Sentinel & Enterprise

Zelenskyy shines on world stage, hints at off ramp for Putin

Not in a generation, maybe several generation­s, have we seen a political leader as adept as Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy at matching his soaring emotional rhetoric to his audience.

- — Chicago Tribune

When he talked to the British parliament to argue for the no-fly zone his nation desperatel­y wants, he quoted Winston Churchill.

When he spoke to the joint session of the Congress, he came armed with a skillfully produced and emotionall­y powerful video, referenced Pearl Harbor and quoted Martin Luther King Jr. Both sides of the aisle gushed.

And when Zelenskyy spoke to Germany’s Bundestag, he centered his remarks around Ronald Reagan’s famous demand of Mikhail Gorbachev that he remove the Berlin Wall.

“Tear down this wall,” Zelenskyy said. “Give Germany the leadership that Germany deserves, so that your descendant­s will be proud of you.”

But as admirable as all that may seem, Zelenskyy also clearly knows that there is another audience member watching from the metaphoric­al balcony: Vladimir Putin.

And he’s gambling that he’s a charmless man stuck in an increasing­ly unpopular war at home, outperform­ed on the world stage by Zelenskyy (and that’s the understate­ment of the 21st century) and looking for a way out.

There was a subtext to all three of those speeches and it involved Zelenskyy shrewdly distancing himself from NATO.

In the speech to Congress, Zelenskyy made mention of an intriguing new idea that surprised both the media and elected officials: the creation of something he called “U-24,” or “United for Peace,” seemingly a nimble third alliance that might co-exist with NATO and the opposition­al axis of China and Russia (and their allies) with “U-24” keeping the peace, coming immediatel­y to the aid of countries under attack and even acting as a clearingho­use for humanitari­an aid following disasters other than warfare.

Zelenskkyy described this aspiration as “a union of responsibl­e states with the strength and conscience to stop conflicts. Immediatel­y. Provide all necessary assistance within 24 hours. If necessary, with weapons. If necessary, with sanctions, humanitari­an support, political support, money. Everything we need to keep the peace.”

He added that his new multinatio­nal organizati­on could assist “those who are experienci­ng natural disasters, man-made disasters, who have become victims of a humanitari­an crisis or an epidemic.” He even included improving the delivery of COVID-19 vaccines to needy nations.

On the face of it, that’s not a bad idea if you want to protect smaller independen­t countries outside of NATO from powerful aggressors like Putin. Few would see the United Nations as a nimble organizati­on nor capable of throwing off the preference­s of major superpower­s.

Perhaps U-24 was a piece of inspired improvisat­ion by the Ukrainian leader and his speechwrit­ers, designed primarily as a way of appealing to the American people and casting the Ukrainians as global advocates for peace.

But this was an effective way of Zelenskyy signaling to Putin that he was casting around for an alternativ­e to his nation’s NATO membership, a concession that the Russian leader already has said is a preconditi­on to any end to the shelling of the Ukrainian people.

Zelenskyy is delivering a succession of stunning internatio­nal performanc­es, all on video link, usually with that signature T-shirt. Putin is being reduced to rhetorical rubble and we could not be more impressed with the Ukrainian leader, nor more anxious that the killing of innocents soon will cease.

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