Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was shut out of the discussions regarding the way forward for his nation, which occurred in Saudi Arabia on Feb. 18, 2025. Actually, there have been no Ukrainian representatives, nor any European Union ones – simply U.S. and Russian delegations, and their Saudi hosts.
The assembly – which adopted a mutually complimentary telephone name between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian chief Vladimir Putin just days earlier – was gleefully celebrated in Moscow. The absence of Ukraine in deciding its personal future could be very a lot consistent with Putin’s coverage towards its neighbor. Putin has lengthy rejected Ukrainian statehood and the legitimacy of the Ukrainian authorities, or as he calls it the “Kyiv regime.”
Whereas the U.S. delegation did reiterate that future discussions must contain Ukraine at some stage, the Trump administration’s actions and phrases have little doubt undermined Kyiv’s place and affect.
To that finish, the U.S. is more and more falling consistent with Moscow on a key plank of the Kremlin’s plan to delegitimize Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian authorities: calling for elections in Ukraine as a part of any peace deal.
Questioning Zelenskyy’s legitimacy
Difficult Zelenskyy’s legitimacy is a part of a deliberate ongoing propaganda campaign by Russia to discredit Ukrainian management, weaken help for Ukraine from its key allies and take away Zelenskyy – and probably Ukraine – as a accomplice in negotiations.
Claims by the Russian president that his nation is ready for peace negotiations seem, to many observers of its three-year warfare, extremely suspect given Russia’s ongoing assaults on its neighbor and its steadfast refusal to date to comply with any non permanent truce.
But the Kremlin is pushing the narrative that the issue is that there isn’t any professional Ukrainian authority with which it will possibly deal. As such, Putin can proclaim his commitments to a peace with out making any commitments or compromises essential to any true negotiation course of.
In the meantime, portray Zelenskyy as a “dictator” dampens the enthusiastic help that once greeted him from democratic countries. This, is flip, can translate to the discount and even finish of army help for Kyiv, Putin hopes, permitting him a fillip in what has turn out to be a warfare of attrition.
What Putin wants for this plan to work is a prepared accomplice to assist get the message out that Zelenskyy and the present Ukraine authorities should not professional representatives of their nation – and into this hole the brand new U.S. administration seems to have stepped.
Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)
Dictating phrases
Take the narrative on elections.
On the assembly in Saudi Arabia, the U.S. reportedly discussed elections in Ukraine as being a key a part of any peace deal. Trump himself has raised the prospect of elections, noting in a Feb. 18 press convention: “We’ve a scenario the place we haven’t had elections in Ukraine, the place we’ve martial legislation.” The U.S. president went on to assert, incorrectly, that Zelenskyy’s approval score was right down to “4%.” The newest polling truly exhibits the Ukrainian president to be sitting on a 57% approval rating.
A day later, Trump upped the attacks, describing Zelenskyy as a “dictator with out elections.”
Such statements echo Russia’s narrative that the federal government in Kyiv is illegitimate.
The Kremlin’s claims concerning what it describes because the “legal aspects related to his [Zelenskyy’s] legitimacy” are primarily based on the premise that the Ukraine president’s five-year time period as president of Ukraine ought to have resulted in 2024.
And elections in Ukraine would have taken place in Could of that 12 months had it not been for the martial law that Ukraine put into place when the Russian Federation launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
The Martial Regulation Act – which Ukraine imposed on Feb. 24, 2022 – explicitly bans all elections in Ukraine at some point of the emergency motion.
And whereas the Ukrainian Structure solely consists of language concerning the extension of parliament’s powers till martial legislation is lifted, constitutional attorneys in Ukraine are inclined to agree that the implication is that this additionally applies to presidential powers.
However what the legislation says, the Kremlin’s questioning of the democratic establishments of Ukraine and its push for elections in Ukraine have discovered traction in Washington of late. Trump’s particular envoy Gen. Keith Kellogg declared on Feb. 1 that elections “must be carried out” as a part of peace course of, saying that elections are a “beauty of a solid democracy.”
