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Wikipedia

Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy[a] (also romanized as Zelensky or Zelenskiy;[b] born 25 January 1978) is a Ukrainian politician who has been serving as the sixth president of Ukraine since 2019. He was formerly a comedian and actor.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy
Володимир Зеленський
Zelenskyy in 2023
6th President of Ukraine
Assumed office
20 May 2019
Prime Minister
Preceded byPetro Poroshenko
Personal details
Born (1978-01-25) 25 January 1978 (age 45)
Kryvyi Rih, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Political partyIndependent[1]
Other political
affiliations
Servant of the People (2018–present)
Spouse
(m. 2003)
Children2
Parent
ResidenceMariinskyi Palace
Alma materKyiv National Economic University (LLB)
Occupation
  • Politician
  • actor
  • comedian
Signature
Websitepresident.gov.ua/en

Born to a Ukrainian Jewish family, Zelenskyy grew up as a native Russian speaker in Kryvyi Rih, a major city of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast in central Ukraine. Prior to his acting career, he obtained a degree in law from the Kyiv National Economic University. He then pursued a career in comedy and created the production company Kvartal 95, which produced films, cartoons, and TV shows including the TV series Servant of the People, in which Zelenskyy played a fictional Ukrainian president. The series aired from 2015 to 2019 and was immensely popular. A political party with the same name as the TV show was created in March 2018 by employees of Kvartal 95.

Zelenskyy announced his candidacy in the 2019 presidential election on the evening of 31 December 2018, alongside the New Year's Eve address of then-president Petro Poroshenko on the TV channel 1+1. A political outsider, he had already become one of the frontrunners in opinion polls for the election. He won the election with 73.23 percent of the vote in the second round, defeating Poroshenko. He has positioned himself as an anti-establishment and anti-corruption figure. As president, Zelenskyy has been a proponent of e-government and of unity between the Ukrainian- and Russian-speaking parts of the country's population.[4]: 11–13  His communication style makes extensive use of social media, particularly Instagram.[4]: 7–10  His party won a landslide victory in the snap legislative election held shortly after his inauguration as president. During the first two years of his administration, Zelenskyy oversaw the lifting of legal immunity for members of parliament (the Verkhovna Rada),[5] the country's response to the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic recession, and some limited progress in tackling corruption in Ukraine.[6][7][8]

During his presidential campaign, Zelenskyy promised to end Ukraine's protracted conflict with Russia, and he has attempted to engage in dialogue with Russian president Vladimir Putin.[9] His administration faced an escalation of tensions with Russia in 2021, culminating in the launch of an ongoing full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022. Zelenskyy's strategy during the Russian military buildup was to calm the Ukrainian populace and assure the international community that Ukraine was not seeking to retaliate.[10] He initially distanced himself from warnings of an imminent war, while also calling for security guarantees and military support from NATO to "withstand" the threat.[11] After the start of the invasion, Zelenskyy declared martial law across Ukraine and a general mobilisation of the armed forces. His leadership during the crisis has won him widespread international praise, and he has been described as a symbol of the Ukrainian resistance.[12][13] Zelenskyy was named the Time Person of the Year for 2022.[14][15][16][17]

Early life

Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy was born to Jewish parents on 25 January 1978 in Kryvyi Rih, then in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.[18][19][20][21] His father, Oleksandr Zelenskyy, is a professor and computer scientist and the head of the Department of Cybernetics and Computing Hardware at the Kryvyi Rih State University of Economics and Technology; his mother, Rymma Zelenska, used to work as an engineer.[22][23][24] His grandfather, Semyon (Simon) Ivanovych Zelenskyy [uk], served as an infantryman, reaching the rank of colonel in the Red Army (in the 57th Guards Motor Rifle Division) during World War II;[25][26] Semyon's father and three brothers were killed in the Holocaust.[27][28][29][30] In March 2022, Zelenskyy said that his great-grandparents had been killed after German troops burned their home to the ground during a massacre.[31]

Before starting elementary school, Zelenskyy lived for four years in the Mongolian city of Erdenet, where his father worked.[19] Zelenskyy grew up speaking Russian.[32][25] At the age of 16 he passed the Test of English as a Foreign Language and received an education grant to study in Israel, but his father did not allow him to go.[33] He later earned a law degree from the Kryvyi Rih Institute of Economics, then a department of Kyiv National Economic University and now part of Kryvyi Rih National University, but never worked in the legal field.[19][34]

Entertainment career

At age 17, he joined his local team competing in the KVN comedy competition.[35] He was soon invited to join the united Ukrainian team "Zaporizhzhia-Kryvyi Rih-Transit", which performed in the KVN's Major League, and eventually won in 1997.[19][36][37] That same year, he created and headed the Kvartal 95 team, which later transformed into the comedy outfit Kvartal 95. From 1998 to 2003, Kvartal 95 performed in the Major League and the highest open Ukrainian league of KVN, and the team members spent a lot of time in Moscow and constantly toured around post-Soviet countries.[19][36] In 2003, Kvartal 95 started producing TV shows for the Ukrainian TV channel 1+1, and in 2005, the team moved to fellow Ukrainian TV channel Inter.[19]

In 2008, he starred in the feature film Love in the Big City, and its sequel, Love in the Big City 2.[19] Zelenskyy continued his movie career with the film Office Romance. Our Time in 2011 and with Rzhevsky Versus Napoleon in 2012.[19] Love in the Big City 3 was released in January 2014.[19] Zelenskyy also played the leading role in the 2012 film 8 First Dates and in sequels which were produced in 2015 and 2016.[19] He recorded the voice of Paddington Bear in the Ukrainian dubbing of Paddington (2014) and Paddington 2 (2017).[38]

 
Zelenskyy in Prague in 2009

Zelenskyy was a member of the board and the general producer of the TV channel Inter from 2010 to 2012.[34]

In August 2014, Zelenskyy spoke out against the intention of the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture to ban Russian artists from Ukraine.[39] Since 2015, Ukraine has banned Russian artists and Russian media and art from entering Ukraine.[40] In 2018, the romantic comedy Love in the Big City 2 starring Zelenskyy was banned in Ukraine due to the film not following the Law of Ukraine on cinematography.[41]

After the Ukrainian media had reported that during the Russo-Ukrainian War Zelenskyy's Kvartal 95 had donated 1 million to the Ukrainian army, some Russian politicians and artists petitioned for a ban on his works in Russia.[42][43][c] Once again, Zelenskyy spoke out against the intention of the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture to ban Russian artists from Ukraine.[39]

 
Kvartal 95 performing in 2018

In 2015, Zelenskyy became the star of the television series Servant of the People, where he played the role of the president of Ukraine.[34] In the series, Zelenskyy's character was a high-school history teacher in his 30s who won the presidential election after a viral video showed him ranting against government corruption in Ukraine.

The comedy series Svaty ("In-laws"), in which Zelenskyy appeared, was banned in Ukraine in 2017,[44] but unbanned in March 2019.[45]

Zelenskyy worked mostly in Russian-language productions. His first role in the Ukrainian language was the romantic comedy I, You, He, She,[46] which appeared on the screens of Ukraine in December 2018.[47] The first version of the script was written in Ukrainian but was translated into Russian for the Lithuanian actress Agnė Grudytė. Later, the movie was dubbed into Ukrainian.[48]

In October 2021, the Pandora Papers revealed that Zelenskyy, his chief aide, and the head of the Security Service of Ukraine Ivan Bakanov operated a network of offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands, Cyprus, and Belize. These companies included some that owned expensive London property.[49] Around the time of his 2019 election, Zelenskyy handed his shares in a key offshore company over to Serhiy Shefir, but the two men appear to have made an arrangement for Zelenskyy's family to continue receiving the money from these companies.[49] Zelenskyy's election campaign had centred on pledges to clean up the government of Ukraine.[49]

2019 presidential campaign

 
Zelenskyy and then-president of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko, April 2019

In March 2018, members of Zelenskyy's production company Kvartal 95 registered a new political party called Servant of the People – the same name as the television program that Zelenskyy had starred in over the previous three years.[50][51] Although Zelenskyy denied any immediate plans to enter politics and said he had registered the party name only to prevent it being appropriated by others,[52] there was widespread speculation that he was planning to run. As early as October 2018, three months before his campaign announcement and six months before the presidential election, he was already a frontrunner in opinion polls.[53][51] After months of ambiguous statements,[52][51] on 31 December, less than four months from the election, Zelenskyy announced his candidacy for president of Ukraine on the New Year's Eve evening show on the TV channel 1+1.[54] His announcement up-staged the New Year's Eve address of incumbent president Petro Poroshenko on the same channel,[54] which Zelenskyy said was unintentional and attributed to a technical glitch.[55]

Zelenskyy's presidential campaign against Poroshenko was almost entirely virtual.[56][57] He did not release a detailed policy platform[58] and his engagement with mainstream media was minimal;[56][d] he instead reached out to the electorate via social media channels and YouTube clips.[56] In place of traditional campaign rallies, he conducted stand-up comedy routines across Ukraine with his production company Kvartal 95.[60][61] He styled himself as an anti-establishment, anti-corruption figure, although he was not generally described as a populist.[58] He said he wished to restore trust in politicians, "to bring professional, decent people to power" and to "change the mood and timbre of the political establishment".[50][51][62] On 16 April 2019, a few days before the election, 20 Ukrainian news outlets called on Zelenskyy to "stop avoiding journalists".[56] Zelenskyy stated that he was not hiding from journalists but that he did not want to go to talk shows where "people of the old power" were "just doing PR" and that he did not have time to satisfy all interview requests.[63]

Prior to the elections, Zelenskyy presented a team that included former finance minister Oleksandr Danylyuk and others.[64][59] During the campaign, concerns were raised over his links to the oligarch Ihor Kolomoyskyi,[65] a billionaire businessman who had gained control of the 1+1 Media Group in 2010. The group operates eight Ukrainian TV channels and broadcast the Servant of the People TV series from 2015 until 2019, featuring Zelenskyy in a comedian role as a national president.

President Poroshenko and his supporters claimed that Zelenskyy's victory would benefit Russia.[66][67][68][69] On 19 April 2019 at Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex presidential debates were held in the form of a show.[70][71][72] In his introductory speech, Zelenskyy acknowledged that in 2014 he voted for Poroshenko, but "I was mistaken. We were mistaken. We voted for one Poroshenko, but received another. The first appears when there are video cameras, the other Petro sends Medvedchuk privietiki (greetings) to Moscow".[70] Although Zelenskyy initially said he would serve only a single term, he walked back this promise in May 2021, saying he had not yet made up his mind.[73]

Zelenskyy stated that as president he would develop the economy and attract investment to Ukraine through "a restart of the judicial system" and restoring confidence in the state.[74] He also proposed a tax amnesty and a 5-per-cent flat tax for big business which could be increased "in dialogue with them and if everyone agrees".[74] According to Zelenskyy, if people would notice that his new government "works honestly from the first day", they would start paying their taxes.[74]

Zelenskyy achieved a plurality of the electorate (30%) in the first round of elections on 31 March 2019.[75] In the second round, on 21 April 2019, he received 73 per cent of the vote to Poroshenko's 25 per cent, and was elected President of Ukraine.[76][77] Polish president Andrzej Duda was one of the first European leaders to congratulate Zelenskyy.[78] French president Emmanuel Macron received Zelenskyy at the Élysée Palace in Paris on 12 April 2019.[79] On 22 April, U.S. president Donald Trump congratulated Zelenskyy on his victory over the telephone.[80][81] European Commission president Jean Claude Juncker and European Council president Donald Tusk also issued a joint letter of congratulations and stated that the European Union (EU) will work to speed up the implementation of the remainder of the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement, including the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area.[82]

Presidency

Presidential styles of
Volodymyr Zelenskyy
 
Reference styleЙого Високоповажність, Президент України.
"His Excellency, the President of Ukraine"
Spoken styleПрезидент України.
"President of Ukraine"
Alternative styleПане Президенте.
"Mr President"
 
Zelenskyy with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the Federal Chancellery Complex in Berlin, June 2019
 
Zelenskyy meeting with U.S. president Donald Trump in New York City on 25 September 2019
 
