Monday, April 13, 2026

Russian oppositionary: The world will miss 2025

Prophetic words, published in the Dialog on Dec. 30, 2025:

"Gudkov warned that this year could seem good compared to 2026: "Don't rush to say goodbye to 2025" 

Former Russian State Duma deputy Gennady Gudkov hinted that next year could be much more difficult than this one. 

Gennady Gudkov voiced his forecast for next year: "Of course, 2026 will be a terrible year, a very difficult year. It will be a year of some trials and, perhaps, defeats, perhaps some conflicts. I keep saying, guys, don't rush to say goodbye to 2025, don't say, 'Go away quickly.' It may turn out that you'll remember 2025 as a good year, a year of relative stability."  

The Russian opposition leader spoke about this in an interview with Vasily Golovanov on YouTube. 

The politician explained why his predictions are credible: "I'm not talking about Ukraine, because the Ukrainian people are suffering from a terrible war, but more generally because 2026 could turn out to be much worse than 2025, unfortunately. I'd be happy to be wrong. I'd be happy to be wrong in my assessment of these negotiations, but a week ago I said nothing would happen there. It's all nonsense. It's all an attempt to put further pressure on Ukraine. I said Zelenskyy would go, and Trump would negotiate with Putin. And that's what happened."

"2026 will be a very difficult year for all normal people in the world, very tense, and it's hard to say how it will end. And will it end in a way that will be hard on everyone? Relations between China and Japan have reached their breaking point. This has never happened before. Relations between Taiwan and China have reached their breaking point, and relations between the Pakistan-India-Turkey bloc have reached their breaking point," Gudkov noted."

He didn't mention Iran, but as you see, generally he was spot on.   

Trump is the devil's advocate: All talks about peace talks mask continuous US pressure on Ukraine

From the Obozrevatel:

"The Devil's Advocate: Trump and Zelenskyy's latest meeting leaves little optimism, but many questions about the US President's common sense. Interview with Ohryzko 

Roman Pryadun, December 30, 2025 

The meeting between Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Mar-a-Lago on December 28 was billed as a near-final breakthrough. The results: three hours of negotiations, "great progress," several weeks to go until clear peace terms were reached, and only "one or two difficult moments" supposedly remained. In this scenario, everything looks almost perfect: the United States is demonstrating an active role as a mediator, Ukraine is ready for difficult decisions, and Russia is somewhere on the horizon, a party that, with a little more prodding, will agree. The only problem is that behind the grandiose statements there are virtually no specifics, and behind the optimistic rhetoric lies the old, familiar logic of pressuring Kyiv specifically.

Formally, the parties are discussing security guarantees, a military component, the restoration of Ukraine, and a "plan of consistent actions." Informally, however, the key dilemma resurfaces: Putin wants Donbas, Zelenskyy cannot and has no right to give it up, and in Trump's eyes, Russia's demands in general, and the demand to give up territory in particular, don't seem excessive. Trump wants a deal—a quick, effective one, and preferably one that can be sold as his own diplomatic triumph. It is precisely in this triangle that all the "95% of the agreed plan" and "100% security guarantees," the text of which no one has seen, are stuck. Meanwhile, Trump is rushing, threatening further territorial losses, and hinting that Kyiv has little time to reflect.

Against this backdrop, Russia's position remains surprisingly "consistent": Ukraine must withdraw its troops from Donbas to end the fighting and make a political decision regarding the territories. Putin hasn't changed his demands, shows no willingness to compromise, and continues the war, as evidenced by missile strikes on civilian infrastructure and statements from his entourage. Meanwhile, the US President remains oblivious and once again draws words from a parallel reality: Putin's "sincerity" and his "desire for peace" and "prosperity" for Ukraine. Once again, this creates a strange situation where the pressure is directed not at the aggressor, but at the victim of aggression.

Therefore, the key question after Mar-a-Lago is not whether the meeting was "wonderful," but rather whether, under the guise of a peace process, they are trying to impose on Ukraine decisions that are strategically beneficial to everyone but Ukraine itself. It is from this perspective that both the successes and failures of the current negotiations should be assessed.

Former Ukrainian Foreign Minister Volodymyr Ohryzko shared his thoughts on these and other issues in an exclusive interview with OBOZ.UA.

 The meeting at Trump's private residence, Mar-a-Lago, was supposed to yield something concrete. But despite the three-hour meeting, we emerged with optimism, along the lines of "everything is great, everything is fine, we're moving in the right direction," without any specifics. At least, security guarantees. Everything seems fine, but no one is saying what exactly. How do you assess this meeting, which was expected to yield at least some concrete results?

