The Republican candidate added that if he wins the election, “the first thing I’m gonna do is call up Zelenskyy and call up President Putin and I’m gonna say, ‘You gotta make a deal, this is crazy.’”
Trump has repeatedly vowed to negotiate an end to the conflict, though he has declined to give further details and wouldn’t say whether he wanted Ukraine to defeat Russia when pressed at the presidential debate with Harris earlier this month. He has also threatened to cut U.S. aid to Ukraine.
While he avoided mentioning Trump by name, Zelenskyy said last Friday during an interview that if Western partners really want Ukraine to win the war they have to do everything they can to help Kyiv win “today, while all the officials who want the victory of Ukraine are in official positions.”
During the debate, Harris tore into Trump over his stance on the war, saying Russian President Vladimir Putin “would be sitting in Kyiv right now” with Poland in his sights if Trump were in the Oval Office.
Zelenskyy is slated to meet with Trump in the coming days after first speaking with U.S. President Joe Biden and Harris, and attending the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
Zelenskyy’s trip to Pennsylvania is a boon for Harris, who has sought to use U.S. support for Ukraine to appeal to the state’s 750,000-strong Polish-American community. Biden beat Trump in Pennsylvania in 2020 by about 80,000 votes.
Zelenskyy’s office refused to confirm the swing state was chosen for any purpose other than “to pay a visit of gratitude” to the Scranton munitions factory, which manufactures shells used by Ukraine’s military.
“This is a key plant, they increased the 155 mm [shells] production specifically for us. And that would be logical to thank them,” a Ukrainian official close to the president told POLITICO on condition of anonymity, adding that Zelenskyy planned to visit a different state every time he goes to the U.S.