Zelenskyy and Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko in Zhytomyr, October 2019
 
Zelenskyy leaving 10 Downing Street after a meeting with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in October 2020

Zelenskyy was inaugurated on 20 May 2019.[83] Various foreign officials attended the ceremony in Ukraine's parliament (Verkhovna Rada), including Salome Zourabichvili (Georgia), Kersti Kaljulaid (Estonia), Raimonds Vējonis (Latvia), Dalia Grybauskaitė (Lithuania), János Áder (Hungary), Maroš Šefčovič (European Union), and Rick Perry (United States).[84] Zelenskyy is the first Jewish president; with Volodymyr Groysman as prime minister, Ukraine became the first country other than Israel to simultaneously have a Jewish head of state and head of government.[21] In his inaugural address, Zelenskyy dissolved the then Ukrainian parliament and called for early parliamentary elections (which had originally been due to be held in October of that year).[85] One of Zelenskyy's coalition partners, the People's Front, opposed the move and withdrew from the ruling coalition.[86]

On 28 May, Zelenskyy restored the Ukrainian citizenship of Mikheil Saakashvili.[87]

Zelenskyy's first major proposal to change the electoral system from a plurality voting system to proportional representation with closed party lists was strongly rejected by the Ukrainian parliament, due to the belief that closed lists would lead to more corruption in government.[88]

In addition, on 6 June, lawmakers refused to include Zelenskyy's key initiative on reintroducing criminal liability for illegal enrichment in the parliament's agenda, and instead included a similar bill proposed by a group of deputies.[89][90] In June 2019 it was announced that the president's third major initiative, which seeks to remove immunity from lawmakers, diplomats and judges, would be submitted after the July 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[91] This initiative was completed on 3 September, when the new parliament passed a bill stripping lawmakers of legal immunity, delivering Zelenskyy a legislative victory by fulfilling one of his key campaign promises.[92]

On 8 July, Zelenskyy ordered the cancellation of the annual Kyiv Independence Day Parade on Maidan Nezalezhnosti, citing costs. Despite this, Zelenskyy highlighted that the day would "honor heroes" on Independence Day, however the "format will be new".[93][94] He also proposed to spend the money that would have been used to finance the parade on veterans.[95]

In 2020, Zelenskyy's party proposed reforms to Ukraine's media laws with the intent to increase competition and loosen the dominance of Ukrainian oligarchs on television and radio broadcasters. Critics said it risked increasing media censorship in Ukraine[96] because its clause of criminal responsibility for the distribution of disinformation could be abused.[97]

In January 2020, Zelenskyy took a trip to Oman that was not published on his official schedule, appearing to combine a personal holiday with government business. His office said Zelenskyy paid for the entire trip himself. Nevertheless, he was criticised for a lack of transparency and critics pointed out he had once criticized his predecessor Poroshenko for taking an undisclosed vacation in the Maldives.[98][99]

In January 2021, parliament passed a bill updating and reforming Ukraine's referendum laws,[100] which Ukraine's Constitutional Court had declared unconstitutional in 2018.[101] Fixing the referendum law had been one of Zelenskyy's campaign promises.[100]

In June 2021, Zelenskyy submitted to the Verkhovna Rada a bill creating a public registry of Ukraine's oligarchs, banning them from participating in privatizations of state-owned companies, and forbidding them from contributing financially to politicians. Opposition party leaders supported Zelenskyy's goal of reducing oligarchs' influence on politics in Ukraine but were critical of his approach, saying the public register would be both dangerous, as it concentrated power in the president; and ineffective, since oligarchs were merely a "symbol" of more deeply-rooted corruption.[102] The bill was passed into law in September 2021.[103] Critics of Zelenskyy's administration have claimed that, in taking power away from the Ukrainian oligarchs, he has sought to centralize authority and strengthen his personal position.[104]

Cabinets and administration

Zelenskyy appointed Andriy Bohdan as head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine. Prior to this, Bohdan had been the lawyer of Ukrainian oligarch Ihor Kolomoyskyi.[105] Under the rules of Lustration in Ukraine, introduced in 2014 following Euromaidan, Bohdan is not entitled to hold any state office until 2024 (because of his government post during the Second Azarov Government).[106] Bohdan, however, contended that because heading the presidential administration is not considered civil service work, lustration did not apply to him.[107] A number of the members of the Presidential Administration Zelenskyy appointed were former colleagues from his former production company, Kvartal 95,[105] including Ivan Bakanov, who became deputy head of the Ukrainian Secret Service.[108] Former deputy foreign minister Olena Zerkal declined an appointment as deputy head of the presidential administration, but did agree to serve as the Ukrainian representative of the international courts concerning Russia.[109] Zelenskyy's requests to replace the foreign minister, defence minister, chief prosecutor and head of Ukraine's security service were rejected by parliament.[110][111] Zelenskyy also dismissed and replaced 20 of the governors of Ukraine's 24 oblasts.[112]

Honcharuk government

In the 21 July 2019 parliamentary election, Zelenskyy's political party, Servant of the People, won the first single-party majority in modern Ukrainian history in parliament, with 43 per cent of the party-list vote. His party gained 254 of the 424 seats.[113]

Following the elections, Zelenskyy nominated Oleksiy Honcharuk as prime minister, who was quickly confirmed by parliament. Parliament also confirmed Andrii Zahorodniuk as defence minister, Vadym Prystaiko as foreign minister and Ivan Bakanov as head of the SBU.[114] Arsen Avakov, a controversial figure due to longstanding corruption allegations,[115] was kept on as interior minister, with Honcharuk arguing that the relatively inexperienced government needed experienced administrators and that Avakov had been "'drawn red lines' that cannot be crossed."[116]

Zelenskyy dismissed Bohdan as head of his presidential administration on 11 February 2020 and appointed Andriy Yermak as his successor the same day.[117]

Shmyhal government

In March 2020, Honchurak resigned as prime minister following the leak of an audio recording in which he appeared to belittle Zelenskyy's economic management. Honchurak was replaced as prime minister Denys Shmyhal.[118] Honchurak's hasty departure caused disquiet both in Ukraine and abroad, with many economists and political observers warning it would bring instability.[119] In his 4 March address to the Rada,[120] Zelenskyy recommitted to reforms domestic and financial, and remarked that he "cannot always become a psychologist for people, a crisis manager for someone, a collector who requires honestly earned money, and a nanny of the ministry in charge."[citation needed] By September 2020, Zelenskyy's approval ratings had fallen to less than 32 per cent.[121]

 
Zelenskyy and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 16 October 2020

On 24 March 2021, Zelenskyy signed the Decree 117/2021 approving the "strategy for de-occupation and reintegration of the temporarily occupied territory of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol."[122]

Attempts to end the Donbas conflict

One of Zelenskyy's central campaign promises had been to end the Russo-Ukrainian War and resolve the Russia-sponsored separatist movement there.[123] On 3 June, Zelenskyy appointed former president Leonid Kuchma as Ukraine's representative in the Tripartite Contact Group for a settlement in the conflict.[124] On 11 July 2019, Zelenskyy held his first telephone conversation with Russian president Vladimir Putin, during which he urged Putin to enter into talks mediated by European countries.[125][126] The two leaders also discussed the exchange of prisoners held by both sides.[126] In October 2019, Zelenskyy announced a preliminary deal struck with the separatists, under which the Ukrainian government would respect elections held in the region in exchange for Russia withdrawing its unmarked troops.[123] The deal was met with heavy criticism and protests by both politicians and the Ukrainian public. Detractors noted that elections held in Donbas were unlikely to be free and fair, that the separatists had long driven most pro-Ukrainian residents out of the region to ensure a pro-Russia majority, and that it would be impossible to ensure Russia kept its end of the agreement.[123] Zelenskyy defended his negotiations, saying the elections would not be held before a Russian withdrawal.[127] The agreement failed to ease the conflict, as the separatists continued their attacks and Russia continued providing them with weapons and ammunition.[128] Several Ukrainian nationalist militias and former militias also refused to accept the agreement, including the far-right Azov fighters in the Luhansk region of Donbas. Zelenskyy met personally with some of these groups and tried to convince them to surrender their unregistered weapons and accept the peace accord. Andriy Biletsky, the leader of the far-right National Corps and first commander of Azov, accused Zelenskyy of being disrespectful to army veterans and of acting on behalf of the Kremlin by leaving Ukrainians vulnerable to Russian aggression.[129][130] Ultimately, the peace deal failed to reduce the violence, much less end the war.[128]

In December 2019, Russia and Ukraine agreed to resume talks mediated by France and Germany under the so-called Normandy Format, which had been abandoned in 2016; it was Zelenskyy's first face-to-face meeting with Vladimir Putin.[131] In July 2020, Zelenskyy announced a formal ceasefire with the separatists — the more than twentieth such attempt since the war began in 2014.[132] Although the ceasefire was frequently violated over the next few years and overall violence remained high, ceasefire violations in 2020 did decrease by over 50 per cent compared to the previous year.[133]

UIA Flight 752

On 8 January 2020, the Presidential Office announced that Volodymyr Zelenskyy was cutting short his trip to Oman owing to the Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 plane crash in nearby Iran the same day.[134] Also on the same day, internet news site Obozrevatel.com released information that on 7 January 2020, Ukrainian politician of the Opposition Platform — For Life Viktor Medvedchuk – who has exclusive relations with the current president of Russia – may have arrived in Oman.[135][136] Soon, rumors began that Zelenskyy may have had some additional meetings beside the ones that were announced.[137] On 14 January 2020, Andriy Yermak dismissed the rumors as speculations and baseless conspiracy theories,[138] while Medvedchuk stated that the plane was used by his older daughter's family to fly from Oman to Moscow.[139] Later, Yermak contacted the on-line newspaper Ukrainian Truth and gave more details about the visit to Oman and the plane crash in Iran.[140]

On 17 January 2020, the presidential appointee Minister of Foreign Affairs, Vadym Prystaiko, was unable to give answers during the "times of questions to the government" in parliament when the people's deputies of Ukraine asked him about the visit's official agenda, the invitation from Oman, officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs who were preparing the visit, as well as how the president actually crossed the border while visiting Oman.[141][142] On 20 January 2020, Prystaiko followed up by giving a briefing to the press in the Office of the president of Ukraine and saying that he would explain everything about the visit when the time came.[143]

Foreign relations

 
Zelenskyy and Azerbaijan's president Ilham Aliyev, 17 December 2019
 
Zelenskyy with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 24 January 2020
 
Zelenskyy and U.S. president Joe Biden, 1 September 2021

Zelenskyy's first official trip abroad as president was to Brussels in June 2019, where he met with European Union and NATO officials.[144]

In August 2019, Zelenskyy promised to lift the moratorium on exhuming Polish mass graves in Ukraine after the previous Ukrainian government banned the Polish side from carrying out any exhumations of Polish victims of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army-perpetrated Volhynian massacres, following the removal of a memorial to the Ukrainian Insurgent Army in Hruszowice, southeastern Poland.[145]

In September 2019, it was reported that U.S. president Donald Trump had allegedly blocked payment of a congressionally mandated $400-million military aid package to Ukraine to pressure Zelenskyy during a July phone call between the two presidents to investigate alleged wrongdoing by Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden,[69][146] who took a board seat on Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings.[147] This report was the catalyst for the Trump–Ukraine scandal and the impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump. Zelenskyy has denied that he was pressured by Trump and declared that "he does not want to interfere in a foreign election."[148]

On a trip to the United States in September 2021, Zelenskyy engaged in talks and commitments with U.S. president Joe Biden,[149] Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm,[150] and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.[151] President Zelenskyy and First Lady Olena Zelenska also took part in the opening of the Ukrainian House in Washington, D.C.[150] On the same trip, he met with Apple CEO Tim Cook[152] and with Ukrainians in senior positions at Silicon Valley tech companies,[153] and spoke at Stanford University.[154] While Zelenskyy was still in the U.S., just after delivering a speech at the United Nations, an assassination attempt was made in Ukraine on Serhiy Shefir, his closest aide. Shefir was unhurt in the attack, although his driver was hospitalized with three bullet wounds.[155]

