The imposition of “unpalatable” peace terms by US President-elect Donald Trump could destabilize the country from within, Kiev’s former top diplomat said
Ukraine could face civil unrest and even a full-blown “collapse” if US President-elect Donald Trump reverses the previous administration’s policy of unconditionally supporting Kiev, former Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba has warned.
The election of Trump on November 5 prompted fears in Kiev that Washington would end financial and military aid and would strong-arm the country into an unfavorable settlement with Russia.
“If the money were to dry up, a new dynamic would come into play, and not all of it on the battlefield. True, bereft of funding, Ukraine could lose ground completely,” Kuleba wrote in an op-ed published in the Economist newspaper on Wednesday.
He argued that Ukraine could plunge into a civil conflict if the US forces it to sign a bad peace deal.
“If the Trump administration then imposed unpalatable peace terms on Ukraine, and if Mr Zelensky agreed (an unlikely scenario), part of Ukrainian society would resist. Domestic unrest would risk the country’s internal collapse,” Kuleba wrote.
Such a dramatic development would give Russian President Vladimir Putin “the victory he has long desired, painting Ukraine as a failed state,” Kuleba suggested, warning that Trump “cannot afford for Ukraine to become his Afghanistan.”
Throughout his re-election campaign, Trump claimed that he would quickly mediate a peace agreement between Kiev and Moscow, without specifying possible terms. During a televised debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, he refused to directly answer a question whether he wants Ukraine to win. “I want the war to stop,” he said at the time.
In June, Reuters reported that two of Trump’s advisers had drawn up a plan to reach a ceasefire based on current battle lines. The official Trump campaign has distanced itself from any concrete proposals, however.
Kiev has long insisted that a lasting peace deal can only be based on Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s ‘peace formula’, which includes the restoration of the country’s 1991 border. Russia has rejected these terms wholesale, insisting that Ukraine should drop its aspirations to join NATO in favor of becoming a neutral country and renounce its claims on Crimea and other regions, which voted to join Russia.
Speaking to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz over the phone on Friday, Putin reiterated that the conflict “was a direct result of NATO’s long-standing aggressive policy” of ignoring Russia’s security concerns.