Frankly, I assess it as one that, unfortunately, did not produce the results we all expected. Because Trump once again played the devil's advocate, which is Putin. He decided that before meeting with Zelenskyy, he absolutely had to consult with Putin and understand what he wanted, what his final positions were, so to speak. And only then did he relay these positions during his conversation with the Ukrainian delegation. What is this if not a coordination of positions with the main enemy, I believe, of the entire civilized world?  

How else can you describe Trump's position, which he claims "understands Putin"? He understands that Putin doesn't want a ceasefire. Because he'll have to renew it later. Let's remember where Trump started. He talked about an immediate and unconditional ceasefire, and only then would negotiations, talks, agreements, and so on come. What is he saying today? He's saying: I understand Putin, who doesn't want a ceasefire. 

Less than a year has passed, and Trump has already completely, pardon the word, bowed to Putin, to his position, and is effectively defending it. That's the greatest tragedy. And all our talk about how things might change is in vain.     

In short, any hope that the views of the US, Ukraine, and Europe would somehow miraculously converge faded shortly before the meeting. After Donald Trump announced that he had had a "very productive" conversation with Vladimir Putin. This was already a bad sign, as their previous conversations had confirmed how receptive the American president was to the Kremlin dictator's arguments. Trump's indecent number of compliments to Putin simply confirmed this.

– As well as certain hopes that, perhaps, after Putin once again rejects all these proposals, Trump will finally begin to take some action.

Exactly. Nothing of the sort is happening. We see that he's not just not going to do this. Trump is going to continue to pander to Putin. The same goes for guarantees. They want to force us into some kind of decision without having any specifics about what we're even talking about.   

You're absolutely right. There are no concrete details. What guarantees? What is NATO? We've discussed this many times. NATO is a guarantee from the United States. And now the United States is saying: the Europeans will give you guarantees, and we'll help somehow. How will we help? When will we help? For how long will we help? With what exactly? Nothing is clear. This is called buying a pig in a poke. Without seeing what kind of pig it is, what the conditions are, and what lies behind it. Therefore, frankly, I'm more than disappointed with the results. Yes, for the public, everyone is very optimistic, everyone is thanking each other. But for us, in my opinion, the result is completely unacceptable so far. I'm not even talking about territorial issues. But I don't see any movement on Trump's part toward reality there either.

– Regarding guarantees, the Ukrainian President, at least officially, is optimistic. He notes that we're being offered 15 years. What exactly is being offered, again, is unclear. The Western press writes that these guarantees from the US are the best Ukraine can get today, and better than anything previously offered. Meanwhile, Trump claims that the US will help, but Europe will shoulder a significant portion.

So we're back to the same old story. We don't know what we're even talking about. If this is going to be a second Budapest Memorandum, with just general talk about nothing, then a logical question arises. Why this whole series? Why this whole story about some kind of aid and some kind of guarantees, if in reality there are no guarantees?  

Until we see what this means in practice on paper, all this talk will remain empty talk. We can talk about 10 years, 15, 30, or 50. But we don't know the meaning of this proposal. What does it imply? What does a guarantee mean? My understanding of a guarantee is that, in the event of an attack, the country guaranteeing your security immediately enters the war against the aggressor. Is that included in those guarantees? Frankly, I don't know.

– Regarding Donbas and the referendum, which Trump is practically demanding. The US President even stated that he's ready to come and address Ukrainian MPs. Essentially, to put pressure on the Verkhovna Rada, at least that's what it seems. How do you assess such statements?

It's comical because it simply doesn't fit together from any angle. I'll start by saying that the US has a 2017 law in effect, which Trump personally signed. This law clearly stipulates that the US has no right to recognize any Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories as Russian. It contains many other provisions about how the US should assist us, how it should ensure our sovereignty, and so on. But today, Trump simply ignores this law. For him, it's as if the document he personally signed doesn't exist.     

What does this mean? If he ignores current US law, then where's the guarantee that he'll also comply with the new so-called security guarantees, if it's passed in Congress?

I'm no longer so sure. Because you can expect anything from someone who says black today and white tomorrow. And when they talk about a referendum, and Trump simultaneously says, "I understand Putin, who doesn't want to cease fire," a basic question arises. How can you hold a referendum under fire? Can anyone with common sense even propose such a thing? Yes, parliament can only put this issue to a referendum. It cannot make such a decision on its own, because it is expressly stipulated in the Constitution. Otherwise, parliament's decision would be null and void.  

Here, you see, when people are reasonable, they try to act reasonably. But when they're not, all sorts of fantastical variations emerge that are divorced from reality and cannot be implemented in practice. That's why I say that, unfortunately, we have a situation where Trump is trying to find every possible way to support Putin, while completely failing to see that Putin must answer for his crimes.