2021–2022 Russo-Ukrainian crisis

In April 2021, in response to Russian military build-up at the Ukrainian borders, Zelenskyy spoke to American president Joe Biden and urged NATO members to speed up Ukraine's request for membership.[156]

 
Zelenskyy in the Donetsk region in June 2021

On 26 November 2021, Zelenskyy accused Russia and Ukrainian oligarch Rinat Akhmetov of backing a plan to overthrow his government.[157] Russia denied any involvement in a coup plot and Akhmetov said in a statement that "the information made public by Volodymyr Zelenskiy about attempts to draw me into some kind of coup is an absolute lie. I am outraged by the spread of this lie, no matter what the president's motives are."[158][159] In December 2021, Zelenskyy called for preemptive action against Russia.[160]

On 19 January 2022, Zelenskyy said in a video message that the country's citizens should not panic and appealed to the media to be "methods of mass information and not mass hysteria."[161][162] On 28 January, Zelenskyy called on the West not to create a "panic" in his country over a potential Russian invasion, adding that constant warnings of an "imminent" threat of invasion are putting the economy of Ukraine at risk.[163] Zelenskyy said that "we do not see a bigger escalation" than in early 2021 when Russia's military build-up started.[164] Zelenskyy and U.S. president Joe Biden disagreed on how imminent the threat was.[165][166]

On 19 February, as worries of a Russian invasion of Ukraine grew, Zelenskyy warned the Munich Security Conference that Western nations should abandon their "appeasement" attitude toward Moscow. "Ukraine has been granted security assurances in exchange for giving up the world's third-largest nuclear arsenal. We don't have any firearms. And there's no security... But we have a right to urge a transformation from an appeasement policy to one that ensures security and peace," he stated.[167]

In the early hours of 24 February, shortly before the start of the Russian invasion, Zelenskyy recorded an address to the citizens of both Ukraine and Russia. He disputed claims of the Russian government about the presence of neo-Nazis in the Ukrainian government and stated that he had no intention of attacking the Donbas region, while highlighting his personal connections to the area.[168] In part of the address, he spoke in Russian to the people of Russia, appealing to them to pressure their leadership to prevent war:

Who will suffer the most from this? People. Who does not want this more than anyone? People. Who can prevent this? People.

Are these people present among you? I am sure there are. Public figures, journalists, musicians, actors, athletes, scientists, doctors, bloggers, stand-up comedians, Tik-Tokers and many more. Regular people. Regular, normal people. Men, women, the elderly, children, fathers, and most importantly, mothers. Just like people in Ukraine. Just like the authorities in Ukraine, no matter how much they try to convince you otherwise.

I know that they will not show this appeal of mine on Russian television. But the citizens of Russia must see it. They must know the truth. And the truth is that this needs to stop, before it is too late. And if the Russian leadership does not want to sit down at the table with us for the sake of peace, then perhaps, they will sit down at the table with you.

Do Russians want war? I would very much like to answer this question. But the answer depends only on you, the citizens of the Russian Federation.

The speech was widely described as "emotional" and "astonishing".[169][170]

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

 
Verkhovna Rada chairman Ruslan Stefanchuk, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal after signing of the application for membership in the European Union during the war on 28 February 2022
 
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visiting a military hospital for soldiers fighting in the Kyiv Oblast, 13 March

First phase: Invasion of Ukraine (24 February – 7 April)

On the morning of 24 February, Putin announced that Russia was initiating a "special military operation" in the Donbas. Russian missiles struck a number of military targets in Ukraine, and Zelenskyy declared martial law.[171] Zelenskyy also announced that diplomatic relations with Russia were being severed, effective immediately.[172] Later in the day, he announced general mobilisation.[173] On 25 February, Zelenskyy said that despite Russia's claim that it was targeting only military sites, civilian sites were also being hit.[174] In an early morning address that day, Zelenskyy said that his intelligence services had identified him as Russia's top target, but that he is staying in Kyiv and his family will remain in the country. "They want to destroy Ukraine politically by destroying the head of state", he said.[175] In the early hours of 26 February, during the most significant assault by Russian troops on the capital of Kyiv, the United States government and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan urged Zelenskyy to evacuate to a safer location, and both offered assistance for such an effort. Zelenskyy turned down both offers and opted to remain in Kyiv with its defense forces, saying that "the fight is here [in Kyiv]; I need ammunition, not a ride".[176][177][178]

More than 90% of Ukrainians supported the actions of Zelenskyy,[179] including more than 90% in western and central Ukraine and more than 80% in Russian-speaking regions in eastern and southern Ukraine.[180] A Pew Research Center poll found that 72% of Americans had confidence in Zelenskyy's handling of international affairs.[181]

Zelenskyy has gained worldwide recognition as the wartime leader of Ukraine during the Russian invasion; historian Andrew Roberts compared him to Winston Churchill.[182][183] Harvard Political Review said that Zelenskyy "has harnessed the power of social media to become history's first truly online wartime leader, bypassing traditional gatekeepers as he uses the internet to reach out to the people."[184] He has been described as a national hero or a "global hero" by many commentators, including publications such as The Hill, Deutsche Welle, Der Spiegel and USA Today.[182][185][186][187] BBC News and The Guardian have reported that his response to the invasion has received praise even from previous critics.[178][188] During the invasion, Zelenskyy has been reportedly the target of more than a dozen assassination attempts; three were prevented due to tips from Russian FSB employees who opposed the invasion. Two of those attempts were carried out by the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary force, and the third by the Kadyrovites, the personal guard of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov.[189] While speaking about Ukrainian civilians who were killed by Russian forces, Zelenskyy said:[190]

We will not forgive. We will not forget. We will punish everyone who committed atrocities in this war... We will find every scum who was shelling our cities, our people, who was shooting the missiles, who was giving orders. You will not have a quiet place on this earth – except for a grave.

On 7 March 2022, Czech president Miloš Zeman decided to award Zelenskyy with the highest state award of the Czech Republic, the Order of the White Lion, for "his bravery and courage in the face of Russia's invasion".[191]

 
Zelenskyy with Polish Prime Minister Morawiecki, Czech Prime Minister Fiala and Slovenian Prime Minister Janša, Kyiv, 15 March

Zelenskyy has repeatedly called for direct talks with Russian president Vladimir Putin,[192] saying: "Good Lord, what do you want? Leave our land. If you don't want to leave now, sit down with me at the negotiating table. But not from 30 meters away, like with Macron and Scholz. I don't bite."[193] Zelenskyy said he was "99.9 percent sure" that Putin thought the Ukrainians would welcome the invading forces with "flowers and smiles".[194]

On 7 March 2022, as a condition for ending the invasion, the Kremlin demanded Ukraine's neutrality; recognition of Crimea, which had been annexed by Russia, as Russian territory; and recognition of the self-proclaimed separatist republics of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent states.[195] On 8 March, Zelenskyy expressed willingness to discuss Putin's demands.[192] Zelenskyy said he is ready for dialogue, but "not for capitulation".[196] He proposed a new collective security agreement for Ukraine with the United States, Turkey, France, Germany as an alternative to the country joining NATO.[197] Zelenskyy's Servant of the People party said that Ukraine would not give up its claims on Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk.[198] However, Zelenskyy said that Ukraine was considering giving the Russian language protected minority status.[199]

 
Zelenskyy in the Kyiv Oblast following the recapture of the region by Ukraine, 4 April

On 15 March 2022, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, together with Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala and Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša, visited Kyiv to meet with Zelenskyy in a display of support for Ukraine.[200] On 16 March 2022, a deepfake appeared online of Zelenskyy calling on Ukrainian citizens to surrender to Russia. The attack was largely deemed to have failed at its intended goal.[201] The video is considered to be the first use of deepfake technology in a global-scale disinformation attack.[202]

Zelenskyy has made an effort to rally the governments of Western nations in an effort to isolate Russia. He has made numerous addresses to the legislatures of the EU,[203][204] UK,[205] Poland,[206] Australia,[207] Canada,[208] US,[209] Germany,[210] Israel,[211] Italy,[212] Japan,[213] the Netherlands,[214] Romania,[215] and the Nordic countries.[216][217][218]

On March 23, Zelenskyy was calling on Russians to emigrate from Russia so as not to finance the war in Ukraine with their taxes.[219] In March 2022, Zelenskyy supported the suspension of 11 Ukrainian political parties with ties to Russia: the Socialist Party of Ukraine, Derzhava, Left Opposition, Nashi, Opposition Bloc, Opposition Platform — For Life, Party of Shariy, Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine, Union of Leftists, and the Volodymyr Saldo Bloc.[220][221][222] The Communist Party of Ukraine, another pro-Russia party, had already been banned in 2015 because of its support to the Donbas separatists.[223] Zelenskyy has also supported consolidating all TV news stations into a single 24-hour news broadcast run by the state of Ukraine.[224]

Second phase: South-Eastern front (8 April – 5 September)

In April 2022, Zelenskyy criticized Germany's ties with Russia.[225] In May 2022, Zelenskyy said that Ukrainian men of conscription age had a duty to remain in Ukraine and that up to 100 Ukrainian soldiers were killed every day in the fighting in eastern Ukraine. He made the comment after he was asked about an online petition calling to lift a prohibition on Ukrainian men leaving Ukraine.[226][227] As Zelenskyy ordered a general military mobilization in February 2022, he also banned men aged 18 to 60 from leaving Ukraine.[228] In early June 2022, Zelenskyy's adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said that up to 200 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in combat every day.[229]

 
Zelenskyy awarding a soldier near the front line in the Kharkiv Oblast, 29 May

Zelenskyy denounced suggestions by former US diplomat Henry Kissinger that Ukraine should cede control of Crimea and Donbas to Russia in exchange for peace.[230] On 25 May 2022, he said that Ukraine would not agree to peace until Russia agreed to return Crimea and the Donbas region to Ukraine.[231] However, he later said he did not believe that all the land seized by Russia since 2014, which includes Crimea, could be recaptured by force, saying that "If we decide to go that way, we will lose hundreds of thousands of people."[232]

On 3 May 2022, Zelenskyy accused Turkey of having "double standards" by welcoming Russian tourists while attempting to act as an intermediary between Russia and Ukraine in order to end the war.[233] On 25 May 2022, Zelenskyy said that he was satisfied with China's policy of staying away from the conflict.[234] In August 2022, he said China had the economic leverage to pressure Putin to end the war, adding "I'm sure that without the Chinese market for the Russian Federation, Russia would be feeling complete economic isolation. That's something that China can do – to limit the trade [with Russia] until the war is over." According to Zelenskyy, since the beginning of the invasion, Chinese President Xi Jinping had refused to speak with him."[235]

On 30 May 2022, Zelenskyy criticized EU leaders for being too soft on Russia and asked, "Why can Russia still earn almost a billion euros a day by selling energy?"[236] The study published by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) calculates that the EU paid Russia about €56 billion for fossil fuel deliveries in the three months following the start of Russia's invasion.[237]

 
Zelenskyy visiting a school in Irpin in Bucha Raion on the occasion of Knowledge Day on 1 September 2022

On 20 June 2022, Zelenskyy addressed African Union (AU) representatives via videoconference. He invited African leaders to a virtual meeting, but only four of them attended.[238] On 20 July 2022, South America's Mercosur trade bloc refused Zelenskyy's request to speak at the trade bloc's summit in Paraguay.[239]

Third phase: Counteroffensives and annexations (6 September – present)

Speaking about the 2022 Russian mobilization, Zelenskyy called on Russians to not submit to "criminal mobilization", saying: "Russian commanders do not care about the lives of Russians — they just need to replenish the empty spaces left" by killed and wounded Russian soldiers.[240] Following Putin's announcement of Russia annexing four regions of Ukrainian territory it had seized during its invasion, Zelenskyy announced that Ukraine would not hold peace talks with Russia while Putin was president.[241]

