Of all of President Trump’s social media posts, it is the one he fired off on Tuesday that future historians may pick as marking the biggest turning point of the Ukraine war. As Trump tweets go – and his inimitable impromptu “communiqués” have long become an established genre of themselves – this one was an instant classic for its U-turn shock factor, the plurality of serious underlying messages it packed, its revealing effect on his critics, and the balance of its contradictions.
The Ukrainians, the president said to the surprise of the entire world, can “WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form” and indeed “maybe even go further than that”. Russia, in his newfound analysis, looks like “a paper tiger” that “has been fighting aimlessly” since 2022 and whose economy is in “BIG” trouble. Now, Trump suggested, “is the time for Ukraine to act”, while promising that he will continue to “supply weapons to NATO for NATO to do what they want with them” – before wishing “both Countries well” and “Good luck to all”.
To say that this is – for the moment – a complete transformation in presidential rhetoric on the Ukrainian war would almost be an understatement in these circumstances. Such declarations don’t just go against Trump’s long-held, oft-repeated and well-established view on the conflict, with a weak Ukraine seen as losing “badly” and a powerful Russia on an implacable course to victory. But they would have been utterly inconceivable just a few weeks ago when the mainstream foreign policy community was left aghast at Trump’s apparent validation of Russian power at the Alaska Summit, and his dim view of the Ukrainian cause.
So what is going on? There are three possibilities. The first is that Donald Trump has experienced a genuine Damascene conversion. Secondly, this might just be another impulsive, ill-informed, “nonsensical” outburst by the President, soon to be written off by some further development and twist in his perspective on the subject. Thirdly, and more likely, Tuesday’s tweet is in fact a more calculated political move signalling a change in policy but wrapped in wording designed to cushion the impact and control the narrative in his favour.