It looks like Putin has Trump where he wants him. Elena Gold was wrong. Z and the EU will have to ramp up their military readiness and keep Russia at bay as long as possible.
  Trump rejects Zelensky on Tomahawk missiles in "tough" meeting Barak Ravid 15 hours ago axios.com   President  Trump told Ukrainian President  Volodymyr Zelensky in a tense meeting on Friday that he doesn't intend to provide long-range  Tomahawk missiles, at least for now, two sources briefed on the meeting tell Axios.
  Why it matters: Zelensky  hoped to leave Washington with commitments around new weapons for  Ukraine, but found Trump in a totally different state of mind a day  after he held a lengthy call  with Russian president Vladimir Putin. Trump made clear his priority now is diplomacy, and he thinks providing Tomahawks could undermine it, the sources say.
  Behind the scenes: One of the sources said the meeting "was not easy," while the other simply said "it was bad."
 
 - "Nobody shouted, but Trump was tough," according to the first source. 
 - "Trump gave several strong statements during the meeting and at some points it got a bit emotional," the second source said.
 - The  meeting ended abruptly after 2.5 hours. "I think we're done. Let's see  what happens next week," Trump said, referring to planned talks between  the U.S. and Russia. Trump intends to meet Putin in Budapest some time  in the next two weeks.
  Zoom in: During the meeting, Trump briefed Zelensky on Thursday's call with Putin.
 
 - He  stressed that the current U.S. proposal for a diplomatic solution is  for the war to end with the front lines frozen in place — a difficult  proposition for Ukraine to accept.
 - Trump hinted at that stance in a Truth Social  post  following the meeting. After describing the meeting as "interesting"  and "cordial," he said he'd told both Zelensky and Putin that it was  time to "stop where they are," adding: "Let both claim Victory, let  History decide!"
 - Trump then departed for Mar-a-Lago without  taking questions from the press. The White House did not immediately  respond to a request for comment.
  Split screen:  Zelensky, meanwhile, held a conference call with European leaders  immediately after the Trump meeting. Several of them seemed puzzled  about Trump's apparent change of heart, a source who was on the call  said.
 
 - Soon after, the leaders started putting out coordinated  statements of support for Ukraine — a clear indication that the meeting  with Trump was not a success.
 
 
 
 - In  a briefing with reporters, Zelensky confirmed they had discussed  Tomahawks but said he and Trump had decided not to discuss the matter  publicly because the U.S. wants to avoid escalation.
 - When asked if he's optimistic about the Tomahawks, Zelensky said: "I'm realistic."
  In reality, the sources said, Zelensky pushed hard on Tomahawks but Trump pushed back and showed no flexibility.
  What's next: During  Zelensky's call with the European leaders, U.K. Prime Minister Keir  Starmer proposed working with the U.S. to draft peace for Ukraine along  the lines of Trump's 20-point plan for Gaza, the source on the call  said.
 
 - NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte proposed an urgent  follow-up call between European national security advisers over the  weekend.
  The bottom line: Zelensky's number  one priority from the visit was to get commitments from Trump not just  on Tomahawks but on a variety of weapons systems Ukraine wishes to  obtain, his  chief of staff told Axios ahead of the meeting. 
 
 - Trump offered no such commitments. 
 
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