On 25 September 2022, Zelenskyy said that Putin's threats to use nuclear weapons "could be a reality." He added that Putin "wants to scare the whole world" with nuclear blackmail.[242] He also said that Putin is aware that the "world will never forgive" a Russian nuclear strike.[243] When asked what kind of relationship Ukrainians and Ukraine will have with Russia after the war, Zelenskyy replied that "They took too many people, too many lives. The society will not forgive them", adding that "It will be the choice of our society whether to talk to them, or not to talk at all, and for how many years, tens of years or more."[244] On 21 December 2022, Zelenskyy visited the United States on his first foreign trip since the war began.[245][246] He met with President Joe Biden and addressed Congress delivering his full speech in English. The United States announced they would supply Patriot missiles to Ukraine as had been requested.[247]

 
Zelenskyy at the UN Security Council in New York City on 20 September 2023

In May 2023, he visited the International Criminal Court in The Hague and said he would like to see Russian President Vladimir Putin stand trial for war crimes committed during the war in Ukraine,[248] including the crime of aggression.[249]

On 19 September 2023, in a speech to the UN General Assembly, Zelenskyy called on neutral countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia to abandon their neutrality and support Ukraine.[250] In October 2023, after the Hroza missile attack, he criticized countries supporting Russia, saying "all those who help Russia circumvent sanctions are criminals."[251]

Zelenskyy condemned Hamas' actions during the 2023 Israel–Hamas war and expressed his support to Israel and its right to self-defense.[252]

Political views

Economic issues

In a mid-June interview with BIHUS info [uk] a representative of the president of Ukraine at the Cabinet of Ministers, Andriy Herus stated that Zelenskyy had never promised to lower communal tariffs, but that a campaign video in which Zelenskyy stated that the price of natural gas in Ukraine could fall by 20–30 per cent or maybe more was a not a direct promise but actually "half-hinting" and "joking".[253] Zelenskyy's election manifesto mentioned tariffs only once—that money raised from a capital amnesty would go towards "lowering the tariff burden on low-income citizens".[254][255]

Foreign policy

 
Zelenskyy and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson paying tribute to fallen Ukrainian soldiers in Kyiv on 17 June 2022
 
Zelenskyy with Joe Biden, Rishi Sunak, Giorgia Meloni and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan at the 2023 Vilnius summit

During his presidential campaign, Zelenskyy said that he supported Ukraine's becoming a member of the European Union and NATO, but he said Ukrainian voters should decide on the country's membership of these two organisations in referendums.[256] At the same time, he believed that the Ukrainian people had already chosen "eurointegration".[256][257] Zelenskyy's close advisor Ivan Bakanov also said that Zelenskyy's policy is supportive of membership of both the EU and NATO, and proposes holding referendums on membership.[258] Zelenskyy's electoral programme claimed that Ukrainian NATO membership is "the choice of the Maidan and the course that is enshrined in the Constitution, in addition, it is an instrument for strengthening our defense capability".[259] The program states that Ukraine should set the goal to apply for a NATO Membership Action Plan in 2024.[259] The programme also states that Zelenskyy "will do everything to ensure" that Ukraine can apply for European Union membership in 2024.[260] Two days before the second round, Zelenskyy stated that he wanted to build "a strong, powerful, free Ukraine, which is not the younger sister of Russia, which is not a corrupt partner of Europe, but our independent Ukraine".[261]

In October 2020, he spoke in support of Azerbaijan in regards to the Nagorno-Karabakh war between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenians over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Zelenskyy said: "We support Azerbaijan's territorial integrity and sovereignty just as Azerbaijan always supports our territorial integrity and sovereignty."[262]

In February 2022, he applied for Ukraine to join the European Union.[263][264]

Zelenskyy has tried to position Ukraine as a neutral party in the political and trade tensions between the United States and China. In January 2021, Zelenskyy said in an interview with Axios that he does not perceive China as a geopolitical threat and that he does not agree with the United States assertions that it represents one.[265]

Russo-Ukrainian War

 
Zelenskyy and Russian president Putin meeting in Paris on 9 December 2019 in the "Normandy Format" aimed at ending the war in Donbas

Zelenskyy supported the late 2013 and early 2014 Euromaidan movement. During the war in Donbas, he actively supported the Ukrainian army.[34] Zelenskyy helped fund a volunteer battalion fighting on Donbas.[266]

In a 2014 interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda v Ukraine, Zelenskyy said that he would have liked to pay a visit to Crimea, but would avoid it because "armed people are there".[267] In August 2014, Zelenskyy performed for Ukrainian troops in Mariupol and later his studio donated ₴1 million to the Ukrainian army.[268] Regarding the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea, Zelenskyy said that, speaking realistically, it would be possible to return Crimea to Ukrainian control only after a regime change in Russia.[269]

In an interview in December 2018 with Ukrainska Pravda, Zelenskyy stated that as president he would try to end the ongoing war in Donbas by negotiating with Russia.[270] As he considered the leaders of the Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic (DPR and LPR) to be Russia's "puppets", it would "make no sense to speak with them".[270] He did not rule out holding a referendum on the issue.[270] In an interview published three days before the 2019 presidential election (on 21 April), Zelenskyy stated that he was against granting the Donbas region "special status".[271] In the interview he also said that if he were elected president he would not sign a law on amnesty for the militants of the DPR and LPR.[271]

In response to suggestions to the contrary, he stated in April 2019 that he regarded Russian president Vladimir Putin "as an enemy".[272] On 2 May 2019, Zelenskyy wrote on Facebook that "the border is the only thing Russia and Ukraine have in common".[273]

Zelenskyy opposes the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany, calling it "a dangerous weapon, not only for Ukraine but for the whole of Europe."[274]

On 25 May 2022, Zelenskyy said that "Ukraine will fight until it regains all its territories."[275]

Zelenskyy has described the extensive environmental damage from the war as “an environmental bomb of mass destruction” and "an ecocide" (a crime in Ukraine) and has met with prominent European politicians and others to discuss the environmental damage.[276][277][278][279][280]

Government reform

 
Zelenskyy with NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg in June 2019

During the presidential campaign, Zelenskyy promised bills to fight corruption, including removal of immunity from the president of the country, members of the Verkhovna Rada (the Ukrainian parliament) and judges, a law about impeachment, reform of election laws, and providing efficient trial by jury. He promised to bring the salary for military personnel "to the level of NATO standards".[281]

Although Zelenskyy prefers elections with open list election ballots, after he called the snap 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election his draft law "On amendments to some laws of Ukraine in connection with the change of the electoral system for the election of people's deputies" proposed to hold the election with closed list because the 60-day term to the snap election did not "leave any chances for the introduction of this system".[282]

Social issues

 
Zelenskyy and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, November 2021

Zelenskyy opposed targeting the Russian language in Ukraine and banning artists for their political opinions (such as those viewed by the Government as anti-Ukrainian).[283][284] In April 2019, he stated that he was not against a Ukrainian language quota (on radio and TV), although he noted they could be tweaked.[285] He also said that Russian artists "who have turned into (anti-Ukrainian) politicians" should remain banned from entering Ukraine.[271]

In response to a petition demanding equal rights for same-sex couples, Zelenskyy echoed the view that family does not depend on sex and asked the Prime Minister of Ukraine to review civil partnerships for same-sex couples. With regards to same-sex marriage, Zelenskyy cited a provision in the Constitution of Ukraine barring same-sex marriage, as well as a ban on wartime changes to the Constitution, ruling out an introduction of same-sex marriages during the ongoing war.[286][287] Civil rights organizations praised the statement, though criticizing its vagueness, as Zelenskyy had avoided giving any details about legal proposals for civil partnerships.[288]

On 2 December 2022, Zelenskyy entered a bill to the Verkhovna Rada that would officially ban all activities of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) UOC in Ukraine.[289]

Personal life

 
Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Olena Zelenska in 2019 parliamentary election

In September 2003, Zelenskyy married Olena Kiyashko, with whom he had attended school and university.[290][291] Kiyashko worked as a scriptwriter at Kvartal 95.[292] The couple's first daughter, Oleksandra, was born in July 2004. Their son, Kyrylo, was born in January 2013. In Zelenskyy's 2014 movie 8 New Dates, their daughter played Sasha, the daughter of the protagonist. In 2016, she participated in the show The Comedy Comet Company Comedy's Kids and won ₴50,000.[19] The family lives in Kyiv.[291]

Zelenskyy's first language is Russian, and he is also fluent in Ukrainian and English.[293][294][295][296] His assets were worth about ₴37 million (about US$1.5 million) in 2018.[297]

Achievements, awards, and recognition

Awards and decorations

In 2022, British newspaper Financial Times[298] and US magazine Time both selected Zelenskyy as Person of the Year.[299]

Species named after Zelenskyy

Ausichicrinites zelenskyyi, an extinct species of feather star described on 20 July 2022 by a group of Polish paleontologists, is named after Zelenskyy "for his courage and bravery in defending free Ukraine".[317][318]

Selected filmography

 
The film premiere of I, You, He, She

Films

Year Title Role
2004 Three Musketeers writer; d'Artagnan
2009 Love in the Big City Igor
2010 Love in the Big City 2 Igor
2011 Office Romance. Our Time Anatoly Efremovich Novoseltsev
2012 Rzhevsky Versus Napoleon Napoleon
8 First Dates Nikita Sokolov
2014 Love in Vegas Igor Zelenskyy
Paddington (Ukrainian dub) Paddington Bear (voice)[319]
2015 8 New Dates Nikita Andreevich Sokolov
2016 8 Best Dates Nikita Andreevich Sokolov
Servant of the People 2 Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko
2018 I, You, He, She Maksym Tkachenko
2023 Superpower himself; short interviews with Sean Penn

Television shows and appearances

Year Title Role Notes
2006 Dancing with the Stars (Ukraine) as contestant
2008–2012 Svaty ("In-Laws") as producer
2015–2019 Servant of the People Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko
2022 64th Annual Grammy Awards Guest appearance Special message, as President of Ukraine
2023 12th Annual NFL Honors Guest appearance Special message, as President of Ukraine[320]

Publication

  • Zelensky, Volodymyr (2022). A Message From Ukraine: Speeches, 2019 – 2022. London: Hutchinson Heinemann. ISBN 978-1-52-915354-5. (a collection of sixteen of Zelenskyy's speeches)

Notes

  1. ^ Ukrainian: Володимир Олександрович Зеленський, pronounced [woloˈdɪmɪr olekˈsɑndrowɪdʒ zeˈlɛnʲsʲkɪj].
  2. ^ Zelenskyy's name lacks an established Latin-alphabet spelling, and it has been romanized in various ways: for example Volodymyr Zelensky or Zelenskyi from Ukrainian, or Vladimir Zelenskiy from Russian.[2] Zelenskyy is the transliteration on his passport, and his administration has used it since he assumed the presidency in 2019.[2][3]
  3. ^ Since 2015, Ukraine has banned Russian artists and other Russian works of culture from entering Ukraine.[40]
  4. ^ From 21 January until 18 April 2019 Zelenskyy did not give interviews.[59]