Look at his response regarding what Russia should do to compensate for the damage caused to Ukraine. He says: "But Russia wants to sell Ukraine energy cheaply." Can you imagine the level of understanding of this situation? In other words, there's no talk of any responsibility whatsoever. Essentially, it turns out that Putin is right because he can seize 20% of Ukrainian territory today and nothing will happen to him.

But what does that even look like? You're supposedly becoming a mediator, but at the same time, you're starting to seize some of the country's assets. I'm talking about the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. You're supposed to be impartial, a mediator between the two sides, and in no way exploit the situation for your own gain. So what do you do? You say, "I'll take 50%, or 30%, I'll take 100 billion dollars, or whatever else I can squeeze out." So what kind of mediator are you? You're simply participating in the plunder of one side of a so-called conflict, which is actually aggression.

– Trump's statement that Ukraine must hurry with the agreement because even greater territorial losses could occur in the coming weeks or months. Doesn't this seem like intimidation of Ukraine and direct pressure on Zelenskyy, particularly regarding Donbas?   

This precisely demonstrates his true position. The logic is simple: I won't help you stop the aggressor, but you stop it yourself, because the aggressor could seize even more of your territory. This is some kind of upside-down logic. You're on the wrong side of the fence, morally, politically, and legally. Here, we recall the Budapest Memorandum again, and that same American law. But instead, you're essentially saying: surrender, capitulate, because the enemy is advancing, and I won't and don't want to do anything. Because I'm a "mediator." True, a mediator on the enemy's side.

– Western media noted that one of Volodymyr Zelenskyy's main goals during his meeting with Trump was to shift the blame for the failure of the peace plan onto Putin. Do you think this can be completely forgotten? Because these statements, "I trust Putin," "he wants peace," "he wants what's best for Ukraine," are repeated over and over again. Can we simply write it off?   

Responsibility is obvious to anyone who wants to see it. But if Americans don't want to see it, then any attempts to persuade them are futile. And here the issue lies with Trump. Because if he's clearly convinced that Putin wants peace, period, then what responsibility does that entail? That's the logic. And it once again tells us that we can no longer hope that Trump will put real pressure on Russia. 

All reasonable European and global politicians understand perfectly well who is the root cause of this war. Therefore, when Putin talks about eliminating the "root causes of the war," it really means only one thing: eliminating Putin himself and his regime. Then the war truly would not have happened. After all, Putin spoke about this war back in 2001 to President Bush. Just in different words. And now, declassified documents have been released to the public. Remember how, during those same years, Putin publicly said: "What does Crimea or Sevastopol matter? This is exclusively Ukrainian territory. We are strategic partners, friends, and we will support each other." And at the same time, he declared that Ukraine is an "artificial state." That is the real root cause of this war. Therefore, when Trump says, "I trust Putin," he is actually trusting a man who is a criminal. He just doesn't want to say it out loud. Although he must know.
 
– Following the Trump-Zelensky press conference, Fox News reported that these talks could lead to the first conversation between the presidents of Ukraine and Russia in over five years. Do you think this is even possible at this stage of the war?  
 
I don't know what this or that Fox News correspondent had in mind. This is most likely another ploy by the US administration to push the discussion in the direction they want. 
 
But what should Zelenskyy discuss with Putin? Unless Trump doesn't know what Zelenskyy wished for in his Christmas address. But I don't think that would be pleasant for that war criminal. So I don't see any topics for such a conversation. It's an attempt to create the illusion of a process. Let them talk, they say. But it's pointless." 
 
– Everyone's talking about the positions of Ukraine, the US, and Trump, whether the plan was agreed upon or not. But Putin hasn't changed at all. The latest statements and actions of his army show that a ceasefire is out of the question. The war will continue. He's already saying that, given the pace of the offensive, Russia's interest in withdrawing the Ukrainian Armed Forces from the territories it occupies is zero. In other words, Russia's position isn't changing at all.
 
Russia's position will only change in one case. If we stop its advance and begin our own. If we destroy its offensive and economic potential, then its position will change. Until that happens, until we read DeepState reports daily about the enemy's latest advance, Putin will continue to advance.
 
If Trump were to take not even a pro-Ukrainian but a pro-American stance, the situation would be different. But he's not doing so and is effectively refusing to help. Therefore, the only way to change Russia's position is to stop it. The more we destroy the enemy's manpower, equipment, infrastructure, and military-economic potential, the faster this will happen. Frankly, I don't see any other option. 
 
– Why is Trump's response to Putin's ignoring his proposals so sluggish? It's about money, it's about an unwillingness or inability to understand the situation. It's about the perception of Russia as a state that "decides" things in the world, and Ukraine as something secondary in his eyes. Why is this happening?
 
