At White House Summit, a master class of diplomacy
US President Donald Trump, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders pose for a family photo at the White House.
WASHINGTON – Over the past seven months, the leaders of the Western world have been enrolled in an intensive course of Trumpology.
One by one, presidents and prime ministers of European countries have travelled to Washington, learning all sorts of lessons about how best to handle the tricky man who sits behind the big desk in the gold-wrapped room shaped like an oval.
On Aug 19, the whole class showed up at the White House.
The time had come to put their education to use. And it was the Ukrainian leader, Mr Volodymyr Zelensky, who seemed to have learned the most
since his last visit , when he was mocked for not wearing a suit, deemed insufficiently deferential and ultimately kicked out.
This time, he showed up to his Oval Office meeting with a more formal look, a game sense of humour and a letter for the First Lady.
'I cannot believe it,' Mr Trump said as he looked Mr Zelensky up and down, taking measure of his new black-on-black get-up. 'I love it. Look at you.'
In the Oval Office, Mr Zelensky again encountered Mr Brian Glenn, the right-wing reporter-instigator who criticised Mr Zelensky for his clothing the last time he was in the Oval.
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Mr Glenn told Mr Zelensky that he 'looked fabulous' now. Mr Zelensky played along: 'You are in the same suit. You see, I changed, you have not.' Everybody laughed.
The Ukrainian president produced a letter from his wife addressed to First Lady Melania Trump. Mr Trump seemed thrilled by this.
'It's not to you, it's to your wife,' Mr Zelensky said as Mr Trump took the letter in hand. This caused Mr Trump to laugh and smile wide. 'I want it!' he said.
Later in the afternoon, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky joined the leaders of Britain, Germany, Italy, France and Finland in the state dining room.
The Nato secretary-general, Mr Mark Rutte, and the president of the European Commission, Dr Ursula Von der Leyen, were there as well. Both had, at various times earlier in 2025, found their own methods for dealing with Mr Trump. Now, they sat together and tried to work him as one.
Around the table they went, thanking him for all that he had done while ever so gently slipping in their specific pleas for a lasting security guarantee in Ukraine and an immediate ceasefire.
Managing Trump
This delicate dance seemed momentarily at risk when German Chancellor Friedrich Merz insisted a bit more forcefully than the others that a ceasefire was of paramount importance.
Mr Trump had gone to Alaska days earlier with the stated aim of achieving a ceasefire, but after he failed to get one,
he changed his tune. His public position now is that a ceasefire is not necessary to continue with negotiations.
When Mr Merz insisted that the opposite was the case, the smile left Mr Trump's face.
Nails on a chalkboard. Someone had upset the president. He got defensive for a moment, but then the meeting started to hum along at a pleasant pitch once more.
European leaders in the dining room were there to manage a global crisis. Which meant they also had to manage the mood of one famously mercurial man. The subject of this high-level diplomatic summit was diplomacy mixed with psychology.
Adding to the surreal nature of the thing was the way Russian President Vladimir Putin hovered over it all, just out of sight, like a character offstage. Mr Trump kept bringing up Mr Putin's perspective.
'Vladimir Putin wants it to end,' he claimed. He repeatedly mentioned that he needed to call Mr Putin to update him on how the meetings were shaping up.
The Europeans looked stoic at every mention of Mr Putin, as if they hardly needed to be reminded of the Russian leader's viewpoint.
Who has better mastered the technique of appealing to Mr Trump's sensibilities, Mr Putin or the Europeans?
After the Russian leader got his face time with Mr Trump at their summit in Anchorage on Aug 15, the American president came away having adopted much of Mr Putin's approach on Ukraine.
But by the end of the day, it did seem as if the Europeans had learned a thing or two.
'I had a very good meeting with distinguished guests,' Mr Trump wrote on social media after it was all over. NYTIMES

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