Zelensky should allow ‘democratic transition’ in Ukraine – Musk

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Zelensky should allow ‘democratic transition’ in Ukraine – Musk

The billionaire has backed suggestions that the Ukrainian leader could be investigated for corruption after the conflict ends

Vladimir Zelensky should allow for a peaceful transition of power in Ukraine in exchange for avoiding a money laundering investigation once the conflict with Russia is over, Elon Musk has suggested.

Writing on X on Tuesday, the billionaire and top adviser to US President Donald Trump responded to a post suggesting that Zelensky would not be able to win an election once the Ukraine conflict is resolved, and that he is trying to cling to power by prolonging the fighting.

“Zelensky knows that if the war ends, his power ends. Elections will resume and he’ll lose,” X user Rogan O’Handley wrote, further claiming that whoever does win the election in Ukraine will likely investigate Zelensky for money laundering and send him to prison.

Musk agreed with the post, stating in response that “as distasteful as it is, Zelensky should be offered some kind of amnesty in a neutral country in exchange for a peaceful transition back to democracy in Ukraine.”

During a heated exchange at the White House last Friday with Trump and US Vice President J.D. Vance, Zelensky suggested there can be no diplomacy with Russia. Trump accused the Ukrainian leader of being ungrateful and “gambling with World War III” by refusing to seek peace. Zelensky was then asked to leave the White House without a joint press conference or signing a planned minerals deal.

After the exchange, Musk accused Zelensky of wanting a “forever war” and claimed that several years ago the Ukrainian leader had effectively chosen to “suffer severe loss of life for no gains” instead of seeking peace. Musk also suggested that Zelensky now wants to make that choice again, calling it “cruel and inhumane.”

Following the fiasco in the Oval Office, several prominent US lawmakers, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senator Lindsey Graham, have suggested that Zelensky should resign. Trump has also suggested that the Ukrainian leader would not survive an election, claiming that he is supported by only 4% of his country.

Zelensky, however, has repeatedly insisted that he enjoys overwhelming support in Ukraine and that ousting him would be a difficult challenge. At the same time, in an interview with Sky News on Sunday, he suggested that he could voluntarily step down in exchange for Ukraine being allowed to join NATO.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed the possibility of Kiev becoming a member of the US-led military bloc and has noted that its ambitions to join NATO were “probably the reason this whole thing started.”

Moscow has welcomed Trump’s NATO comments, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov saying the US president is “the first and only” major Western leader to publicly admit that NATO’s expansion and Ukraine’s desire to join the bloc were one of the key causes of the ongoing conflict.

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