It's all very down-to-earth here. Trump himself said just a few months ago that the Russian economy was in huge trouble. Remember, there was a period when he criticized Putin for destroying Russia's economic opportunities. And then he forgot about it. And he started dragging Russia into some new "group of five," which doesn't include a single European country. 
 
This means one thing. Trump sees Russia as a source of potential profits. For American investors. And, no less important, for himself personally. Ukraine is significantly less interesting to him in this context. Because Russia is a vast territory with vast resources. In reality, from the Urals eastward, almost nothing has been explored or developed. Russia's potential in this regard is many times greater than Ukraine's. And since the dollar is the raison d'ĂȘtre for Trump, the logic here is quite clear. For Trump, Ukraine is, roughly speaking, number 25 on the agenda. And Russia is a potential instrument for great American and personal enrichment. That's the whole story."  

More comments on the Trump - Zelensky meeting in December 2025

I have posted about this meeting before.

From the CNN / Yahoo!News

"Why Trump’s ‘terrific’ meeting with Zelensky was also pretty good for Putin

Analysis by Clare Sebastian, CNN
Trump called the meeting “terrific” and asked if Zelensky and his general who “looks like central casting” had enjoyed the food. Awkward, yes, but a far cry from the open humiliation of the Ukrainian leader that played out in the Oval Office in February.

And yet, beneath the veil of politeness, there was rhetoric from the US president that suggests his default position in negotiations is still to pressure Kyiv, while appeasing Moscow.

On the toughest question of all – territory – Trump at one point suggested it might anyway be “taken” in the coming months, asking, “are you better off making a deal now?” It was a line eerily similar to that of Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov, summarizing a call between President Vladimir Putin and Trump earlier on Sunday: “Given the situation on the front lines, it would make sense for the Ukrainian regime to adopt this decision regarding Donbas without delay.”

That echo wasn’t lost on the Kremlin. Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted on a call with journalists that Trump “apparently reminded them (the Ukrainian side) that Ukraine is losing land and will continue to lose it.” While Russian forces continue to inch forward in the eastern Donbas region, Putin has demanded that Ukraine cede land that Russia has yet to seize.

The Kremlin would already have been confident in its power to sway the US president. In the lead-up to the Alaska summit between Trump and Putin in August, European leaders worked hard to bring Trump round to the idea that a ceasefire was needed before peace negotiations, something Moscow has always dismissed. In the end, it was Putin who won that argument, and, more than four months later, Trump still appears to support his view.

“He (Putin) feels that, look, you know, they’re fighting to stop and then if they have to start again, which is a possibility, he doesn’t want to be in that position. I understand that position,” Trump said Sunday...

No ceasefire then means no referendum, and no referendum could mean no territorial concessions from Ukraine, and ultimately no deal. So, we’re back on the diplomatic merry-go-round, buying more and more time for Russia to attack.

“Russia wants to continue to put pressure on us. And what does this continuation look like? War, missiles, artillery,” Zelensky said in comments to journalists Monday morning. As he spoke, most Ukrainian regions started a new week with regular blackouts, and more than 9,000 households in the Kyiv region woke up with no power at all.

Hardly surprising then, that the Ukrainian president shifted uncomfortably from one foot to the other as he listened to Trump describe Putin as “very good” on the issue of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which Russia seized by force in March 2022 and has occupied ever since.

“President Putin is actually working with Ukraine on getting it open. That’s a big step when he’s not bombing that plant,” said the US president...

Peskov, the Kremlin spokesperson, reiterated Monday that Russia wants “the withdrawal of the regime’s armed forces from Donbas beyond its administrative borders.” That, of course, includes territory Russia hasn’t been able to occupy in nearly four years of war. And in return Moscow continues to receive praise and diplomatic overtures from the White House, with Trump speaking to Putin both before and after his meeting with Zelensky..."

***

And from the Politico / Yahoo!News

"Russia again appears to throw cold water on hopes for a Ukrainian peace deal

Eli Stokols and Diana Nerozzi

That comment elicited an eyeroll and chuckle from Zelenskyy, who stood at Trump’s side at a lectern during a short press conference after following their two hours of talks.

Trump also suggested that Ukraine’s refusal to cede additional territory could simply lead to Russia taking it by force in the future.

Peskov on Monday capitalized on Trump’s views. “Ukraine is losing lands and will lose them further,” he said.

One European official, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the state of negotiations, said any progress made is good. But, the person added, that the “bar is really low for what counts as a good meeting” between Trump and Zelenskyy.

“It’s good they seemed a bit closer, but listening to Trump go on and on about how he understands Putin and how he wants Ukraine to succeed — it’s beyond naive,” the official said.“And that’s actually the thing that’s preventing progress. Until Trump stops eating out of Putin’s hand and applying real pressure, he has no reason to really negotiate.”...