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volodymyr, zelenskyy, zelensky, redirects, here, surname, zelensky, surname, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, oleksandrovych, family, name, zelenskyy, volodymyr, oleksandrovych, zelenskyy, also, romanized, zelensky, . Zelensky redirects here For the surname see Zelensky surname In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Oleksandrovych and the family name is Zelenskyy Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy a also romanized as Zelensky or Zelenskiy b born 25 January 1978 is a Ukrainian politician who has been serving as the sixth president of Ukraine since 2019 He was formerly a comedian and actor Volodymyr ZelenskyyVolodimir ZelenskijZelenskyy in 20236th President of UkraineIncumbentAssumed office 20 May 2019Prime MinisterVolodymyr GroysmanOleksiy HoncharukDenys ShmyhalPreceded byPetro PoroshenkoPersonal detailsBorn 1978 01 25 25 January 1978 age 45 Kryvyi Rih Ukrainian SSR Soviet UnionPolitical partyIndependent 1 Other politicalaffiliationsServant of the People 2018 present SpouseOlena Kiyashko m 2003 wbr Children2ParentOleksandr Zelenskyy father ResidenceMariinskyi PalaceAlma materKyiv National Economic University LLB OccupationPoliticianactorcomedianSignatureWebsitepresident wbr gov wbr ua wbr enBorn to a Ukrainian Jewish family Zelenskyy grew up as a native Russian speaker in Kryvyi Rih a major city of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast in central Ukraine Prior to his acting career he obtained a degree in law from the Kyiv National Economic University He then pursued a career in comedy and created the production company Kvartal 95 which produced films cartoons and TV shows including the TV series Servant of the People in which Zelenskyy played a fictional Ukrainian president The series aired from 2015 to 2019 and was immensely popular A political party with the same name as the TV show was created in March 2018 by employees of Kvartal 95 Zelenskyy announced his candidacy in the 2019 presidential election on the evening of 31 December 2018 alongside the New Year s Eve address of then president Petro Poroshenko on the TV channel 1 1 A political outsider he had already become one of the frontrunners in opinion polls for the election He won the election with 73 23 percent of the vote in the second round defeating Poroshenko He has positioned himself as an anti establishment and anti corruption figure As president Zelenskyy has been a proponent of e government and of unity between the Ukrainian and Russian speaking parts of the country s population 4 11 13 His communication style makes extensive use of social media particularly Instagram 4 7 10 His party won a landslide victory in the snap legislative election held shortly after his inauguration as president During the first two years of his administration Zelenskyy oversaw the lifting of legal immunity for members of parliament the Verkhovna Rada 5 the country s response to the COVID 19 pandemic and subsequent economic recession and some limited progress in tackling corruption in Ukraine 6 7 8 During his presidential campaign Zelenskyy promised to end Ukraine s protracted conflict with Russia and he has attempted to engage in dialogue with Russian president Vladimir Putin 9 His administration faced an escalation of tensions with Russia in 2021 culminating in the launch of an ongoing full scale Russian invasion in February 2022 Zelenskyy s strategy during the Russian military buildup was to calm the Ukrainian populace and assure the international community that Ukraine was not seeking to retaliate 10 He initially distanced himself from warnings of an imminent war while also calling for security guarantees and military support from NATO to withstand the threat 11 After the start of the invasion Zelenskyy declared martial law across Ukraine and a general mobilisation of the armed forces His leadership during the crisis has won him widespread international praise and he has been described as a symbol of the Ukrainian resistance 12 13 Zelenskyy was named the Time Person of the Year for 2022 14 15 16 17 Contents 1 Early life 2 Entertainment career 3 2019 presidential campaign 4 Presidency 4 1 Cabinets and administration 4 1 1 Honcharuk government 4 1 2 Shmyhal government 4 2 Attempts to end the Donbas conflict 4 3 UIA Flight 752 4 4 Foreign relations 4 5 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis 4 6 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 4 6 1 First phase Invasion of Ukraine 24 February 7 April 4 6 2 Second phase South Eastern front 8 April 5 September 4 6 3 Third phase Counteroffensives and annexations 6 September present 5 Political views 5 1 Economic issues 5 2 Foreign policy 5 2 1 Russo Ukrainian War 5 3 Government reform 5 4 Social issues 6 Personal life 7 Achievements awards and recognition 7 1 Awards and decorations 7 2 Species named after Zelenskyy 8 Selected filmography 8 1 Films 8 2 Television shows and appearances 9 Publication 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly lifeVolodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy was born to Jewish parents on 25 January 1978 in Kryvyi Rih then in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic 18 19 20 21 His father Oleksandr Zelenskyy is a professor and computer scientist and the head of the Department of Cybernetics and Computing Hardware at the Kryvyi Rih State University of Economics and Technology his mother Rymma Zelenska used to work as an engineer 22 23 24 His grandfather Semyon Simon Ivanovych Zelenskyy uk served as an infantryman reaching the rank of colonel in the Red Army in the 57th Guards Motor Rifle Division during World War II 25 26 Semyon s father and three brothers were killed in the Holocaust 27 28 29 30 In March 2022 Zelenskyy said that his great grandparents had been killed after German troops burned their home to the ground during a massacre 31 Before starting elementary school Zelenskyy lived for four years in the Mongolian city of Erdenet where his father worked 19 Zelenskyy grew up speaking Russian 32 25 At the age of 16 he passed the Test of English as a Foreign Language and received an education grant to study in Israel but his father did not allow him to go 33 He later earned a law degree from the Kryvyi Rih Institute of Economics then a department of Kyiv National Economic University and now part of Kryvyi Rih National University but never worked in the legal field 19 34 Entertainment careerAt age 17 he joined his local team competing in the KVN comedy competition 35 He was soon invited to join the united Ukrainian team Zaporizhzhia Kryvyi Rih Transit which performed in the KVN s Major League and eventually won in 1997 19 36 37 That same year he created and headed the Kvartal 95 team which later transformed into the comedy outfit Kvartal 95 From 1998 to 2003 Kvartal 95 performed in the Major League and the highest open Ukrainian league of KVN and the team members spent a lot of time in Moscow and constantly toured around post Soviet countries 19 36 In 2003 Kvartal 95 started producing TV shows for the Ukrainian TV channel 1 1 and in 2005 the team moved to fellow Ukrainian TV channel Inter 19 In 2008 he starred in the feature film Love in the Big City and its sequel Love in the Big City 2 19 Zelenskyy continued his movie career with the film Office Romance Our Time in 2011 and with Rzhevsky Versus Napoleon in 2012 19 Love in the Big City 3 was released in January 2014 19 Zelenskyy also played the leading role in the 2012 film 8 First Dates and in sequels which were produced in 2015 and 2016 19 He recorded the voice of Paddington Bear in the Ukrainian dubbing of Paddington 2014 and Paddington 2 2017 38 nbsp Zelenskyy in Prague in 2009Zelenskyy was a member of the board and the general producer of the TV channel Inter from 2010 to 2012 34 In August 2014 Zelenskyy spoke out against the intention of the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture to ban Russian artists from Ukraine 39 Since 2015 Ukraine has banned Russian artists and Russian media and art from entering Ukraine 40 In 2018 the romantic comedy Love in the Big City 2 starring Zelenskyy was banned in Ukraine due to the film not following the Law of Ukraine on cinematography 41 After the Ukrainian media had reported that during the Russo Ukrainian War Zelenskyy s Kvartal 95 had donated 1 million to the Ukrainian army some Russian politicians and artists petitioned for a ban on his works in Russia 42 43 c Once again Zelenskyy spoke out against the intention of the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture to ban Russian artists from Ukraine 39 nbsp Kvartal 95 performing in 2018In 2015 Zelenskyy became the star of the television series Servant of the People where he played the role of the president of Ukraine 34 In the series Zelenskyy s character was a high school history teacher in his 30s who won the presidential election after a viral video showed him ranting against government corruption in Ukraine The comedy series Svaty In laws in which Zelenskyy appeared was banned in Ukraine in 2017 44 but unbanned in March 2019 45 Zelenskyy worked mostly in Russian language productions His first role in the Ukrainian language was the romantic comedy I You He She 46 which appeared on the screens of Ukraine in December 2018 47 The first version of the script was written in Ukrainian but was translated into Russian for the Lithuanian actress Agne Grudyte Later the movie was dubbed into Ukrainian 48 In October 2021 the Pandora Papers revealed that Zelenskyy his chief aide and the head of the Security Service of Ukraine Ivan Bakanov operated a network of offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands Cyprus and Belize These companies included some that owned expensive London property 49 Around the time of his 2019 election Zelenskyy handed his shares in a key offshore company over to Serhiy Shefir but the two men appear to have made an arrangement for Zelenskyy s family to continue receiving the money from these companies 49 Zelenskyy s election campaign had centred on pledges to clean up the government of Ukraine 49 2019 presidential campaignMain article 2019 Ukrainian presidential election nbsp Zelenskyy and then president of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko April 2019In March 2018 members of Zelenskyy s production company Kvartal 95 registered a new political party called Servant of the People the same name as the television program that Zelenskyy had starred in over the previous three years 50 51 Although Zelenskyy denied any immediate plans to enter politics and said he had registered the party name only to prevent it being appropriated by others 52 there was widespread speculation that he was planning to run As early as October 2018 three months before his campaign announcement and six months before the presidential election he was already a frontrunner in opinion polls 53 51 After months of ambiguous statements 52 51 on 31 December less than four months from the election Zelenskyy announced his candidacy for president of Ukraine on the New Year s Eve evening show on the TV channel 1 1 54 His announcement up staged the New Year s Eve address of incumbent president Petro Poroshenko on the same channel 54 which Zelenskyy said was unintentional and attributed to a technical glitch 55 Zelenskyy s presidential campaign against Poroshenko was almost entirely virtual 56 57 He did not release a detailed policy platform 58 and his engagement with mainstream media was minimal 56 d he instead reached out to the electorate via social media channels and YouTube clips 56 In place of traditional campaign rallies he conducted stand up comedy routines across Ukraine with his production company Kvartal 95 60 61 He styled himself as an anti establishment anti corruption figure although he was not generally described as a populist 58 He said he wished to restore trust in politicians to bring professional decent people to power and to change the mood and timbre of the political establishment 50 51 62 On 16 April 2019 a few days before the election 20 Ukrainian news outlets called on Zelenskyy to stop avoiding journalists 56 Zelenskyy stated that he was not hiding from journalists but that he did not want to go to talk shows where people of the old power were just doing PR and that he did not have time to satisfy all interview requests 63 Prior to the elections Zelenskyy presented a team that included former finance minister Oleksandr Danylyuk and others 64 59 During the campaign concerns were raised over his links to the oligarch Ihor Kolomoyskyi 65 a billionaire businessman who had gained control of the 1 1 Media Group in 2010 The group operates eight Ukrainian TV channels and broadcast the Servant of the People TV series from 2015 until 2019 featuring Zelenskyy in a comedian role as a national president President Poroshenko and his supporters claimed that Zelenskyy s victory would benefit Russia 66 67 68 69 On 19 April 2019 at Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex presidential debates were held in the form of a show 70 71 72 In his introductory speech Zelenskyy acknowledged that in 2014 he voted for Poroshenko but I was mistaken We were mistaken We voted for one Poroshenko but received another The first appears when there are video cameras the other Petro sends Medvedchuk privietiki greetings to Moscow 70 Although Zelenskyy initially said he would serve only a single term he walked back this promise in May 2021 saying he had not yet made up his mind 73 Zelenskyy stated that as president he would develop the economy and attract investment to Ukraine through a restart of the judicial system and restoring confidence in the state 74 He also proposed a tax amnesty and a 5 per cent flat tax for big business which could be increased in dialogue with them and if everyone agrees 74 According to Zelenskyy if people would notice that his new government works honestly from the first day they would start paying their taxes 74 Zelenskyy achieved a plurality of the electorate 30 in the first round of elections on 31 March 2019 75 In the second round on 21 April 2019 he received 73 per cent of the vote to Poroshenko s 25 per cent and was elected President of Ukraine 76 77 Polish president Andrzej Duda was one of the first European leaders to congratulate Zelenskyy 78 French president Emmanuel Macron received Zelenskyy at the Elysee Palace in Paris on 12 April 2019 79 On 22 April U S president Donald Trump congratulated Zelenskyy on his victory over the telephone 80 81 European Commission president Jean Claude Juncker and European Council president Donald Tusk also issued a joint letter of congratulations and stated that the European Union EU will work to speed up the implementation of the remainder of the EU Ukraine Association Agreement including the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area 82 PresidencyPresidency of Volodymyr Zelenskyy 20 May 2019 presentPresidentVolodymyr