Opinion | Trump-Zelensky Face-Off: Boys, Uninterrupted
What the world saw at the Oval Office was a performance that suited everyone involved. Or so they thought.

Nope, it's not Putin who's having the last laugh after the Oval-gate.
It's the leaders, past and present, of India and Pakistan. Even at the height of their hostilities, heads of the governments in New Delhi and Islamabad refrained from a face-off in public. In the Oval Office, on the other hand, things became so heated between Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky and POTUS Donald Trump that a descent into fisticuffs appeared to be a real possibility. Lest we forget, Ukraine and the US are allies.
Peace As Performance
What the world saw at the Oval Office was a performance that suited everyone involved. Or so they thought. Zelensky took an exception to US Vice President JD Vance's optimistic and, honestly, commonsensical statement “Path to peace, path to prosperity lies in maybe engaging in diplomacy”. He reminded the room that between 2016 and 2022, three US presidents failed to check Putin's continued aggression against Ukraine. “What diplomacy are you talking about, JD?” Zelensky asked, rather tactlessly. The conversation nosedived not only at the diplomatic front but also on the level of personal courtesies.
Zelensky has admitted that the public spat with the most powerful ally of Ukraine is not a good look at this point. But this public showdown has forged his image as the guy who stood up to the American bullying. Holding his ground when Vance and Trump continued to mention his lack of gratitude, Zelensky kept reiterating his commitment to the shared values of sovereignty, democracy and integrity. The world saw a war-beaten man upholding principles that are worth fighting for. Zelensky performed the part of David—upright, vulnerable, and a possible giant slayer if he got the help he needs.
But what about Trump and Vance? Trump stuck to his crazy fearsome gambit—an improvisation on George Friedman's ‘Crazed Fearsome Cripple Gambit' the latter used to explain North Korea's regime. Trump reminded everyone that it was his maverick ways that “stopped a lot of wars”. The peace deal between Russia and Ukraine, therefore, can only be brokered by him. Not because he's aligned to Putin. “I'm aligned to no one,” Trump emphasised. He is correct.
Trump, The Dealmaker
During his previous presidency, Trump demonstrated that he does not believe in operating along established lines. Whatever, whoever serves his immediate purpose is worthy of his alignment. A deal is a deal. Nothing less, nothing more. However, the problem with the Russia-Ukraine deal is that it appears impossible under current circumstances. The heated exchange with Zelensky has given Trump an easy scapegoat. “You see the hatred he's got for Putin. It's very tough for me to make a deal with that kind of hatred. The other side is not exactly in love with him either,” Trump said before things spiralled south. He also issued a statement after this fateful press meet that he's “determined that President Zelensky is not ready for Peace if America is involved”.
As for Vance, he assigned himself the role of a seasoned diplomat by making his “Pathway to peace” statement. He was also the one to say to Zelensky that it was disrespectful to “litigate” in full public view. Vance was right, too. Diplomacy is what happens behind the closed doors. Unfortunately, even Vance forgot that while responding to Zelensky's “disrespectful” ways. Zelensky also took umbrage at Vance speaking loudly but was chastised immediately by Trump. “He's not speaking loudly.” Vance won his boss over. All he had to do was say that his boss was working tirelessly for saving an ungrateful president's country from “total destruction”. Vance and Trump had a visible bonhomie that people in most offices will kill for.
Theatre Of The Absurd
For now, the war continues. The rest of the world can give up any hopes of improved supply chains or correction in inflation. World leaders, especially Europeans, are rallying behind Zelensky, at least on social media. But as the Ukrainian president noted during the Oval Office meeting, “Europe is ready but without the United States they will not be ready to be as strong as we need”. With Zelensky, Trump, and Vance all sticking to their scripts, what could have been a step towards bringing at least a ceasefire, possibly long enough to give a semblance of peace, is a stumble at all levels. Under such circumstances, peace is a Godot that may never arrive, no matter how long one waits.
Overall, this performance beats any theatre of the absurd that any master dramatist could muster. Jean (Genet), Eugene (Ionesco) who?
(The author is a Delhi-based author and academic.)
Disclaimer: These are the personal opinions of the author
-
Blog | Goondaism To Corruption, 'Mango' Mishra Is All That's Wrong With Bengal
A priest's son who became a lawyer bunks the courtroom, takes on a handout job, and aims to make money through bribes. This is not just corruption, but a deep rot.
-
Opinion | No, Bangladesh's Islamist Descent Is Not Yunus' Doing Alone
The truth is that the shift has been underway in Bangladesh for a long time now, and was visible - even ignored - under the regime of Sheikh Hasina, India's 'great friend'.
-
He Spoke To NDTV On Surviving 2023 Airstrike. Now, Killed In Gaza Cafe Blast
Last year, speaking to NDTV, Ismail Abu Hatab detailed his experience of surviving an Israeli airstrike. He died on Monday in a strike on a Gazan cafe.
-
Opinion | The Cost of 'Boasting': Trump And India's Post-Op Sindoor Dilemmas
Sometimes, it is not the conflict that changes everything. It is the story told about how it ended. This is one such case.
-
NDTV Exclusive: Pakistan Rebuilding Terror Launchpads Destroyed In Operation Sindoor
According to intelligence sources, a series of small and high-tech terror facilities are being developed in dense forest areas along the Line of Control (LoC) to evade surveillance and attack.
-
Opinion | Why Iranians Are Standing With Their Regime - Even When They Hate It
Tunisia, where the Arab Spring began, did not wait or depend on external forces to engineer a change. It was implemented by Tunisians themselves. Any Iranian Spring, too, must begin in Iran.
-
Opinion | Why America Is Like A Teenager Who Refuses To Grow Up
American foreign policy in West Asia is a textbook example of adolescent overreach: short attention spans, cyclical memory, a belief in shortcuts to regime change, and an almost allergic reaction to complexity.
-
Opinion | How Zohran Mamdani Has Given Indian-Americans An Identity Crisis
Suddenly, many Indians' urge to claim anyone even remotely Indian in terms of their genetic makeup for achieving anything on the global stage has turned into outright hate.
-
Opinion | Congress May Have Finally Solved Its Tharoor Dilemma In Kerala
With the Nilambur by-election in the bag, maybe the Congress can finally put the sordid Tharoor saga behind it and concentrate on the challenging panchayat and assembly elections looming ahead.
-
Opinion | US, Iran And A Night Of Missiles And Fragile Messages
Trump's ceasefire declaration signals that the US does not seek further entanglement. Whether that message holds beyond a social media post remains to be seen.
-
News Updates
-
Featured
-
More Links
-
Follow Us On