Trump, who backed off the idea of a deadline for the peace talks, did not directly answer a question Sunday about what, if anything, he’d do to increase pressure on Moscow if negotiations fail. He instead accepted the grim possibility that the war would continue and “millions” more people would die.

In Ukraine, Trump’s characterization of the talks landed with a thud.

“It is absolutely painful for Ukraine and the Ukrainian people when we are sitting without electricity, without heat and running water during the winter because Russia chooses to terrorize us, to attack our peaceful cities,” Kira Rudik, a member of Ukrainian parliament, said in a Monday interview on CNN. “And at the same time, Putin lies to President Trump and President Trump allows him to continue doing so and allows him to continue doing so.”"

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Kasparov: The West should have done something when warning signals came from Russia

From the Dialog, Dec. 28, 2025:

"Kasparov explained what's "unique" about Russia's aggression against Ukraine: "It was supposed to be a signal..." 

Russian opposition leader Garry Kasparov recalled events of past years when Putin "hinted" at his aggressive plans. 

The attack on Ukraine is different from any other war in that essentially no one warned of their aggressive plans, said Garry Kasparov. On the other hand, long before this, Putin had publicly declared his intention to restore historical error and recreate the Soviet Union, but his words didn't alert anyone.  

Garry Kasparov discussed the unique features of the war in Ukraine in an interview for the YouTube channel "Free Russia Forum." 

"The 2014 annexation was completely unprepared. Moreover, in 2013, it looked like no one would touch the borders, so the unique thing was that it was completely unexpected. I understand that the Americans thought: we'll just sign the document and that's it, but that's what intelligence agencies are for, by the way, there are analysts, there are a huge number of experts. What could you expect from them if they missed the collapse of the Soviet Union?" the politician opined.

Kasparov then recalled the historical events leading up to the attack on Ukraine: "So, in 2005, on April 25, at a joint session of the Federation Council and the State Duma, Putin uttered the words he was looking for: 'The collapse of the Soviet Union is the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century.' This was supposed to be a signal to Bush. So that Bush would hear it, Putin would repeat it in Munich in 2007, looking at Bush and all those Western leaders. He also said that the West must take Russia's interests into account and, please, return NATO to its 1997 borders, that is, give us all of Eastern Europe under our sphere of influence. What could have been more straightforward? What have they done? They did nothing.""  

The aftermath of Trump stopping intelligence aid to Ukraine last year

From the Time:

""Hundreds of Dead": Inside the Fallout from Trump's Ukraine Intel Pause

The impact for the Ukrainians has been most acute in the Russian region of Kursk, where the Ukrainian armed forces are struggling to hold a swath of territory that they seized in a shock offensive last August. That assault marked the first foreign invasion of Russian land since World War II, humiliating the Kremlin and drawing thousands of North Korean troops into the war to help Russia regain control of the area.

President Zelensky sees that region as a critical source of leverage in any future peace talks with the Russians. His aim is to trade parts of the Kursk area for Ukrainian land that Russia has occupied. “We will swap one territory for another,” Zelensky told the Guardian last month.

Since the U.S. halted intelligence sharing, however, the Russians have made swift advances in Kursk, aiming to cut off Ukrainian supply lines into the region, according to military officers and fresh maps of the battlefield produced by Deep State, an open-source intelligence organization. “If we do nothing, there will be huge consequences,” the co-founder of Deep State, Roman Pogorily, told local media on Tuesday. The main supply line for Ukrainian troops operating in Kursk is now “under constant attack,” he added. “It is impossible to move normally along it.” 

A source in the Zelensky government confirmed that operations in the region of Kursk have been worst affected by the loss of access to U.S. intelligence. “Not only Kursk, in all Russian territory there are problems now,” he says. The Ukrainians have lost the ability to detect the approach of Russian bombers and other warplanes as they take off inside Russia. As a result, Ukraine has less time to warn civilians and military personnel about the risk of an approaching airstrike or missile. “It’s very dangerous for our people,” the government source says. “It has to be immediately changed.”

The loss of U.S. intelligence has also hurt the ability of Ukrainian forces to launch long- and intermediate-range strikes against Russian targets. Some of those strikes have been conducted in recent years using an American weapon known as the High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS. When the U.S. first provided these weapons to Ukraine in 2022, it also began sending intelligence from U.S. satellites that allowed for precision strikes against Russian command centers far behind the front lines. “The satellites allow us to see what the enemy is hiding,” Oleksiy Reznikov, who was then Ukraine’s defense minister, said at the time. “The HIMARS allow us to destroy it.”