ZelenskyyPrime MinisterVolodymyr HroysmanOleksiy HoncharukDenys ShmyhalCabinetHoncharuk GovernmentShmyhal GovernmentPartyServant of the PeopleElection2019SeatPresidential Office BuildingBankova 11 Kyiv Petro Poroshenko nbsp Presidential styles of Volodymyr Zelenskyy nbsp Reference styleJogo Visokopovazhnist Prezident Ukrayini His Excellency the President of Ukraine Spoken stylePrezident Ukrayini President of Ukraine Alternative stylePane Prezidente Mr President nbsp Zelenskyy with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the Federal Chancellery Complex in Berlin June 2019 nbsp Zelenskyy meeting with U S president Donald Trump in New York City on 25 September 2019 nbsp Zelenskyy and Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko in Zhytomyr October 2019 nbsp Zelenskyy leaving 10 Downing Street after a meeting with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in October 2020Zelenskyy was inaugurated on 20 May 2019 83 Various foreign officials attended the ceremony in Ukraine s parliament Verkhovna Rada including Salome Zourabichvili Georgia Kersti Kaljulaid Estonia Raimonds Vejonis Latvia Dalia Grybauskaite Lithuania Janos Ader Hungary Maros Sefcovic European Union and Rick Perry United States 84 Zelenskyy is the first Jewish president with Volodymyr Groysman as prime minister Ukraine became the first country other than Israel to simultaneously have a Jewish head of state and head of government 21 In his inaugural address Zelenskyy dissolved the then Ukrainian parliament and called for early parliamentary elections which had originally been due to be held in October of that year 85 One of Zelenskyy s coalition partners the People s Front opposed the move and withdrew from the ruling coalition 86 On 28 May Zelenskyy restored the Ukrainian citizenship of Mikheil Saakashvili 87 Zelenskyy s first major proposal to change the electoral system from a plurality voting system to proportional representation with closed party lists was strongly rejected by the Ukrainian parliament due to the belief that closed lists would lead to more corruption in government 88 In addition on 6 June lawmakers refused to include Zelenskyy s key initiative on reintroducing criminal liability for illegal enrichment in the parliament s agenda and instead included a similar bill proposed by a group of deputies 89 90 In June 2019 it was announced that the president s third major initiative which seeks to remove immunity from lawmakers diplomats and judges would be submitted after the July 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election 91 This initiative was completed on 3 September when the new parliament passed a bill stripping lawmakers of legal immunity delivering Zelenskyy a legislative victory by fulfilling one of his key campaign promises 92 On 8 July Zelenskyy ordered the cancellation of the annual Kyiv Independence Day Parade on Maidan Nezalezhnosti citing costs Despite this Zelenskyy highlighted that the day would honor heroes on Independence Day however the format will be new 93 94 He also proposed to spend the money that would have been used to finance the parade on veterans 95 In 2020 Zelenskyy s party proposed reforms to Ukraine s media laws with the intent to increase competition and loosen the dominance of Ukrainian oligarchs on television and radio broadcasters Critics said it risked increasing media censorship in Ukraine 96 because its clause of criminal responsibility for the distribution of disinformation could be abused 97 In January 2020 Zelenskyy took a trip to Oman that was not published on his official schedule appearing to combine a personal holiday with government business His office said Zelenskyy paid for the entire trip himself Nevertheless he was criticised for a lack of transparency and critics pointed out he had once criticized his predecessor Poroshenko for taking an undisclosed vacation in the Maldives 98 99 In January 2021 parliament passed a bill updating and reforming Ukraine s referendum laws 100 which Ukraine s Constitutional Court had declared unconstitutional in 2018 101 Fixing the referendum law had been one of Zelenskyy s campaign promises 100 In June 2021 Zelenskyy submitted to the Verkhovna Rada a bill creating a public registry of Ukraine s oligarchs banning them from participating in privatizations of state owned companies and forbidding them from contributing financially to politicians Opposition party leaders supported Zelenskyy s goal of reducing oligarchs influence on politics in Ukraine but were critical of his approach saying the public register would be both dangerous as it concentrated power in the president and ineffective since oligarchs were merely a symbol of more deeply rooted corruption 102 The bill was passed into law in September 2021 103 Critics of Zelenskyy s administration have claimed that in taking power away from the Ukrainian oligarchs he has sought to centralize authority and strengthen his personal position 104 Cabinets and administration Zelenskyy appointed Andriy Bohdan as head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine Prior to this Bohdan had been the lawyer of Ukrainian oligarch Ihor Kolomoyskyi 105 Under the rules of Lustration in Ukraine introduced in 2014 following Euromaidan Bohdan is not entitled to hold any state office until 2024 because of his government post during the Second Azarov Government 106 Bohdan however contended that because heading the presidential administration is not considered civil service work lustration did not apply to him 107 A number of the members of the Presidential Administration Zelenskyy appointed were former colleagues from his former production company Kvartal 95 105 including Ivan Bakanov who became deputy head of the Ukrainian Secret Service 108 Former deputy foreign minister Olena Zerkal declined an appointment as deputy head of the presidential administration but did agree to serve as the Ukrainian representative of the international courts concerning Russia 109 Zelenskyy s requests to replace the foreign minister defence minister chief prosecutor and head of Ukraine s security service were rejected by parliament 110 111 Zelenskyy also dismissed and replaced 20 of the governors of Ukraine s 24 oblasts 112 Honcharuk government Main article Honcharuk Government In the 21 July 2019 parliamentary election Zelenskyy s political party Servant of the People won the first single party majority in modern Ukrainian history in parliament with 43 per cent of the party list vote His party gained 254 of the 424 seats 113 Following the elections Zelenskyy nominated Oleksiy Honcharuk as prime minister who was quickly confirmed by parliament Parliament also confirmed Andrii Zahorodniuk as defence minister Vadym Prystaiko as foreign minister and Ivan Bakanov as head of the SBU 114 Arsen Avakov a controversial figure due to longstanding corruption allegations 115 was kept on as interior minister with Honcharuk arguing that the relatively inexperienced government needed experienced administrators and that Avakov had been drawn red lines that cannot be crossed 116 Zelenskyy dismissed Bohdan as head of his presidential administration on 11 February 2020 and appointed Andriy Yermak as his successor the same day 117 Shmyhal government See also Land reforms by country Ukraine and Shmyhal Government In March 2020 Honchurak resigned as prime minister following the leak of an audio recording in which he appeared to belittle Zelenskyy s economic management Honchurak was replaced as prime minister Denys Shmyhal 118 Honchurak s hasty departure caused disquiet both in Ukraine and abroad with many economists and political observers warning it would bring instability 119 In his 4 March address to the Rada 120 Zelenskyy recommitted to reforms domestic and financial and remarked that he cannot always become a psychologist for people a crisis manager for someone a collector who requires honestly earned money and a nanny of the ministry in charge citation needed By September 2020 Zelenskyy s approval ratings had fallen to less than 32 per cent 121 nbsp Zelenskyy and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan on 16 October 2020On 24 March 2021 Zelenskyy signed the Decree 117 2021 approving the strategy for de occupation and reintegration of the temporarily occupied territory of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol 122 Attempts to end the Donbas conflict One of Zelenskyy s central campaign promises had been to end the Russo Ukrainian War and resolve the Russia sponsored separatist movement there 123 On 3 June Zelenskyy appointed former president Leonid Kuchma as Ukraine s representative in the Tripartite Contact Group for a settlement in the conflict 124 On 11 July 2019 Zelenskyy held his first telephone conversation with Russian president Vladimir Putin during which he urged Putin to enter into talks mediated by European countries 125 126 The two leaders also discussed the exchange of prisoners held by both sides 126 In October 2019 Zelenskyy announced a preliminary deal struck with the separatists under which the Ukrainian government would respect elections held in the region in exchange for Russia withdrawing its unmarked troops 123 The deal was met with heavy criticism and protests by both politicians and the Ukrainian public Detractors noted that elections held in Donbas were unlikely to be free and fair that the separatists had long driven most pro Ukrainian residents out of the region to ensure a pro Russia majority and that it would be impossible to ensure Russia kept its end of the agreement 123 Zelenskyy defended his negotiations saying the elections would not be held before a Russian withdrawal 127 The agreement failed to ease the conflict as the separatists continued their attacks and Russia continued providing them with weapons and ammunition 128 Several Ukrainian nationalist militias and former militias also refused to accept the agreement including the far right Azov fighters in the Luhansk region of Donbas Zelenskyy met personally with some of these groups and tried to convince them to surrender their unregistered weapons and accept the peace accord Andriy Biletsky the leader of the far right National Corps and first commander of Azov accused Zelenskyy of being disrespectful to army veterans and of acting on behalf of the Kremlin by leaving Ukrainians vulnerable to Russian aggression 129 130 Ultimately the peace deal failed to reduce the violence much less end the war 128 In December 2019 Russia and Ukraine agreed to resume talks mediated by France and Germany under the so called Normandy Format which had been abandoned in 2016 it was Zelenskyy s first face to face meeting with Vladimir Putin 131 In July 2020 Zelenskyy announced a formal ceasefire with the separatists the more than twentieth such attempt since the war began in 2014 132 Although the ceasefire was frequently violated over the next few years and overall violence remained high ceasefire violations in 2020 did decrease by over 50 per cent compared to the previous year 133 UIA Flight 752 See also Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 On 8 January 2020 the Presidential Office announced that Volodymyr Zelenskyy was cutting short his trip to Oman owing to the Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 plane crash in nearby Iran the same day 134 Also on the same day internet news site Obozrevatel com released information that on 7 January 2020 Ukrainian politician of the Opposition Platform For Life Viktor Medvedchuk who has exclusive relations with the current president of Russia may have arrived in Oman 135 136 Soon rumors began that Zelenskyy may have had some additional meetings beside the ones that were announced 137 On 14 January 2020 Andriy Yermak dismissed the rumors as speculations and baseless conspiracy theories 138 while Medvedchuk stated that the plane was used by his older daughter s family to fly from Oman to Moscow 139 Later Yermak contacted the on line newspaper Ukrainian Truth and gave more details about the visit to Oman and the plane crash in Iran 140 On 17 January 2020 the presidential appointee Minister of Foreign Affairs Vadym Prystaiko was unable to give answers during the times of questions to the government in parliament when the people s deputies of Ukraine asked him about the visit s official agenda the invitation from Oman officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs who were preparing the visit as well as how the president actually crossed the border while visiting Oman 141 142 On 20 January 2020 Prystaiko followed up by giving a briefing to the press in the Office of the president of Ukraine and saying that he would explain everything about the visit when the time came 143 Foreign relations nbsp Zelenskyy and Azerbaijan s president Ilham Aliyev 17 December 2019 nbsp Zelenskyy with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu 24 January 2020 nbsp Zelenskyy and U S president Joe Biden 1 September 2021See also List of international presidential trips made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy Zelenskyy s first official trip abroad as president was to Brussels in June 2019 where he met with European Union and NATO officials 144 In August 2019 Zelenskyy promised to lift the moratorium on exhuming Polish mass graves in Ukraine after the previous Ukrainian government banned the Polish side from carrying out any exhumations of Polish victims of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army perpetrated Volhynian massacres following the removal of a memorial to the Ukrainian Insurgent Army in Hruszowice southeastern Poland 145 In September 2019 it was reported that U S president Donald Trump had allegedly blocked payment of a congressionally mandated 400 million military aid package to Ukraine to pressure Zelenskyy during a July phone call between the two presidents to investigate alleged wrongdoing by Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden 69 146 who took a board seat on Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings 147 This report was the catalyst for the Trump Ukraine scandal and the impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump Zelenskyy has denied that he was pressured by Trump and declared that he does not want to interfere in a foreign election 148 On a trip to the United States in September 2021 Zelenskyy engaged in talks and commitments with U S president Joe Biden 149 Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm 150 and Secretary of State Antony Blinken 151 President Zelenskyy and First Lady Olena Zelenska also took part in the opening of the Ukrainian House in Washington D C 150 On the same trip he met with Apple CEO Tim Cook 152 and with Ukrainians in senior positions at Silicon Valley tech companies 153 and spoke at Stanford University 154 While Zelenskyy was still in the U S just after delivering a speech at the United Nations an assassination attempt was made in Ukraine on Serhiy Shefir his closest aide