Daily Press

Zelenskyy leans into unlikely role

Once a comic actor, president provides hope for Ukrainians

- By Lynn Berry

WASHINGTON — A year ago, with Russian forces bearing down on Ukraine’s capital, Western leaders feared for the life of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and advised him to flee. The U.S. offered him an escape route.

Instead, he filmed a defiant video of himself on a darkened street outside the presidenti­al offices with his four closest aides arrayed behind him.

“We are all here,” Zelenskyy said in a declaratio­n of their determinat­ion to stay in Kyiv and defend Ukraine’s independen­ce.

It was powerful political theater.

From the first days of the war, when few expected Ukraine’s army to hold up against a Russian onslaught, Zelenskyy has inspired Ukrainians to fight. He has given them hope.

Night after night, he has addressed the nation in a video posted on social media. His actor-trained voice can be soothing or forceful, rising in moral outrage as he condemns the most recent Russian atrocities and insists that those responsibl­e will be punished.

He speaks of the anger and pain from the devastatio­n of the country and the untold deaths. He vows that Ukraine will one day be made whole. He never tires of thanking all those on the front lines. Through all the horrors of the war, Zelenskyy has instilled a belief that Ukraine can prevail.

Zelenskyy was 41 when he was elected president in 2019, largely on the promise that he would be the kind of corruption-fighting president he had played so well in a popular television show.

In those first years, he struggled to convince Ukrainians he was up to the job and his approval ratings slumped.

War can take leaders and make them heroes or fools.

Moscow’s struggles in Ukraine have done nothing to elevate Russian President Vladimir Putin in the eyes of the world. But it was as a wartime leader that Zelenskyy found his moment. Many now compare him to Winston Churchill, the British prime minister who famously led his country in World War II as it came under attack from Nazi Germany.

“He’s been extraordin­arily good at channeling a kind of larger national spirit,” Fiona Hill, a Russia scholar at the Brookings Institutio­n who served in the past three U.S. administra­tions, said.

She credits, in part, Zelenskyy’s

training as an actor. “Sometimes, it’s literally when we say this is the role of a lifetime, there is that performati­ve element of it.”

Hill notes that Churchill “wasn’t this great a leader in peacetime as he was in the war, and he himself was a performer, and he enjoyed amateur theatrical­s and also knew that he was playing a role.”

As a wartime leader, Zelenskyy almost immediatel­y began to dress the part, shedding his trim suits for an entire wardrobe of army green. His boyish face grew a dark beard. He seemed to age overnight.

Before the invasion, he looked much like the affable young history teacher from his TV show, “Servant of the People,” about a man who was improbably elected president after a student

surreptiti­ously filmed his profanity-filled rant against government corruption. The comedy show, which ran from 2015 until the real election in spring 2019, was hugely popular.

Michael Kimmage, who worked on Russia and Ukraine policy at the U.S. State Department during the Obama administra­tion, traces some of Zelenskyy’s success in uniting the country back to the 2019 election, which he won with 70% of the vote and without the kind of East-West division seen in previous elections.

But Kimmage says Zelenskyy’s “quasi-Churchilli­an characteri­stics” came as a surprise.

“He’s a former entertaine­r and comedian, so you don’t sort of naturally put him into that military role. But it just fit,” he said. “I don’t

know where that came from. It’s obviously enormously consequent­ial for the war itself, but not a quality that I saw in Zelenskyy before the war.”

While uniting his own country, Zelenskyy also has been highly effective in getting the world to stand with the Ukrainians and provide the steady flow of money and military supplies that have kept them in the fight. After dozens of speeches by video link, Zelenskyy traveled out of the country in December for the first time since the war began to meet President Joe Biden at the White House and address Congress.

He followed with visits this month to London, Paris and Brussels.

At the Munich Security Conference last week, Zelenskyy was relentless in imploring allies to keep standing firm with Ukraine and not to waste a minute doing so. Russia is the Goliath, he said; Ukraine is David with the sling.

Despite Zelenskyy’s obvious star power, his adviser Mykhailo Podolyak, one of the four men standing behind him in the video at the start of the war, qualifies his praise.

“You put me in a bit of an awkward positions, because on the one hand, of course, I see a president who is in his place at this time,” Podolyak said. “It’s very cool. He has an iron core, an iron will, a fantastic willingnes­s to take responsibi­lity, courage and so on.”

But, Podolyak said, the war has shown that Ukraine has many people with the same iron will: “That is, this country cannot be broken.”

 ?? UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS OFFICE 2022 ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has come through by offering hope and inspiratio­n to his compatriot­s.
UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS OFFICE 2022 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has come through by offering hope and inspiratio­n to his compatriot­s.

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