These capabilities have now been crippled without access to information from U.S. satellites. Even Maxar Technologies, a private space technology company headquartered in Colorado, has stopped sending Ukraine images from its satellites, according to two Ukrainian military officers familiar with the situation. Ukrainian forces have often used satellite images from Maxar to plan long-range strikes against Russia.

In an emailed statement to TIME on Friday, Maxar Technologies confirmed the disruption to service in Ukraine. “The U.S. government has decided to temporarily suspend Ukrainian accounts” in the system that the government uses to provide access to commercial satellite imagery. “Maxar has contracts with the U.S. government and dozens of allied and partner nations around the world to provide satellite imagery and other geospatial data,” it said. “Each customer makes their own decisions on how they use and share that data.”

Adding to the Ukrainian sense of abandonment, the group of Western “partners” who helped receive and process satellite intelligence at the military headquarters in Kyiv have departed, says the source close to Ukraine’s general staff. “There’s no one left,” he says, declining to be more specific in identifying what “partners” he meant.

Some European intelligence agencies have rushed to help fill the gap left by the Trump Administration. But it will take time for them to deploy, and they are not likely to make up for U.S. intelligence capabilities any time soon, two of the Ukrainian officers say. “We are really thankful to European partners,” one of them says. “This is the only one solid point that gives us any hope, because without this support, we cannot survive.”"


Trump berates the sacrifice of Americans who died for Ukraine

From the Daily Beast / Facebook:"

"Trump, 79, Sends Jaw-Dropping Message to Families of Fallen U.S. Fighters
 
Janna Brancolini, Daily Beast
 
President Donald Trump struggled to offer much sympathy for the families of about 100 Americans—many of them U.S. military veterans—who have died fighting in Ukraine.
 
An estimated several thousand Americans have volunteered to fight for Ukraine since Russian dictator Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion in 2022, with at least 92 Americans killed as of September, The New York Times reported.
 
Following a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at Mar-a-Lago on Sunday to discuss a peace deal to end the war, Trump was asked about his message to the families of the fallen Americans.
 
“The message is so obvious,” he replied. “What a shame. They died in a foreign country. And some are celebrated people, they’re very celebrated. But it’s so sad that a thing like that would happen.”
He then immediately moved on to the next question.
 
Social media users quickly noted that the president hadn’t thanked the fallen for their sacrifice, praised their commitment to freedom and democracy, or even offered his personal condolences.
 
Many of the Americans who have died in Ukraine were U.S. military veterans.
 
Mike Meoli, 71, was a retired Navy Seal and firefighter who traveled to Ukraine to train medics on the front lines. He was killed in November 2024, ABC 10 News San Diego reported.
 
Nicholas Maimer, 45, was an Army Special Forces veteran and Idaho native who helped train Ukrainian officers. He was killed in May 2023 in an artillery barrage, according to Military.com.
 
Ian Frank Tortorici, 32, was a retired corporal with the U.S. Marines who fought on the front lines. He died in July 2023 after a Russian missile hit a restaurant where he was eating while on leave, Task and Purpose reported.
 
The U.S. government has declined to provide aid to American fighters to avoid any suggestion of a direct clash with Russia, which is a nuclear power, the Times reported in September.
 
But some social media users argued that Trump’s barely-there compassion for their families wasn’t measured diplomacy—it was reminiscent of the president’s previous comments about Americans who died in combat being “suckers” and “losers.”
 
During a trip to France in 2018, the president said American soldiers who died on French soil during World War I were “losers,” and that U.S. Marines who helped halt the 1918 German advance toward Paris were “suckers” for dying at the hands of the enemy.
 
The White House denied reports of the comments, which were revealed by The Atlantic magazine in 2020, but they’re just one example of the president disparaging military veterans and their families.
 
He has mocked the late Sen. John McCain’s war injuries, publicly insulted the parents of a 27-year-old soldier who died in a car bombing in Iraq, and privately raged about the funeral costs for a female soldier who was murdered by a male soldier at Fort Hood.
 
Although he failed to offer much comfort Sunday to the families of Americans who have died fighting Russia, Trump did manage to heap praise on the man who started the war.
 
“Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed,” Trump said, prompting Zelensky to raise an eyebrow. “I was explaining to the president [Zelensky], President Putin was very generous in his feeling toward Ukraine succeeding.”
 
He also said he “understands” Putin’s refusal to agree to a ceasefire while a longer-term agreement is being hashed out.
 
“He feels that look, you know, they’re fighting and to stop, and if they have to start again, which is a possibility, he doesn’t want to be in that position—I understand that position,” Trump said.
 
Putin bombarded Ukraine with over 100 drones on Christmas Eve and early Christmas Day, killing at least seven civilians.
 