The poll field lure
Zelenskyy is not opposed to elections in precept and has agreed that elections ought to be held when the time is true. “As soon as martial legislation is over, then the ball is in parliament’s court docket – the parliament then picks a date for elections,” Zelenskyy said in a Jan. 2 interview.
And he seems to have the backing of nearly all of Ukrainians. In Could 2024, 69% of Ukrainians polled stated Zelenskyy ought to stay president till the tip of marshal legislation, after which elections should be held.
The problem, as Zelenskyy has stated, is the timing and circumstances. “Through the warfare, there could be no elections. It’s obligatory to alter laws, the structure, and so forth. These are vital challenges. However there are additionally nonlegal, very human challenges,” he said on Jan. 4.
Even opposition politicians in Ukraine agree that now shouldn’t be the time. Petro Poroshenko, Zelenskyy’s predominant political rival, has dismissed the idea of wartime elections, as has Inna Sovsun, the leader of the opposition Golos Party.
Other than logistical issues of making certain free and honest elections in the course of a warfare, the battle would current logistical hurdles to campaigning and accessing polling websites. There’s additionally the query of whether or not and learn how to embrace Ukrainians in Russian-occupied territories and those that are internally displaced, in addition to the 6.5 million who fled combating and presently reside overseas.
Good elections … and unhealthy
Russia did, after all, hold elections during the current conflict. However the 2024 election that Putin won with 87% of the vote was, in line with most worldwide observers, neither free nor fair.
Relatively, it was a sham vote that solely underlined what most political scientists will affirm: Elections are at greatest a obligatory however inadequate marker of democracy.
This level shouldn’t be wasted on Ukrainians, whose dedication to democracy strengthened within the years leading up to the 2022 invasion. Certainly, a survey taken a number of months into the warfare discovered that 76% of Ukrainians agreed that democracy was one of the best type of governance – up from 41% three years earlier.
There are different causes Ukraine could be cautious of elections. The adversarial nature of political campaigns could be divisive, particularly amongst a society in excessive stress.
Ukrainian politicians have brazenly argued that holding an election throughout the warfare could be destabilizing for Ukrainian society, undermining the internal unity in face of Russian aggression.

Russian Foreign Ministry/Anadolu via Getty Images
Outdoors affect
After which there may be concern over exterior affect in any election. Ukrainians have had enough experience with Russian meddling in their politics to take it with no consideration that the Kremlin will try to put a thumb on the dimensions.
Russia has because the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 employed its substantial assets to influence Ukraine’s politics by all accessible means, starting from propaganda, financial pressures and incentives to vitality blackmail, threats and use of violence.
In 2004, Moscow’s electoral manipulations in favor of the pro-Russian candidate, Viktor Yanukovich, led to the Orange Revolution – by which Ukrainians rose as much as reject rigged elections. 9 years later, Yanukovich – who turned president in 2010 – was deposed although the Revolution of Dignity, which noticed Ukrainians oust a person many noticed as a Russian stooge in favor of a path towards higher integration with Europe.
Putin’s historical past of meddling in elections extends past Ukraine, after all. Most lately, the Romanian Constitutional Courtroom annulled the nation’s presidential elections, citing an electoral process compromised by foreign interference.
An inconceivable place
In raising elections as a prerequisite to negotiations, Putin is setting a
“catch-22” lure for Ukraine: The Ukrainian Structure states that elections can occur solely when martial legislation is lifted; however the lifting of the martial legislation is feasible solely when the “sizzling section” of the warfare is over. So with out a ceasefire, no election is feasible.
However in refusing to comply with elections, Ukraine could be forged because the blockage to any peace deal – taking part in to a story that’s already forming within the U.S. administration that Kyiv is the issue and can must be sidelined for there to be progress.
In brief, in seemingly echoing Russian speaking factors on an election being a prerequisite for peace, the U.S. places the Ukrainian authorities in an inconceivable place: Comply with the vote and danger inside division and outdoors interference, or reject it and permit Moscow – and, maybe, Washington – to border Ukraine’s leaders as illegitimate and unable to barter on the behalf of their folks.