WASHINGTON, United States
United States President,
Donald Trump has spent the day attacking Ukraine's President Volodymyr
Zelensky, calling him a "dictator" and deepening the rift between the
two leaders.
His attacks came after
Zelensky, reacting to US-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia from which Kyiv was
excluded, said the US president was "living in a disinformation
space" governed by Moscow.
Speaking at a Saudi-backed
investment meeting in Florida, Trump said the only thing Zelensky "was
really good at was playing Joe Biden like a fiddle".
The "dictator" slur
quickly prompted criticism from European leaders including German Chancellor
Olaf Scholz, who said "it is simply wrong and dangerous to deny President
Zelensky his democratic legitimacy".
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir
Starmer made it clear he backed Zelensky in a phone call to the
Ukrainian president.
A Downing Street spokesperson
said Sir Keir "expressed his support for President Zelensky as Ukraine's
democratically elected leader".
It was "perfectly
reasonable to suspend elections during war time as the UK did during World War
Two," the spokesperson added.
Zelensky is due to meet the
American envoy for Russia and Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, on Thursday. He said it
was crucial that the discussion - and overall co-operation with the US -
remains constructive.
In a social media post,
Zelensky said that peace could be more secure with the US and Europe.
Zelensky's five-year term of
office was due to come to an end in May 2024. However, Ukraine has been under
martial law since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022 and
elections are suspended.
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf
Kristersson also criticised Trump's use of the word "dictator" while
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called the comments
"absurd".
"If you look at the real
world instead of just firing off a tweet, then you know who in Europe has to
live in the conditions of a dictatorship: people in Russia, people in
Belarus," she told broadcaster ZDF.
Speaking in Florida, Trump
called Zelensky a "dictator", just hours after using the same word in
a Truth Social post about the Ukrainian president.
"He refuses to have
elections. He's low in the real Ukrainian polls. How can you be high with every
city being demolished?" Trump said.
He also referenced his attempt
to get rare-earth minerals from Ukraine, accusing Zelensky's government of
"breaking the deal".
His address echoed his wording
of the Truth Social post where Trump said Zelensky "has done a terrible
job, his country is shattered, and MILLIONS have unnecessarily died." In
the meantime, the US was "successfully negotiating an end to the war with
Russia," he said.
A White House official said
Trump's post was in direct response to Zelensky's "disinformation"
comments.
On Tuesday US and Russian
officials held their first high-level, face-to-face talks since Russia's
full-scale invasion.
The former prime minister of
Ukraine, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, told the BBC that Russia was "popping
champagne right now" in response to Trump's comments.
"Volodymyr Zelensky is a
completely legitimate president," he said. "We cannot hold elections
under martial law."
The war of words began with
comments made by Trump on Tuesday at a news conference at Mar-a-Lago in
Florida, when he blamed Ukraine for the war.
Trump was asked by BBC News
what his message was to Ukrainians who might feel betrayed, to which he
replied: "I hear that they're upset about not having a seat, well, they've
had a seat for three years and a long time before that. This could have been
settled very easily."
"You should have never
started it. You could have made a deal," Trump added.
Trump did not mention that
President Vladimir Putin took the decision to invade Ukraine in February 2022.
Then on Wednesday, Zelensky
told reporters in Kyiv: "We are seeing a lot of disinformation and it's
coming from Russia. With all due respect to President Donald Trump as a
leader... he is living in this disinformation space."
He added that he believed
"the United States helped Putin to break out of years of isolation".
Later in the day, the
Ukrainian leader said the world faced the choice to be "with Putin or with
peace" and announced he would be meeting Washington's Ukraine envoy, Keith
Kellogg, on Thursday.