Donald Trump risks being a âloser presidentâ if he wins Novemberâs election and imposes a bad peace deal on Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said, saying it would mean the end of the US as a global âplayerâ.
In an interview with the Guardian in Kyiv, Zelenskiy said he had âno strategy yetâ for what to do if Trump returned to the White House, and that the former British prime minister Boris Johnson had approached him on his behalf.
If Trump beats Joe Biden, he is widely expected to cut off US military support to Ukraine. Last year Trump boasted he could end the war in â24 hoursâ.
Trumpâs aides have previously sketched out a possible plan that would involve giving Ukraineâs eastern regions to Russia, as well as Crimea. But Zelenskiy made clear that âUkrainians would not put up with thatâ. Nor would they accept a Russian âultimatumâ that forced Ukraine to abandon integration with Europe and future membership of Nato, he said.
Zelenskiy acknowledged that a re-elected Trump could, if he really wanted to, impose a crushing military defeat on Ukraine. He could cut off âsupport, weapons and moneyâ, and even âmake dealsâ with Kyivâs partners so they stop deliveries of vital arms.
âUkraine, barehanded, without weapons, will not be able to fight a multimillion [Russian] army,â Zelenskiy told the Guardian.
Speaking inside his presidential headquarters, he said he thought this scenario was unlikely. But he said if it happened there would be grave consequences for the USâs standing in the world â as well as for Trump personally. âDoes he want to become a loser president? Do you understand what can happen?â Zelenskiy said.
He predicted that Vladimir Putin would violate any Trump-brokered deal. âA ceasefire is a trap,â he said. After a pause Putin would âgo furtherâ, humiliating Trump and making him look âvery weakâ in the eyes of the world, he said.
Zelenskiy continued: âThis is not about him [Trump], as a person but about the institutions of the United States. They will become very weak. The US will not be the leader of the world any more. Yes, it will be powerful, first of all, in the domestic economy because it has a powerful economy without a doubt. But in terms of international influence it will be equal to zero.â
Realising that Washington was no longer âa playerâ, other mostly authoritarian countries and leaders would âcome into the arenaâ and emulate Putinâs aggressive âapproachâ, Zelenskiy suggested.
And this would ultimately end in global disaster: âThe beginning of what everyone is so afraid to talk about. This is reality. And this is the real third world war.â
Asked whether Johnson had spoken to Trump on Ukraineâs behalf, Zelenskiy said: âI think he tried, and I think he spoke to him. I think so, yes, as far as I know.â
He added: âI am sorry that I am using Boris as an instrument.â
The initiative came as Kyiv lobbied pro-Trump Republicans in Congress and tried to persuade them to drop their opposition to Ukraine aid. The $61bn military aid package passed in April after a six-month delay.
Zelenskiy made his comments a day before a New York jury on Thursday convicted Trump of all 34 counts of falsifying business records. The verdict in the hush-money trial made him the first former president to be found guilty of felony crimes in the USâs near 250-year history.
In 2019, as president, Trump rang Zelenskiy and asked him to investigate his election rival Biden and Bidenâs son Hunter. If Zelenskiy failed to find dirt on Hunter Biden, US security assistance to Ukraine would be withheld, Trump suggested, according to a leak of the call. The scandal led to Trumpâs first impeachment.
Zelenskiy said he had invited Trump to visit Ukraine. âI want to talk to him openly. I want him to come and see the war for himself. And then to talk to him. I think he would need it to understand the situation better,â he said.
Zelenskiy said he understood that Trump âknowsâ Putin, based on the former presidentâs own âstatementsâ. The pair have met at diplomatic summits. Trump has previously called Russiaâs leader âa geniusâ and described his 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine as âpretty savvyâ.
Communicating with Putin was not the same as knowing him, Zelenskiy said, adding that to understand him better Trump should âsee the results of what he brought to Ukraineâ â a reference to the destruction of towns and cities, murders of civilians and the daily bombardment from Russian missiles.