AS the dust settles on that extraordinary White House gathering, what’s left beyond some of the most astonishing pictures of world leaders in living memory?
For Donald Trump’s blowhard critics, even trying to seek an end to the bloody war is a new low, but that does not do the significance of Monday’s meeting justice.

Trump did not bend the knee to Moscow’s Mad Vlad[/caption]

The President pledged to continue to underwrite the safety of Zelensky’s Ukraine with American might[/caption]

The dust is settling on an extraordinary White House gathering[/caption]

Trump stated publicly negotiations must mirror current front lines[/caption]
The President pledged to continue to underwrite the safety of Ukraine with American might, in a huge U-turn on his campaign vows to withdraw from the world stage.
Large swathes of his MAGA base are going to hate that, but as British Ambassador Peter Mandelson said last night, Trump is a “President with an appetite for risk that is enviable”.
On territory — Ukraine is going to lose parts of the Donbas. Let’s not sugarcoat it.
For all the talk about “not redrawing borders by force”, that’s exactly what is going to happen.
Russia keeps 70 per cent of a region it’s already flattened.
But — and this is critical — Trump did not bend the knee to Moscow’s Mad Vlad’s demand for the entire Donbas.
He stated publicly negotiations must mirror current front lines. That matters.
This isn’t over. Not by a long shot.
But here’s the bottom line: if this ends with US planes patrolling the skies over Europe and Russia is forced to scale back its ambitions, that is not a win for Putin.
And for Ukraine — beaten, bloodied, but still standing — it could be a far better deal than the disaster many feared.