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Trump warns will not 'put up with' Zelensky in new attack

Trump warns will not 'put up with' Zelensky in new attack

US President Donald Trump warned Monday he would "not put up" much longer with Volodymyr Zelensky's stance on the war with Russia, as the Ukrainian leader countered he wanted to end it "as soon as possible."

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In a new sign of frayed ties following their White House blow-up last week, Trump called a comment by Zelensky saying an agreement to end the war remained distant "the worst statement that could have been made" by him.

"America will not put up with it for much longer," Trump said on social media.

The comment came after the Ukrainian president accused Russia of not being serious about peace and warned that tough security guarantees were the only way to end the more than three-year conflict.

Trump's attacks on Zelensky have upended US support for Ukraine and Washington's allies more broadly and stoked concern about the United States pivoting to Russia.

After weekend crisis talks in London, Britain and France are investigating how to propose a one-month truce "in the air, at sea and on energy infrastructure" to halt the war.

The summit reaffirmed European backing for Kyiv and saw a pledge to spend more on security to defend any truce, including, potentially, with troops.

Zelensky said after the meeting that discussions were still focusing on the "first steps," adding: "An agreement on ending the war is very, very far away" -- a comment that angered Trump.

However, Zelensky said Monday on X he "very much hopes on US support on the path to peace."

"It is very important that we try to make our diplomacy really substantive to end this war as soon as possible," he said.

Russia, which launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, dismissed Zelensky's comments, accusing him of not wanting peace -- echoing US criticisms after he was shouted down in the Oval Office on Friday.

- 'Deliberate escalation'? -

On the ground, Ukrainian officials reported fatalities from a Russian missile strike on a military training facility, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) from the front line.

A respected military blogger said between 30 and 40 soldiers were killed and 90 more wounded in the attack near Dnipro on Saturday.

Trump has previously called Zelensky, president since 2019, a "dictator" for not holding elections, even though martial law precludes any vote because of the war.

Zelensky dismissed calls for him to resign, repeating his pledge to do so only if Ukraine were given NATO membership, which Russia -- and now the United States under Trump -- opposes.

In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov blamed Zelensky for Friday's White House blow-up with Trump and Vice President JD Vance, saying he "demonstrated a complete lack of diplomatic abilities."

"He doesn't want peace," Peskov told reporters.

But Germany's likely next chancellor, Friedrich Merz, said the astonishing clash was a "deliberate escalation" by Trump.

US and Russian officials have held talks on ending the war, enraging Ukraine and Europe for being sidelined, and prompting fears in Kyiv and beyond that any deal could threaten the country's future.

Zelensky triggered Trump and Vance's ire by questioning whether Russia could be trusted to uphold a truce. Trump has said he trusts his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to "keep his word."

- US support -

French President Emmanuel Macron told Le Figaro newspaper that a truce would not, initially at least, cover ground fighting, as the size of the meandering front line would make it hard to enforce.

Macron also suggested that European countries should raise their defense spending to between 3.0 and 3.5 percent of GDP to respond to Washington's shifting priorities and Russia's militarization.

Shares in European defense companies soared on Monday as a result.

Macron met Trump in Washington last week, as did Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with both seeking to keep Trump onside.

Starmer on Sunday insisted that the United States was "not an unreliable ally," despite Trump's overtures to Putin and open hostility to Zelensky.

US support was still needed to end the fighting, he said.

 

"I am ready to engage in any kind of constructive format in relations with the US," he said.

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A.Meyer--MP