Sunday’s talks were intended to address security guarantees and possible territorial concessions, and while both sides said progress had been made, neither gave any indication that a deal was within reach.
 
The Daily Beast has reached out to the White House for comment."

Trump insults the intelligence of his audience again: "Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed"

From NPR:

"Trump says Ukraine and Russia 'closer than ever' to peace after talks with Zelenskyy

PALM BEACH, Florida — President Donald Trump on Sunday insisted Ukraine and Russia are "closer than ever before" to a peace deal as he hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his Florida resort... 

The president's statements came after the two leaders met for a discussion that took place after what Trump described as an "excellent," two-and-a-half-hour phone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose invasion of Ukraine launched the war four years ago. Trump insisted he believed Putin still wants peace, even as Russia launched another round of attacks on Ukraine while Zelenskyy flew to the United States for the latest round of negotiations.

"Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed," Trump said during a late afternoon news conference following a meeting with Zelenskyy..."

More from Ukrainska Pravda:

"Trump says Putin claims he "wants to see Ukraine succeed"

Ulyana Krychkovska — 29 December 2025
 

US President Donald Trump has said that Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin has claimed he "wants to see Ukraine succeed" and would help with its reconstruction.

Source: Trump at a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy... as reported by European Pravda

Details: Trump was asked whether, during his conversation with the Kremlin leader, they had discussed Russia's responsibility for any reconstruction of Ukraine after a potential peace deal.

Quote: "They're going to be helping. Russia's going to be helping. Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed, once... It sounds a little strange, but I was explaining to the president."

Details: Trump added that "Putin was very generous in his feeling towards Ukraine succeeding, including supplying energy, electricity and other things at very low prices".

"So, a lot of good things came out of that call today," he noted."

***

Some comments cited by Mediaite / Yahoo!News

"

“What a complete embarrassment,” wrote political commentator @ArmandoNDK.

“Sauron wants to see Frodo succeed,” posted analyst @OAlexanderDK in a nod to the bad guy/good guy trope in JRR Tolkein’s The Lord of The Rings.

Author Michael Weiss wrote of Zelensky, “He can’t believe he’s up there deciding the fate of millions with a hebephrenic pit boss. And not for the first or last time.”

The Bulwark’s Sarah Longwell wrote, “Whenever I truly want my neighbor to succeed, I break into his house, brutalize his family, steal his children, and burn his house to the ground while screaming, ‘bro, I’m just trying to help!’”

Longwell added, “Our president is an international calamity.”

Ukrainian commentator @BohuslavskaKate wrote, “About the press conference: Trump is absolutely detached from reality. He doesn’t understand how to end this war or what he is doing. But he visibly enjoys bragging about his relationship with Putin and their sweet phone calls in front of [Zelensky]. To him, it’s a kind of power flex, but in reality he is simply admiring a war criminal in front of the president of the victim nation. It doesn’t looks powerful, it looks sadistic and dumb.”

"This is an absolutely unhinged thing to say about a country that was invaded, bombed, and terrorized by Russia. Calling Putin “generous” while Ukraine is fighting for its survival tells you everything about where Trump’s loyalties actually lie."" 

***

Needless to say, more than 3 months later, the war is still raging with no end in sight.

Republican congressman cannot say whether Trump supports Ukraine or Russia

From Mediaite / Yahoo!News:

"‘Which Side is Trump On?’ GOP Congressman Spins His Wheels When Asked if President Supports Russia or Ukraine

Joe DePaolo

A Republican congressman spun his wheels Sunday morning when asked whether President Donald Trump is on Russia’s side or Ukraine’s side in the war between the two.

In an interview on ABC’s This Week, Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH) made clear which side he believes the United States should be on — but was less clear about where he believes Trump stands.

“America, when we address the issue of whose side we’re on, you can’t be America first and be pro-Russia,” Turner said. “Russia is a self-declared adversary of the United States, and here they are mercilessly killing Ukrainians and trying to take Ukrainian land.”... 

ABC’s Jonathan Karl then asked what seemed like a simple question.

“Which side is Trump on?” Karl asked

But the congressman sputtered.

“I…you know, clearly… you know, Trump is on the side of peace,” Turner replied. “And he’s trying to balance these two forces — which is very, very difficult to bring these two parties together.”

Karl quickly followed up.

“Trump has repeatedly said that Ukraine never should have started this war or words to that effect,” he said. “I mean, Ukraine didn’t start this war! They were invaded. So, how does that affect his effort to try to broker a peace deal?” 

Turner agreed with the premise that Russia did indeed start the war, but danced around the question from Karl.

