
President Trump came into office vowing to negotiate peace in Ukraine immediately. Over a year into Trump’s second term, the war goes on pretty much as it was when he entered office. That’s not for lack of trying on Trump’s part. Trump has pushed for peace through negotiations and has met with both Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin to talk peace face-to-face. At the Ron Paul Institute, Executive Director Daniel McAdams suggests that Secretary of State Marco Rubio sank Trump’s plans for peace. McAdams writes of the Ukraine negotiations:
Neocons are wreckers. That’s the one thing they are good at.
The inclusion of new blood in the person of Vice President Vance ally, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll – who supplanted terminally clueless Trump envoy Keith Kellogg – offered the promise that finally the realist faction in the shadows of the Trump Administration would have their shot.
Then the rug was pulled. Again.
Rubio jetted off to Geneva to help lick the wounds of the European “leaders” who are dedicated to fighting the Russians down to the last Ukrainian.
Politico lets us in on what happened next, in a piece titled, “Rubio changes the tack of Trump’s Ukraine negotiations after week of chaos.”
Before Rubio showed up in Switzerland, it largely felt like Vice President JD Vance, via his close friend Driscoll, was leading the process. By the end of the weekend, Rubio had taken the reins because the conversations became more flexible, the official said.
“Flexibility” means that we are back to square one, with a reversion to the Kellogg/Euro view that the side winning a war should unilaterally freeze military operations in favor of the losing side.
Politico continued:
Rubio’s participation in the talks produced much more American flexibility, the four people familiar with the discussions said. Rubio told reporters on Sunday night that the aim is simply to finalize discussions ‘as soon as possible,’ rather than by Thanksgiving.
That loss of momentum and destruction of the sense of urgency means we have returned to the endless bickering of the eternally deluded voices who even in the face of rapid recent Russian advances believe that Ukraine is winning – or could win with a few hundred billion more dollars – the war against Russia.
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