Stephens: Oval Office debacle not what Ukraine nor U.S. needed

A dressing-down of Ukraine’s president by Trump and Vance put a peace deal further out of reach.

By Bret Stephens / The New York Times

After 100 days of President Donald Trump back in office, the United States has been permanently changed. These are the moments reshaping the country, according to one of 15 Times Opinion columnists.

Even now, two months and countless fiascos and embarrassments later, I struggle to wrap my head around the enormity that was President Donald Trump’s Oval Office meeting at the end of February with Volodymyr Zelensky.

The Ukrainian president arrived in the White House that day in a way no battle-scarred ally ever has before or ever should again: as the object of Trump’s slander, called a “dictator” by the leader of the free world. Worse, Zelensky was expected to sign over billions of dollars of Ukraine’s mineral resources. All this in exchange for no firm administration commitments for continued military aid.

You remember the rest: After politely sitting through 40 minutes of the news conference, Zelensky quibbled with J.D. Vance when the vice president — a guy who had previously said, “I don’t really care what happens to Ukraine” — ambushed him with a disingenuous suggestion to try diplomacy. Ukraine had been trying diplomacy with Russia for decades, going so far as to give up its nuclear deterrent in exchange for international security guarantees, only to be invaded twice.

The meeting descended from there, with Vance falsely accusing Zelensky of campaigning for Kamala Harris and not thanking Trump. Trump weighed in to tell Zelensky he didn’t “have the cards” and to keep quiet. Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s indefatigable ambassador to the United States, was left holding her head in her hands.

She wasn’t the only one: Millions of Americans of goodwill also cringed. Never in our history has a president so publicly humiliated a foreign leader in any setting, much less the Oval Office. And Zelensky isn’t just any foreign leader; Ukraine is a U.S. ally, defending itself against a Russian war of aggression. Inasmuch as Trump represents America, he turned us into a nation of boors.

But the personal incivility paled next to the diplomatic idiocy. The U.S. still doesn’t have the minerals deal that Trump so dearly wanted (although a memorandum of intent was recently signed). Russia, which rejoiced at the meeting, ignored Trump’s call for a ceasefire, putting his promise to end the war on the first day of his administration even further out of reach. European states rallied around Zelensky, reducing, not increasing, U.S. leverage in the conflict.

In “Animal House,” Dean Wormer tells Flounder that “fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life.” Someone ought to tell Trump, Vance and other administration lemmings that nasty, dishonest and stupid is no way to conduct foreign policy.

Since then, Russia has continued to press its barbaric attack while Ukraine fights on. All the meeting accomplished was to give America’s friends and foes a clearer sense of the dangerously self-infatuated fool in the White House.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times, c.2025.

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