Times-Call (Longmont)

Chicago Tribune on Zelenskyy:

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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.

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 Canadian parliament, he referred to the prime minister as “Justin,” and asked his listeners to imagine their feelings if Toronto or Vancouver were attacked.

When he spoke to the joint session of the Congress on Wednesday, 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 Thursday, he centered his remarks around Ronald Reagan’s famous demand of Mikhail Gorbachev that he remove the Berlin Wall.

“I turn to you, dear Chancellor Scholz,” Zelenskyy said, referencin­g German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and suggesting that the phrase “never again,” typically a reference to the Holocaust, was being subsumed by current hypocrisy and inaction. In so doing, he also made headlines in Israel.

“Tear down this wall,” Zelenskyy said Thursday. “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: 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 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.”

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. ...

It’s worth rememberin­g that in the early years of what was then the growing European Economic Community, an argument for membership was that a powerful middle ground must emerge to counterbal­ance the supranatio­nal but opposition­al power of the Soviets and the United States. In the 1970s, a unified, multinatio­nal third body was seen in Europe as a potential safety valve that might keep the world better protected from nuclear war.

Generally speaking, the reaction to “U-24” from those in the foreign policy establishm­ent to whom we spoke Thursday was that the idea was idealistic, for sure, but also impractica­l and expensive. Certainly, no one is about to start forming some complicate­d new internatio­nal alliance while Russian missiles are killing Ukrainian citizens on a daily basis. It’s not a solution to the immediate crisis, as Zelenskyy surely is well aware.

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 Ukranians 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.

Maybe the Zelenskyy subtext goes even deeper than that. For example, the BBC’S John Simpson, choosing to be optimistic about the emergence of a back-door way for Putin to save face at home and declare victory even as he loses, argued that Zelenskyy was, in fact, asking NATO for something (a no-fly zone) that he well knew it could not and arguably should not deliver. That would allow Zelenskyy to save face at home by declaring the alliance not worth joining anyway (hence U-24) and subtly telling Putin that he will get something that will in turn let him save face, too. All with an aim of stopping the ongoing murder of the Ukranian people and allowing Ukraine to remain an independen­t nation, albeit one willing to offer the concession­s that are required in all successful negotiatio­ns. ...

Still, 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.

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