“Clearly, it’s a war of aggression is started by Russia — and it has been started by Russia,” Turner said. “And I think that Trump’s sense of wanting peace is incredibly important, and I think it’s a noble goal. And I think we’re getting closer. I think that Zelensky is coming with a plan that is workable and that could get us there. And hopefully, with our allies in Europe that have come together — which, they seem to be working and advancing the type of security assurances we’re going to need with the United States, that hopefully, we can deter Russia in the future.”

Watch above, via ABC."

Russia bombed civilians during the winter holidays while Trump's minions claim it is committed to peace

From the Daily Beast / Yahoo!News:

"Putin Humiliates Trump With Kyiv Strike on Eve of Peace Talks

Adam Downer

Russia doesn’t seem to agree with U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff’s assessment that the country is “fully committed” to achieving peace with Ukraine.

Russian forces bombed Kyiv on Saturday morning, killing one person and injuring dozens more, less than one week after Witkoff boasted of Russia’s so-called “commitment” on social media.

“Russia remains fully committed to achieving peace in Ukraine. Russia highly values the efforts and support of the United States to resolve the Ukrainian conflict and re-establish global security,” Witkoff wrote on Dec. 21.

On Dec. 27, the Russian Defense Ministry bragged that it carried out a “massive strike” on Ukraine, saying it used “long-range precision-guided weapons from land, air, and sea, including Kinzhal hypersonic aeroballistic missiles” to attack “Ukrainian military-industrial complex enterprises.”

The 10-hour bombardment comes one day before Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, 47, is set to meet with Donald Trump,79, in Florida to discuss his peace proposal to end the Russia-Ukraine war.

Zelensky said the attack typified Russia’s attitude toward peace.

“Where is the Russian response to the proposals to end the war, which were made by the United States and the world?” he said on Telegram, adding, “Russian representatives hold long talks. In reality, the ‘Kinzhal’ and ‘Shaheds’ speak for them.” “Kinzhal” and “Shahed” are the missiles and drones used in the attack.

The attack ramps up the pressure on Sunday’s meeting. President Trump has seemingly grown tired of the ongoing war, but has blamed the drawn-out nature of the conflict on Ukraine and its allies in Europe, rather than Russia...

Trump didn’t seem eager to sign off on Zelensky’s proposal in a conversation with Politico on Friday, saying of Zelensky, “He doesn’t have anything until I approve it, so we’ll see what he’s got.”

He added, “I think it’s going to go good with him. I think it’s going to go good with Putin.”"

Putin openly declares disinterest in peace talks, which he never used to do in Biden's time

From the To Be Or blog, Dec 27, 2025 (hattip: Dialog):

"Putin: "Judging by the pace we're seeing at the front line, our interest in withdrawing Ukrainian military units from the territories they currently occupy is essentially zero. For a variety of reasons. And if the Kyiv authorities don't want to resolve the matter peacefully, we will resolve all the tasks facing us during the special military operation by force of arms." 

 __ 

Wow. That's right. 

I interpret this as "if you don't leave now, we might as well abandon the negotiations altogether because we're moving so fast that we're not interested." 
 
A new ultimatum to Ukraine. 
 
Like, Zelenskyy, get out of the "territories you occupy" (which ones, by the way?), otherwise even Trump won't force me to sit down at the table. Like, this is your last chance. 
 
The only thing is, I'm not sure he can afford to walk out of the negotiations right now, because there's still the risk of incurring Trump's wrath. But as an additional pressure before tomorrow's meeting between Zelenskyy and Trump—yes, it absolutely goes.

But for now, even without the successes he boasts of, he is so confident in the irreversibility of his victory that he allows himself to doubt the very need to participate in peace negotiations, despite the fact that he has never actually participated in them - he only pretended to."

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Nevzorov: Cannibalism is a principle of Russian politics

From Faktor, Dec 28, 2025 - Russian opposition journalist Alexander Nevzorov, now in Ukraine:

"...It is no secret that the best New Year's gift for the world under the Christmas tree would be a coffin with the body of the Russian Fuhrer. Simply because of the number of problems that would be solved at once with this coffin. His sudden or not so sudden death would be guaranteed to save the planet from a mass of problems and possible large-scale disasters. 

What would Putin's death change? A lot. Because even in the Kremlin's snake pit, where everyone presents themselves as frostbitten fanatics, there is no one who can compare with Putin in mania and cannibalism. All this entourage of his, even the most hysterical and bloody, are cardboard characters who will melt like smoke at the moment of his death. None of them is capable of continuing this infernal game, nor of taking it over. 

 Yes, Putin is undoubtedly what he is by all parameters - both medical and scientific - but his Nazguls are even more insignificant than their master. Of course, Putin's death will not solve the age-old problems of cannibalism as a fundamental principle of Russian politics. But nevertheless, the planet will still get a brief but valuable breath of air."