Zelenskiy to seek US missiles in shadow of Putin summit

Jeff Mason |

US President Donald Trump is speaking with Russian President Vladimir Putin about the Ukraine war.
US President Donald Trump is speaking with Russian President Vladimir Putin about the Ukraine war.

US President Donald Trump will discuss the possible supply of Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, but the surprise announcement of a new US-Russian summit has cast doubt over the prospect.

Trump said on Thursday he may meet Russian President Vladimir Putin within the next two weeks in Budapest after a more than two-hour phone conversation about Russia’s war in Ukraine that he said was productive.

“My whole life, I’ve made deals,” Trump told reporters later at the White House. “I think we’re going to have this one done, hopefully soon.”

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said he would brief Zelenskiy on the Russia talks in the Oval Office on Friday.

President Donald Trump and Russia's Vladimir Putin
President Donald Trump said he might meet Russia’s leader in what would be the second time in 2025. (AP PHOTO)

Trump’s conciliatory tone after the call with Putin raised questions over the near-term likelihood of assistance to Ukraine and reignited European fears of US capitulation to Moscow.

The US president, who has campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize, is eager to add to the list of conflicts he says he has been instrumental in ending.

More than three-and-a-half years after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russia has ground out some territorial gains in 2025.

Putin earlier in October said his forces had taken almost 5000 square kilometres of land in Ukraine in 2025, equivalent to adding one per cent of Ukraine’s territory to the nearly 20 per cent already held.

Both sides have also escalated attacks on each other’s energy systems and Russian drones and jets have strayed into NATO countries.

Donald Trump Volodymyr Zelenskiy
Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskiy returns to the White House to meet again with President Donald Trump. (AP PHOTO)

The White House had seemed in recent days to be leaning toward granting Zelenskiy fresh support and increasingly frustrated with Putin.

The new meeting, which Trump said would likely occur in the next two weeks, follows his consideration of providing Ukraine with long-range Tomahawks missiles.

“We need them, too,” Trump said of the missiles on Thursday in his remarks to reporters after his call with Putin. The weapons are widely seen in Ukraine as a game-changer that would help it escalate attacks on Russian energy systems far from the border that have already caused significant damage.

Zelenskiy, who has had an up-and-down relationship with Trump, said Putin, who pressed ahead with assaults on Ukraine after meeting with Trump in Alaska in August, was again playing for time.

“We can already see that Moscow is rushing to resume dialogue as soon as it hears about Tomahawks,” he wrote on X.

Ukraine
Experts say the summit might be a Russian tactic to delay Tomahawk missiles being given to Ukraine. (AP PHOTO)

Putin’s move was meant to make the US transfer of such weapons less likely, said Max Bergmann, a Russia expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“It does seem that Putin’s outreach is perhaps designed to thwart the potential transfer of Tomahawks to Ukraine, so Putin is wanting to put that back in the box,” Bergmann said. “It strikes me as sort of a stalling tactic.”

Mykola Bielieskov, a senior analyst at Come Back Alive, a Ukrainian non-governmental organisation that is a major procurer of military equipment for the Ukrainian armed forces, said Tomahawk missiles would level a playing field that is tipped towards Russia, but that they would not be a silver bullet.

“We don’t expect Russia to crumble after one, two or three successful strikes,” Bielieskov said. “But it’s about pressure, constant pressure. It’s about disrupting the military industrial complex.”

Ukraine
Tomahawk missiles are seen as a game-changer in Ukraine but experts warn they might not be. (AP PHOTO)

Since taking office in January, Trump has regularly threatened action against Russia, only to delay those steps after talks with Putin.

“The chances of moving toward a ceasefire by pushing Russia to get serious seem to have diminished,” said Dan Fried, a former State Department official.

During Thursday’s call, Putin told Trump that supplying long-range missiles to Ukraine would harm the peace process and damage US-Russia ties, Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters. Trump confirmed Putin had opposed such a transfer.

“What do you think he’s going to say, ‘Please sell Tomahawks?'” Trump joked with reporters. “No, he doesn’t want” Tomahawks given to Ukraine, Trump added, calling them a “vicious weapon”.

Reuters