NewsUkraine seeks to woo Trump with business and strategic ties

Ukraine seeks to woo Trump with business and strategic ties

Ukrainian officials and entrepreneurs are trying to persuade Donald Trump that "a strong Ukraine can support his political goals." They also express cautious optimism that "He [Donald Trump - ed. note] may act faster and more decisively than President Joe Biden," reports the "Washington Post".

Donald Trump
Donald Trump
Images source: © East News | zz/Andrea Renault/STAR MAX/IPx
Mateusz Czmiel

26 November 2024 07:43

Kiev hopes to convince Trump that Ukraine is not a financial burden, but an economically and geopolitically profitable investment, which will ultimately enrich and secure the United States and its interests. Ukraine believes that by using Trump's transactional approach to diplomacy — including offering lucrative business opportunities to American companies — the new president will help halt Russian advances.

How Kiev wants to convince Trump

According to the "Washington Post," hopes that Trump will help end the war on terms favourable to Kiev persist among officials, despite Trump and many of his circle believing that the conflict costs American taxpayers too much money and should be quickly resolved. Such statements have raised concerns that Trump might suddenly halt military support for Ukraine and press for territorial concessions to Russia.

However, officials in Kiev express frustration with the slow pace of assistance from the Biden administration," we read. Many Ukrainians overlook recent negative comments from Trump, focusing on the fact that it was Trump who, as the first U.S. president, sold lethal weapons to Ukraine.

Trump approved lethal weapons for Kiev

During Trump's first term, Ukraine received Javelin missiles — portable anti-tank systems, whose sale had been denied for a long time by the Obama administration. They helped prevent Russian troops from taking the capital at the beginning of 2022. Trump later emphasised these transactions as proof that he was tougher on Vladimir Putin than the Democrats.

- The first weapons that Ukraine received from the United States came from a president who hates Ukraine - said Dmytro Kuleba, who served as Ukraine's foreign minister until September. He added that despite Trump's unpredictability, his presidency could bring positive changes for Ukraine.

To gain Trump's support this time, Kiev will need to create "situations when supporting Ukraine will be a projection of Trump’s strengths" — said Kuleba. — If his goal is to project strength and to say eventually that ‘I’m better than Biden, that Biden failed and I ended [the war],’ then selling out Ukraine is not the way forward — he added.

Ukrainians perceived the Biden administration's restrained approach to aid as damaging to the U.S.'s credibility as a global security guarantor. In recent weeks, Ukrainians have begun promoting a new era of U.S. policy towards Ukraine, based on the principle of "peace through strength." They hope this message will resonate with Trump more than with Biden.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an advisor to the Office of the President of Ukraine, said that Kiev will have to explain to Trump the political pragmatism of supporting Ukraine. — We need to provide representatives of the Trump administration, and Mr. Trump himself, with the most comprehensive information about the logic of the process — he said.

— You spend a small amount of money today to support Ukraine — on weapons, finances and so on — investing and producing. You completely nullify Russia’s military potential, and after that, you dominate. I can barely imagine Trump playing along with someone like Putin — he added.

As noted by the American newspaper, since Trump approved the sending of Javelins to Ukraine, "a lot has changed".

"The president-elect is surrounded by an almost entirely new entourage — including Vice President-elect JD Vance, who as a senator voted against U.S. aid to Ukraine, and billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, who has supported Ukraine with Starlink internet access but also mocked Zelensky and cast doubt on the U.S. role in the war," the paper lists.

Will Trump lay hands on Ukraine's resources?

The full-scale war has been ongoing in Ukraine for nearly three years. Kiev demands NATO membership — the military alliance Trump threatened to leave — and Putin, responding to Biden's decisions to ease some military restrictions on Ukraine, has intensified threats to escalate the war.

Much depends on Zelensky's ability to convince Trump about further steps.

Control of lithium is the control of the future economy — said Volodymyr Vasiuk, a Ukrainian industry expert advising the Ukrainian parliament on economic matters. He added it's better for the West if these materials remain in the hands of a "fairly friendly country like Ukraine."

Vasiuk suggested that Ukraine should leverage Trump's business-based foreign policy approach and make deals with American companies to exploit its resources, especially lithium. The largest such deposit is located in the central part of the country, far from current front lines.

In total, the country has enough lithium to produce 15 million car batteries, although one deposit is already under Russian occupation and another is close to the front lines — Vasiuk noted.

"The Ukrainian gas market is the most lucrative in the world," said Oleksii Chernyshov, president of the state-owned NaftoGaz, who will travel to the United States in the coming weeks to meet with American companies. "I’m confident U.S. companies have a great future in Ukraine now — not tomorrow," he added.

According to him, the Trump administration consists of people with "more business expertise."

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