Shefir was unhurt in the attack although his driver was hospitalized with three bullet wounds 155 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis Main article Prelude to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine In April 2021 in response to Russian military build up at the Ukrainian borders Zelenskyy spoke to American president Joe Biden and urged NATO members to speed up Ukraine s request for membership 156 nbsp Zelenskyy in the Donetsk region in June 2021On 26 November 2021 Zelenskyy accused Russia and Ukrainian oligarch Rinat Akhmetov of backing a plan to overthrow his government 157 Russia denied any involvement in a coup plot and Akhmetov said in a statement that the information made public by Volodymyr Zelenskiy about attempts to draw me into some kind of coup is an absolute lie I am outraged by the spread of this lie no matter what the president s motives are 158 159 In December 2021 Zelenskyy called for preemptive action against Russia 160 On 19 January 2022 Zelenskyy said in a video message that the country s citizens should not panic and appealed to the media to be methods of mass information and not mass hysteria 161 162 On 28 January Zelenskyy called on the West not to create a panic in his country over a potential Russian invasion adding that constant warnings of an imminent threat of invasion are putting the economy of Ukraine at risk 163 Zelenskyy said that we do not see a bigger escalation than in early 2021 when Russia s military build up started 164 Zelenskyy and U S president Joe Biden disagreed on how imminent the threat was 165 166 On 19 February as worries of a Russian invasion of Ukraine grew Zelenskyy warned the Munich Security Conference that Western nations should abandon their appeasement attitude toward Moscow Ukraine has been granted security assurances in exchange for giving up the world s third largest nuclear arsenal We don t have any firearms And there s no security But we have a right to urge a transformation from an appeasement policy to one that ensures security and peace he stated 167 In the early hours of 24 February shortly before the start of the Russian invasion Zelenskyy recorded an address to the citizens of both Ukraine and Russia He disputed claims of the Russian government about the presence of neo Nazis in the Ukrainian government and stated that he had no intention of attacking the Donbas region while highlighting his personal connections to the area 168 In part of the address he spoke in Russian to the people of Russia appealing to them to pressure their leadership to prevent war Who will suffer the most from this People Who does not want this more than anyone People Who can prevent this People Are these people present among you I am sure there are Public figures journalists musicians actors athletes scientists doctors bloggers stand up comedians Tik Tokers and many more Regular people Regular normal people Men women the elderly children fathers and most importantly mothers Just like people in Ukraine Just like the authorities in Ukraine no matter how much they try to convince you otherwise I know that they will not show this appeal of mine on Russian television But the citizens of Russia must see it They must know the truth And the truth is that this needs to stop before it is too late And if the Russian leadership does not want to sit down at the table with us for the sake of peace then perhaps they will sit down at the table with you Do Russians want war I would very much like to answer this question But the answer depends only on you the citizens of the Russian Federation The speech was widely described as emotional and astonishing 169 170 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Main article Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 present nbsp Verkhovna Rada chairman Ruslan Stefanchuk Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal after signing of the application for membership in the European Union during the war on 28 February 2022 nbsp President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visiting a military hospital for soldiers fighting in the Kyiv Oblast 13 MarchFirst phase Invasion of Ukraine 24 February 7 April On the morning of 24 February Putin announced that Russia was initiating a special military operation in the Donbas Russian missiles struck a number of military targets in Ukraine and Zelenskyy declared martial law 171 Zelenskyy also announced that diplomatic relations with Russia were being severed effective immediately 172 Later in the day he announced general mobilisation 173 On 25 February Zelenskyy said that despite Russia s claim that it was targeting only military sites civilian sites were also being hit 174 In an early morning address that day Zelenskyy said that his intelligence services had identified him as Russia s top target but that he is staying in Kyiv and his family will remain in the country They want to destroy Ukraine politically by destroying the head of state he said 175 In the early hours of 26 February during the most significant assault by Russian troops on the capital of Kyiv the United States government and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Zelenskyy to evacuate to a safer location and both offered assistance for such an effort Zelenskyy turned down both offers and opted to remain in Kyiv with its defense forces saying that the fight is here in Kyiv I need ammunition not a ride 176 177 178 More than 90 of Ukrainians supported the actions of Zelenskyy 179 including more than 90 in western and central Ukraine and more than 80 in Russian speaking regions in eastern and southern Ukraine 180 A Pew Research Center poll found that 72 of Americans had confidence in Zelenskyy s handling of international affairs 181 Zelenskyy has gained worldwide recognition as the wartime leader of Ukraine during the Russian invasion historian Andrew Roberts compared him to Winston Churchill 182 183 Harvard Political Review said that Zelenskyy has harnessed the power of social media to become history s first truly online wartime leader bypassing traditional gatekeepers as he uses the internet to reach out to the people 184 He has been described as a national hero or a global hero by many commentators including publications such as The Hill Deutsche Welle Der Spiegel and USA Today 182 185 186 187 BBC News and The Guardian have reported that his response to the invasion has received praise even from previous critics 178 188 During the invasion Zelenskyy has been reportedly the target of more than a dozen assassination attempts three were prevented due to tips from Russian FSB employees who opposed the invasion Two of those attempts were carried out by the Wagner Group a Russian paramilitary force and the third by the Kadyrovites the personal guard of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov 189 While speaking about Ukrainian civilians who were killed by Russian forces Zelenskyy said 190 We will not forgive We will not forget We will punish everyone who committed atrocities in this war We will find every scum who was shelling our cities our people who was shooting the missiles who was giving orders You will not have a quiet place on this earth except for a grave On 7 March 2022 Czech president Milos Zeman decided to award Zelenskyy with the highest state award of the Czech Republic the Order of the White Lion for his bravery and courage in the face of Russia s invasion 191 nbsp Zelenskyy with Polish Prime Minister Morawiecki Czech Prime Minister Fiala and Slovenian Prime Minister Jansa Kyiv 15 MarchZelenskyy has repeatedly called for direct talks with Russian president Vladimir Putin 192 saying Good Lord what do you want Leave our land If you don t want to leave now sit down with me at the negotiating table But not from 30 meters away like with Macron and Scholz I don t bite 193 Zelenskyy said he was 99 9 percent sure that Putin thought the Ukrainians would welcome the invading forces with flowers and smiles 194 On 7 March 2022 as a condition for ending the invasion the Kremlin demanded Ukraine s neutrality recognition of Crimea which had been annexed by Russia as Russian territory and recognition of the self proclaimed separatist republics of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent states 195 On 8 March Zelenskyy expressed willingness to discuss Putin s demands 192 Zelenskyy said he is ready for dialogue but not for capitulation 196 He proposed a new collective security agreement for Ukraine with the United States Turkey France Germany as an alternative to the country joining NATO 197 Zelenskyy s Servant of the People party said that Ukraine would not give up its claims on Crimea Donetsk and Luhansk 198 However Zelenskyy said that Ukraine was considering giving the Russian language protected minority status 199 nbsp Zelenskyy in the Kyiv Oblast following the recapture of the region by Ukraine 4 AprilOn 15 March 2022 Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki together with Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala and Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa visited Kyiv to meet with Zelenskyy in a display of support for Ukraine 200 On 16 March 2022 a deepfake appeared online of Zelenskyy calling on Ukrainian citizens to surrender to Russia The attack was largely deemed to have failed at its intended goal 201 The video is considered to be the first use of deepfake technology in a global scale disinformation attack 202 Zelenskyy has made an effort to rally the governments of Western nations in an effort to isolate Russia He has made numerous addresses to the legislatures of the EU 203 204 UK 205 Poland 206 Australia 207 Canada 208 US 209 Germany 210 Israel 211 Italy 212 Japan 213 the Netherlands 214 Romania 215 and the Nordic countries 216 217 218 On March 23 Zelenskyy was calling on Russians to emigrate from Russia so as not to finance the war in Ukraine with their taxes 219 In March 2022 Zelenskyy supported the suspension of 11 Ukrainian political parties with ties to Russia the Socialist Party of Ukraine Derzhava Left Opposition Nashi Opposition Bloc Opposition Platform For Life Party of Shariy Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine Union of Leftists and the Volodymyr Saldo Bloc 220 221 222 The Communist Party of Ukraine another pro Russia party had already been banned in 2015 because of its support to the Donbas separatists 223 Zelenskyy has also supported consolidating all TV news stations into a single 24 hour news broadcast run by the state of Ukraine 224 Second phase South Eastern front 8 April 5 September In April 2022 Zelenskyy criticized Germany s ties with Russia 225 In May 2022 Zelenskyy said that Ukrainian men of conscription age had a duty to remain in Ukraine and that up to 100 Ukrainian soldiers were killed every day in the fighting in eastern Ukraine He made the comment after he was asked about an online petition calling to lift a prohibition on Ukrainian men leaving Ukraine 226 227 As Zelenskyy ordered a general military mobilization in February 2022 he also banned men aged 18 to 60 from leaving Ukraine 228 In early June 2022 Zelenskyy s adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said that up to 200 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in combat every day 229 nbsp Zelenskyy awarding a soldier near the front line in the Kharkiv Oblast 29 MayZelenskyy denounced suggestions by former US diplomat Henry Kissinger that Ukraine should cede control of Crimea and Donbas to Russia in exchange for peace 230 On 25 May 2022 he said that Ukraine would not agree to peace until Russia agreed to return Crimea and the Donbas region to Ukraine 231 However he later said he did not believe that all the land seized by Russia since 2014 which includes Crimea could be recaptured by force saying that If we decide to go that way we will lose hundreds of thousands of people 232 On 3 May 2022 Zelenskyy accused Turkey of having double standards by welcoming Russian tourists while attempting to act as an intermediary between Russia and Ukraine in order to end the war 233 On 25 May 2022 Zelenskyy said that he was satisfied with China s policy of staying away from the conflict 234 In August 2022 he said China had the economic leverage to pressure Putin to end the war adding I m sure that without the Chinese market for the Russian Federation Russia would be feeling complete economic isolation That s something that China can do to limit the trade with Russia until the war is over According to Zelenskyy since the beginning of the invasion Chinese President Xi Jinping had refused to speak with him 235 On 30 May 2022 Zelenskyy criticized EU leaders for being too soft on Russia and asked Why can Russia still earn almost a billion euros a day by selling energy 236 The study published by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air CREA calculates that the EU paid Russia about 56 billion for fossil fuel deliveries in the three months following the start of Russia s invasion 237 nbsp Zelenskyy visiting a school in Irpin in Bucha Raion on the occasion of Knowledge Day on 1 September 2022On 20 June 2022 Zelenskyy addressed African Union AU representatives via videoconference He invited African leaders to a virtual meeting but only four of them attended 238 On 20 July 2022 South America s Mercosur trade bloc refused Zelenskyy s request to speak at the trade bloc s summit in Paraguay 239 Third phase Counteroffensives and annexations 6 September present Speaking about the 2022 Russian mobilization Zelenskyy called on Russians to not submit to criminal mobilization saying Russian commanders do not care about the lives of Russians they just need to replenish the empty spaces left by killed and wounded Russian soldiers 240 Following Putin s announcement of Russia annexing four regions of Ukrainian territory it had seized during its invasion Zelenskyy announced that Ukraine would not hold peace talks with Russia while Putin was president 241 On 25 September 2022 Zelenskyy said that Putin s threats to use nuclear weapons could be a reality He added that Putin wants to scare the whole world with nuclear blackmail 242 He also said that Putin is aware that the world will never forgive a Russian nuclear strike 243 When asked what kind of relationship Ukrainians and Ukraine will have with Russia after the war Zelenskyy replied that They took too many people too many lives The society will not forgive them adding that It will be the choice of our society whether to talk to them or not to talk at all and for how many years tens of years or more 244 On 21 December 2022 Zelenskyy visited the United States on his first foreign trip since the war began 245 246 He met with President Joe Biden and addressed Congress delivering his full speech in English The United States announced they would supply Patriot missiles to Ukraine as had been requested 247 nbsp Zelenskyy at the UN Security Council in New York City on 20 September 2023In May 2023 he visited the