Zelensky did not come to Washington alone. He arrived wrapped in a web of alliances that Trump could not easily ignore. The real game was set in motion days earlier, far from the cameras, in quiet rooms in Ottawa. There, a subtle shift turned Ukraine from supplicant into symbol, from isolated petitioner into the visible tip of a Western alig…
Zelensky’s decision to stop first in Ottawa was not a courtesy call; it was strategic choreography. By securing visible Canadian backing before stepping into Washington, he altered the script of his encounter with U.S. power. He was no longer a lone leader begging for support, but the representative of a shared Western concern, already validated by another democratic ally. That changed how every handshake, every press statement, every closed-door conversation could be interpreted.
For Trump, whose instinct is to reduce foreign policy to one-on-one deals, the pre-built alliance around Ukraine narrowed the room for transactional theatrics. Any gesture toward Kyiv now carried implications for Canada and, by extension, for a wider network of partners watching closely. Zelensky avoided confrontation, but not influence: he used sequencing, symbolism, and coalition-building to shift leverage without raising his voice, proving that in modern diplomacy, the most decisive battles are often won before anyone sits down at the table.