Trump and his running mate JD Vance have openly railed against continuing American military and financial aid for Ukraine and have vowed to push a negotiated end to the war.
Trump and his running mate, vice-president-elect JD Vance, have openly railed against continuing American military and financial aid for Ukraine and have vowed to push a negotiated end to the war — one that could include giving up Ukrainian territory seized by Russia in its nearly three-year-long assault on the country.
“There is a lot of uncertainty that is going to cloud a lot of what happens,” said Oleksa Drachewych, a professor at Western University who specializes in Ukrainian and Russian history and politics.The uncertainty comes as Ukraine faces yet another winter of punishing Russian missile barrages on critical infrastructure, as well as. The war has been in an effective stalemate for over a year, and both sides have continued to mount casualties.
“Best-case scenario, there will be a resistance that’s happening there,” Drachewych said. “Ukraine is going to still always want to have that territory, and we’re just going to be essentially kicking the ball down the street a little bit farther.in September that Vance was “too radical” and that Trump “doesn’t really know how to stop the war, even if he might think he knows how.”
As Speaker, Johnson managed to work with Democrats to pass additional aid over objections from those Republican hardliners. The final supplemental aid billDrachewych said Zelenskyy and his government may have to offer more concessions to Trump, like additional loans, in order to keep some aid flowing.In the meantime, Canada will have to continue to lead on issues like humanitarian aid and reuniting separated Ukrainian families, he added.
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