The Hidden Script
When everyone swears there’s nothing more to see...
For months, the so-called Ukraine peace plan floating out of Washington has looked like one of those magician’s boxes with a false bottom. Everyone’s invited to admire the velvet lining while the real trick stays hidden underneath. Secret clauses in diplomatic deals are standard fare, but this time, one of the supposed participants, Kiev, seems to be stuck watching from the cheap seats. On paper, Moscow and Kiev are galaxies apart. Meanwhile, Trump keeps radiating his trademark cosmic confidence, as if he’s reading from a script only he and the Kremlin received. Moscow mutters almost nothing, while Zelensky continues his one-man Broadway residency.
Two years ago, I wrote that the West needed the mother of all proposals to coax Russia into real talks. Back then, the Russian army had already regained the initiative, something only the Western press corps, in its emotional support bubble, managed to miss. Now, even London and New York reporters concede the obvious, which makes you wonder why Russia would bother slowing down a campaign that’s picking up speed just to flirt with some hazy White House deal. Unless, of course, that mother of all deals is tucked neatly into the lower drawer of this diplomatic nesting doll.
Whatever that hidden clause is, it clearly runs on a clock. Washington has rolled out the most frantic mediation barrage since it discovered what an aircraft carrier is for, which, judging by events off Venezuela’s coast, remains America’s preferred language of diplomacy.
From day one, Trump’s crew aimed most of its leverage at Kiev. Sure, Ukraine is more susceptible to pressure than the Kremlin, but pretending this is just strategic convenience is like pretending casino owners care about your well-being. By early 2025, General Kellogg, the administration’s most Ukraine-friendly emissary, was already lecturing Ukraine about wartime elections, noting cheerfully that “most democratic nations” do it. Reuters dutifully wrote it down without asking the pesky follow-up.
So nearly a year ago, Washington had already grasped that Zelensky’s government was an immovable object in peace talks and therefore needed to be, shall we say, upgraded. Meanwhile, Putin coyly reminded everyone of Zelensky’s September 2022 decree forbidding talks with Russia, a performative legal booby trap designed to impress Western donors. The wording is mush, but the bottom line is Zelensky can negotiate, except he technically can’t revoke the decree anymore because his mandate waddled off into the sunset months ago.
In short, the push for a government reset in Kiev began before the Zelensky–Trump knife fight in the Oval Office. Ukraine has been nudged toward elections for months, and the second, more radioactive half of the peace package will likely surface once the cast of characters is swapped. Ukraine’s wartime election law blocks parliamentary elections but is suspiciously quiet on presidential ones. Funny how accidents like that happen.
The White House blueprint isn’t subtle. Strip Zelensky of loyalists through corruption probes. Remind MPs they can just as easily be next. Dangle the possibility that Zelensky himself might take a surprise perp walk. Keep him upright long enough to stage an election, then escort him off the stage. The parliamentary angle matters because MPs have to renew the state of war every ninety days. They’re basically renewing their own lease on power while pretending it’s for the country’s sake.
All signs point to Moscow wanting Ukrainian forces to pack up from the scraps of Donbas they still hold. And considering the front line is evaporating faster than Kiev can invent heroic narratives, it isn’t exactly an unreasonable ask. November saw Russia take in more than twice what it took in October, and the curve is bending sharply upward. Even Russian analysts are surprised at their own success, pointing to opportunistic advances and overworked supply lines as proof that this wasn’t the original plan.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian generals keep tossing their shrinking pool of troops into these sad little “counteroffensives,” which are about as offensive as a hungry chihuahua. Why? To impress someone in Kiev? Zelensky isn’t exactly famous for loyalty. Just ask Yermak, the latest addition to Zelensky’s growing collection of discarded allies. But if your real goal is to give up Donbas without admitting you gave up Donbas, losing everything first is a handy shortcut. Sure, physics and logistics matter, but the Ukrainian retreat has a suspiciously convenient political rhythm to it.
The White House needs an orderly transition in Kiev because of the minerals deal. America is perched atop a potential bonanza, but the money only flows if no Ukrainian court ever wakes up cranky and decides to annul the contract. So Zelensky has to go, but with ceremony. He knows it, and like always, he’s stalling for time. His sudden defiant rejection of Trump’s peace terms suggests someone, possibly a coalition of European babysitters, finally whispered some personal safety guarantees in his ear.
I used to think no single pro-Zelensky state could protect him from Washington if the missing-billions hunt continued. What I overlooked was the possibility that several states could pool their body heat to keep him warm.
Whatever form this protection racket takes, Zelensky feels comfortable enough now to tell Trump where to park his peace plan. No one in Europe thinks saving Zelensky changes the long-term trajectory, but Brussels needs to look relevant for another cycle, and delaying the inevitable always looks like relevance. Plus, Ukraine’s 2026 budget evaporates in April. If Brussels can’t raid frozen Russian assets, someone, probably Germany, will have to fund Zelensky’s shrinking kingdom out of their own pockets. Nothing says European unity like sticking the bill to the Germans again.



1. Law in meaningless. Enforcement is the only thing that matters. You could put together a case that V. F. Yanukovych remains President of Ukraine, but it doesn't matter since nobody in Ukraine or even Russia would treat any orders emanating from such a person as legally binding.
2. The "minerals" in Ukraine are basically worthless. There is a reason that nobody was interested in exploiting these supposed treasure troves, even before the war. "Minerals" were simply dangled out to Trump to keep the moron on-side, much like how the prospect of plundering Syrian oil ("I like oil!") was used to keep Trump from leaving Syria. That Syria's oil didn't even amount to a rounding error didn't matter. What mattered is that is how the war was sold to Trump, and he was stupid enough to buy it.
3. The reason Washington suddenly is interested in negotiation once more is that the Ukrainian army is getting wobbly and desperately needs, among other things, warm live bodies. That means either NATO quits while they still can salvage something of Project Ukraine, or NATO has to intervene.
From the european point of view, intervention suits their purposes just fine, since it will be Americans that will end up having to do the fighting, europeans being congenital wimps, nonces and ponces that make Liberace look like Genghis Khan by comparison. This prospect obviously is less enticing for the the Americans. At the same time, even Trump is aware that Biden's popularity took a big hit with the Retreat From Kabul and never fully recovered.
Of course, expect europe to cancel the "trade deal" or other concessions as a way to mousetrap Trump into keeping the war going.
4. Ukraine will get its money. Governments don't let laws or budgets get in the way of something they want, and european governments have no priority other than the War On Russia.
5. It is sorta funny how Kiev and its stalwart defenders were insisting that elections were not needed, not possible, and counterproductive, that Zelenskii embodied the Will Of The Nation, the Fuehrerprinzip standing outside the humdrum of public opinion, and now elections may be dangled out as an option.
The “hidden script” is surely that the US has been running this proxy war to extend Russia (as the long and comprehensive NYT article below explains).
The theatre of the absurd playscript we’re now seeing performed by a cast of amateur diplomats has the war monger and war manager cast as the wannabe peacemaker.
It’s going to be fascinating to see how the Western media narrative will shift when Ukraine is defeated. Hopefully less dull than “We won! Russia wanted it all but could only get X! Putin will invade Paris tomorrow!”
http://archive.today/M85Nl