International Criminal Court in The Hague and said he would like to see Russian President Vladimir Putin stand trial for war crimes committed during the war in Ukraine 248 including the crime of aggression 249 On 19 September 2023 in a speech to the UN General Assembly Zelenskyy called on neutral countries in Latin America Africa and Asia to abandon their neutrality and support Ukraine 250 In October 2023 after the Hroza missile attack he criticized countries supporting Russia saying all those who help Russia circumvent sanctions are criminals 251 Zelenskyy condemned Hamas actions during the 2023 Israel Hamas war and expressed his support to Israel and its right to self defense 252 Political viewsEconomic issues In a mid June interview with BIHUS info uk a representative of the president of Ukraine at the Cabinet of Ministers Andriy Herus stated that Zelenskyy had never promised to lower communal tariffs but that a campaign video in which Zelenskyy stated that the price of natural gas in Ukraine could fall by 20 30 per cent or maybe more was a not a direct promise but actually half hinting and joking 253 Zelenskyy s election manifesto mentioned tariffs only once that money raised from a capital amnesty would go towards lowering the tariff burden on low income citizens 254 255 Foreign policy nbsp Zelenskyy and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson paying tribute to fallen Ukrainian soldiers in Kyiv on 17 June 2022 nbsp Zelenskyy with Joe Biden Rishi Sunak Giorgia Meloni and Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the 2023 Vilnius summitDuring his presidential campaign Zelenskyy said that he supported Ukraine s becoming a member of the European Union and NATO but he said Ukrainian voters should decide on the country s membership of these two organisations in referendums 256 At the same time he believed that the Ukrainian people had already chosen eurointegration 256 257 Zelenskyy s close advisor Ivan Bakanov also said that Zelenskyy s policy is supportive of membership of both the EU and NATO and proposes holding referendums on membership 258 Zelenskyy s electoral programme claimed that Ukrainian NATO membership is the choice of the Maidan and the course that is enshrined in the Constitution in addition it is an instrument for strengthening our defense capability 259 The program states that Ukraine should set the goal to apply for a NATO Membership Action Plan in 2024 259 The programme also states that Zelenskyy will do everything to ensure that Ukraine can apply for European Union membership in 2024 260 Two days before the second round Zelenskyy stated that he wanted to build a strong powerful free Ukraine which is not the younger sister of Russia which is not a corrupt partner of Europe but our independent Ukraine 261 In October 2020 he spoke in support of Azerbaijan in regards to the Nagorno Karabakh war between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenians over the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh Zelenskyy said We support Azerbaijan s territorial integrity and sovereignty just as Azerbaijan always supports our territorial integrity and sovereignty 262 In February 2022 he applied for Ukraine to join the European Union 263 264 Zelenskyy has tried to position Ukraine as a neutral party in the political and trade tensions between the United States and China In January 2021 Zelenskyy said in an interview with Axios that he does not perceive China as a geopolitical threat and that he does not agree with the United States assertions that it represents one 265 Russo Ukrainian War Further information Russo Ukrainian War nbsp Zelenskyy and Russian president Putin meeting in Paris on 9 December 2019 in the Normandy Format aimed at ending the war in DonbasZelenskyy supported the late 2013 and early 2014 Euromaidan movement During the war in Donbas he actively supported the Ukrainian army 34 Zelenskyy helped fund a volunteer battalion fighting on Donbas 266 In a 2014 interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda v Ukraine Zelenskyy said that he would have liked to pay a visit to Crimea but would avoid it because armed people are there 267 In August 2014 Zelenskyy performed for Ukrainian troops in Mariupol and later his studio donated 1 million to the Ukrainian army 268 Regarding the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea Zelenskyy said that speaking realistically it would be possible to return Crimea to Ukrainian control only after a regime change in Russia 269 In an interview in December 2018 with Ukrainska Pravda Zelenskyy stated that as president he would try to end the ongoing war in Donbas by negotiating with Russia 270 As he considered the leaders of the Donetsk People s Republic and the Luhansk People s Republic DPR and LPR to be Russia s puppets it would make no sense to speak with them 270 He did not rule out holding a referendum on the issue 270 In an interview published three days before the 2019 presidential election on 21 April Zelenskyy stated that he was against granting the Donbas region special status 271 In the interview he also said that if he were elected president he would not sign a law on amnesty for the militants of the DPR and LPR 271 In response to suggestions to the contrary he stated in April 2019 that he regarded Russian president Vladimir Putin as an enemy 272 On 2 May 2019 Zelenskyy wrote on Facebook that the border is the only thing Russia and Ukraine have in common 273 Zelenskyy opposes the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany calling it a dangerous weapon not only for Ukraine but for the whole of Europe 274 On 25 May 2022 Zelenskyy said that Ukraine will fight until it regains all its territories 275 Zelenskyy has described the extensive environmental damage from the war as an environmental bomb of mass destruction and an ecocide a crime in Ukraine and has met with prominent European politicians and others to discuss the environmental damage 276 277 278 279 280 Government reform nbsp Zelenskyy with NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg in June 2019During the presidential campaign Zelenskyy promised bills to fight corruption including removal of immunity from the president of the country members of the Verkhovna Rada the Ukrainian parliament and judges a law about impeachment reform of election laws and providing efficient trial by jury He promised to bring the salary for military personnel to the level of NATO standards 281 Although Zelenskyy prefers elections with open list election ballots after he called the snap 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election his draft law On amendments to some laws of Ukraine in connection with the change of the electoral system for the election of people s deputies proposed to hold the election with closed list because the 60 day term to the snap election did not leave any chances for the introduction of this system 282 Social issues nbsp Zelenskyy and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow November 2021Zelenskyy opposed targeting the Russian language in Ukraine and banning artists for their political opinions such as those viewed by the Government as anti Ukrainian 283 284 In April 2019 he stated that he was not against a Ukrainian language quota on radio and TV although he noted they could be tweaked 285 He also said that Russian artists who have turned into anti Ukrainian politicians should remain banned from entering Ukraine 271 In response to a petition demanding equal rights for same sex couples Zelenskyy echoed the view that family does not depend on sex and asked the Prime Minister of Ukraine to review civil partnerships for same sex couples With regards to same sex marriage Zelenskyy cited a provision in the Constitution of Ukraine barring same sex marriage as well as a ban on wartime changes to the Constitution ruling out an introduction of same sex marriages during the ongoing war 286 287 Civil rights organizations praised the statement though criticizing its vagueness as Zelenskyy had avoided giving any details about legal proposals for civil partnerships 288 On 2 December 2022 Zelenskyy entered a bill to the Verkhovna Rada that would officially ban all activities of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate UOC in Ukraine 289 Personal life nbsp Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Olena Zelenska in 2019 parliamentary electionIn September 2003 Zelenskyy married Olena Kiyashko with whom he had attended school and university 290 291 Kiyashko worked as a scriptwriter at Kvartal 95 292 The couple s first daughter Oleksandra was born in July 2004 Their son Kyrylo was born in January 2013 In Zelenskyy s 2014 movie 8 New Dates their daughter played Sasha the daughter of the protagonist In 2016 she participated in the show The Comedy Comet Company Comedy s Kids and won 50 000 19 The family lives in Kyiv 291 Zelenskyy s first language is Russian and he is also fluent in Ukrainian and English 293 294 295 296 His assets were worth about 37 million about US 1 5 million in 2018 297 Achievements awards and recognitionAwards and decorations In 2022 British newspaper Financial Times 298 and US magazine Time both selected Zelenskyy as Person of the Year 299 nbsp Ukraine Honorary Diploma of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine 2003 300 nbsp Czech Republic nbsp Member 1st Class of the Order of the White Lion 2022 301 nbsp Estonia Order of the Tallinn Coat of Arms et 2022 nbsp France nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Legion of Honour 2023 302 nbsp Germany Charlemagne Prize 2023 303 nbsp Latvia nbsp Member 1st Class of the Order of Viesturs 2022 304 nbsp Lithuania nbsp Order of Vytautas the Great with the Golden Chain 2022 305 nbsp Poland Jan Karski Eagle Award 2022 306 nbsp Knight of the Order of the White Eagle 2022 307 308 309 nbsp Portugal nbsp Grand Collar of the Order of Liberty 2023 310 nbsp Slovakia State Award of Alexander Dubcek 2022 311 nbsp United Kingdom Sir Winston Churchill Leadership Award 2022 312 nbsp United States nbsp Ronald Reagan Freedom Award 2022 313 John F Kennedy Profile in Courage Award 2022 314 nbsp Philadelphia Liberty Medal 2022 315 Ripple of Hope Award 2022 316 Species named after Zelenskyy Ausichicrinites zelenskyyi an extinct species of feather star described on 20 July 2022 by a group of Polish paleontologists is named after Zelenskyy for his courage and bravery in defending free Ukraine 317 318 Selected filmography nbsp The film premiere of I You He SheFilms Year Title Role2004 Three Musketeers writer d Artagnan2009 Love in the Big City Igor2010 Love in the Big City 2 Igor2011 Office Romance Our Time Anatoly Efremovich Novoseltsev2012 Rzhevsky Versus Napoleon Napoleon8 First Dates Nikita Sokolov2014 Love in Vegas Igor ZelenskyyPaddington Ukrainian dub Paddington Bear voice 319 2015 8 New Dates Nikita Andreevich Sokolov2016 8 Best Dates Nikita Andreevich SokolovServant of the People 2 Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko2018 I You He She Maksym Tkachenko2023 Superpower himself short interviews with Sean PennTelevision shows and appearances Year Title Role Notes2006 Dancing with the Stars Ukraine as contestant2008 2012 Svaty In Laws as producer2015 2019 Servant of the People Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko2022 64th Annual Grammy Awards Guest appearance Special message as President of Ukraine2023 12th Annual NFL Honors Guest appearance Special message as President of Ukraine 320 PublicationZelensky Volodymyr 2022 A Message From Ukraine Speeches 2019 2022 London Hutchinson Heinemann ISBN 978 1 52 915354 5 a collection of sixteen of Zelenskyy s speeches Notes Ukrainian Volodimir Oleksandrovich Zelenskij pronounced woloˈdɪmɪr olekˈsɑndrowɪdʒ zeˈlɛnʲsʲkɪj Zelenskyy s name lacks an established Latin alphabet spelling and it has been romanized in various ways for example Volodymyr Zelensky or Zelenskyi from Ukrainian or Vladimir Zelenskiy from Russian 2 Zelenskyy is the transliteration on his passport and his administration has used it since he assumed the presidency in 2019 2 3 Since 2015 Ukraine has banned Russian artists and other Russian works of culture from entering Ukraine 40 From 21 January until 18 April 2019 Zelenskyy did not give interviews 59 References Zelenskij Volodimir Oleksandrovich Elections of the President of Ukraine 2019 Central Election Commission Ukraine in Ukrainian Archived from the original on 14 February 2022 Retrieved 10 March 2022 a b Dickinson Peter 9 June 2019 Zelensky Zelenskiy Zelenskyy Spelling Confusion Doesn t Help Ukraine Atlantic Council Archived from the original on 11 June 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2019 Mendel Iuliia IuliiaMendel 10 June 2019 Dear colleagues this is the official form of the last name that the President has in his passport This was decided by the passport service of Ukraine The President won t be offended if BBC standards assume different transliteration Tweet Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 10 June 2019 via Twitter a b Hosa Joanna Wilson Andrew 25 September 2019 Zelensky Unchained What Ukraine s New Political Order Means For Its Future Report European Council on Foreign Relations JSTOR resrep21659 Archived from the original on 9 March 2022 Retrieved 10 February 2022 Ukraine Lifts Prosecutorial Immunity For Members Of Parliament Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 19 December 2019 Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Peleschuk Dan 15 April 2021 Ukraine s anti corruption effort struggles but soldiers on Eurasianet Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Wilson Andrew 6 July 2021 Faltering fightback Zelensky s piecemeal campaign against Ukraine s oligarchs Report European Council on Foreign Relations JSTOR resrep33811 Archived from the original on 26 February 2022 Retrieved 10 February 2022 Khalaf Roula Miller Christopher Hall Ben 5 December 2022 FT Person of the Year Volodymyr Zelenskyy I am more responsible than brave Financial Times Retrieved 15 December 2022 Lutsevych Orysia 16 November 2021 Ukraine still backs Zelenskyy despite slow progress Chatham House Archived from the original on 17 November 2021 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Conflict in Ukraine Global Conflict Tracker Archived from the original on 23 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Seibt Sebastian 18 February 2022 Military tactics Zelensky plays both sides in Ukrainian crisis France 24 Archived from the original on 18 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Ledwidge Frank 3 March 2022 Ukraine war what are Russia s strategic aims and how effectively are they achieving them The Conversation Archived from the original on 4 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 The courage of Ukraine s unlikely wartime leader Financial Times 15 March 2022 Archived from the original on 17 March 2022 Retrieved 15 March 2022 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