President Vladimir Putin’s regime with 12,000 soldiers with which to kill my fellow Ukrainians.
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have decried this escalation and offered words of support, but not the means to achieve a real victory for Ukraine. This, in effect, has led to the slow hemorrhage of Ukraine in a war of attrition against a larger enemy.
But Donald Trump may well be different from Biden and Harris. I believe he could be the engine of change that Ukraine needs. Why? Because Trump wants peace, and a peace on his terms, not Russia’s.
If he wins, Trump could achieve this by delivering an ultimatum to each side. To Ukraine, he would push President Volodymyr Zelensky to the negotiating table through the lever of U.S. support. To Russia, he could threaten exactly the opposite: An expansion of U.S. support for Ukraine and withering economic warfare against Russia.
This ultimatum would be highly effective. The last three months of the war have exhausted both sides, and this is clear in the situation at the front. A few days ago, Russia made its last desperate attack on four out of five main directions of the Ukrainian front. In this massive though underreported attack, Russia was able to capture about a dozen villages. But now the Russian offensive potential has been exhausted. After large losses in manpower and equipment, the lack of not only strategic but also tactical reserves afflicts the Russians just as the rainy season hits. Since “chernozem” black soil is very common there, it will be impossible to use heavy equipment. Thus, a combination of factors will force Russia to halt until January.
Ukraine’s situation, however, is much worse — there is a dire lack of manpower. What reinforcements come are poorly trained and often do not hold their positions when the Russians advance, which leads to experienced units being surrounded and retreats to new positions. Russia uses its superior numbers ground forces and air power to keep stealing Ukrainian territory slowly and with huge attrition on both sides.
Both sides are nearing a situation that in chess is called Zugzwang, or “a compelled move,” where the player forced to move can only make his own situation worse. Russia is catastrophically lacking the means and forces to continue the offensive; Ukraine only has enough means to slow down the advance, gradually yielding and barely holding the Russians back.
An American finger on the scale in either direction would be enough.
During two months of poor marching conditions, Ukraine will build defenses along the entire front, while Russia will accumulate strategic resources for a new offensive. What is unknown is whether the West will give Ukraine all the necessary equipment and permission to strike deep into Russian territory, to destroy Russian reserves. This uncertainty does not bring optimism to either side. Therefore, it will be in Trump’s own best interest to take all measures and try to end this war with a long-term ceasefire.
The scales of war are slightly in Russia’s favor now, but all that will change if America adds money and resources and gives Ukraine the opportunity to destroy Russian strategic objects deep within Russian territory. On the other hand, if America refuses to help Ukraine at all, then the Ukrainian front would fall apart. The victory of either puts the other side on the brink of survival — Ukraine may lose sovereignty, Russia could disintegrate into a kaleidoscope of nuclear-armed feudal states.
My hope is for Ukrainian victory; a U.S. administration would likely see both “maximal” outcomes as disastrous.
Therefore, Trump’s position to force a ceasefire is both the safest outcome, and advantageous for his administration. This ultimatum would be adhered to, since the parties have no other option but to sit down at the negotiating, or quickly suffer defeat.
It would be difficult for Ukraine, since the fronts would become borders, and it will be difficult for Russia, too, since Russia was unable to defeat Ukraine and the “new territories” it claims to occupy will remain mostly Ukrainian. Ukraine and Russia would both be forced to withdraw heavy weapons from the borders.
This situation would ultimately favor Ukraine: It would give Ukraine the opportunity to hold elections for a new president and parliament — an urgent necessity, as the old government has legally lost its mandate. With the new government, Ukraine will receive a popular mandate for integration into the European Union and NATO under new military-political conditions or the opportunity to conclude an agreement with America and NATO countries, guaranteeing the preservation of 80 percent of the territories under Ukraine’s control and negotiations on the fate of 20 percent under Russia’s control.
Ukraine gets at least four years of firm peace with the Trump administration, during which it can complete the reform of its armed forces, begin to form its own defense industry, restore the energy sector and begin to restore the agricultural sector and destroyed infrastructure. At the same time, Ukraine must find a solution to provide for and protect citizens in the occupied territories who retain Ukrainian citizenship.
Only a strong Ukraine, integrated into the Western bloc to one degree or another could eventually ensure the return of territory either as a result of diplomatic efforts by Ukraine and the West, or as a result of the collapse of Russia (like Germany in 1945), or the coming to power of new democratic forces in Russia — with which Ukraine must begin to build special relations now. To achieve the first stage of the ceasefire, and the breathing room, opportunity and security for Ukraine that would follow from it, Trump only needs to make a public offer — or ultimatum — to both parties. Russia and Ukraine would have no choice but to accept this condition. Everything else is catch-22 for them.
Alexander Temerko is a Ukrainian-British businessman and political activist, energy investor, and Councillor of the Institute of Economic Affairs.Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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On the flip side :
Trump gives strongest signal yet he won’t back Ukraine and Zelenskyy against Putin
Republican candidate launches stunning tirade against Kyiv for not making “any deal, even the worst deal” with Russia.


Donald Trump has frequently claimed Russia would not have invaded Ukraine if he was president and has repeatedly vowed to negotiate an end to the conflict if he is returned to the White House. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
SEPTEMBER 26, 2024
BY SEB STARCEVIC AND CSONGOR KÖRÖMI
Former U.S. President Donald Trump lashed out at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday for not making concessions to Russia, giving his strongest indication to date he would stop backing Kyiv if he wins the U.S. presidential election.
Trump, speaking at a campaign event in North Carolina, said Ukraine should have “given up a little bit” to appease Moscow and avoid a bloody conflict with its invading neighbor, which he said “didn’t need to happen.”
“We continue to give billions of dollars to a man who refuses to make a deal, Zelenskyy,” Trump railed in a lengthy tirade.
He added that “any deal, even the worst deal, would’ve been better than what we have right now,” referring to the Kremlin’s destruction in Ukraine, which accelerated with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion in 2022.
“Ukraine is gone, it’s not Ukraine anymore. You can never replace those cities and towns and you can never replace the dead people, so many dead people,” the Republican candidate said. “If we made a bad deal, it would have been much better. They [Ukraine] would have given up a little bit and everybody would be living.”
Trump has frequently claimed Russia would not have invaded Ukraine if he was president and has repeatedly vowed to negotiate an end to the conflict if he is returned to the White House — though he has declined to give further details, wouldn’t say whether he wanted Ukraine to defeat Russia when pressed at the presidential debate with opponent Kamala Harris earlier this month and ignored that the conflict has raged since 2014, including during the entire period he was U.S. president.
He has also threatened to cut U.S. aid to Kyiv and vowed Wednesday that he would not send American troops to “die” in Ukraine.
“They’re [the Democrats] not going to be satisfied until they send American kids to Ukraine, and that’s what they’re trying to do,” he said. “And the moms and dads of America don’t want their kids fighting Ukraine and Russia, and we’re not going to have our soldiers die across the ocean.”
Zelenskyy, who is currently in the U.S. for the United Nations General Assembly, will meet Trump in New York on Friday, the Republican confirmed in a press conference Thursday.
The meeting comes despite fury in the Republican Party over the Ukrainian leader’s visit to a munitions factory in Pennsylvania — a critical swing state in November’s knife-edge election — as part of a tour to shore up support for Kyiv’s resistance against Russia’s war, giving a boost to the Harris campaign and riling Trump’s camp.
The Scranton shop-floor trip was slammed by Republican U.S. House Speaker and Trump ally Mike Johnson, who called it “shortsighted and intentionally political” and demanded Zelenskyy “immediately” fire his country’s ambassador to the U.S.
This article has been updated with confirmation of Donald Trump’s meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Its a little weird these two articles are posted together.
I have the greatest respect for the opinions of Ukrainians; except for putler-rimmers obviously.
It has to be said though that Trumpkov has not changed his position towards Ukraine at all since the foul comments he made in the article from September, so it’s hard to understand what made the writer formulate this conclusion.
If anything, Trump has hardened up further.