試す - 無料

Forget the Trump noisepeace could now be possible

The London Standard

|

March 06, 2025

There's much to fixate on, but it's best to judge the President on the substance

- Melanie McDonagh

Forget the Trump noisepeace could now be possible

Pity the Oscars. There they were thinking they were hogging the stage for sheer compelling screen time — the frocks! The gum-throwing! The big, shocking reveals! Jeff Bezos at

the after-parties! But we all knew different. The most outrageously compelling watch was the incendiary White House showdown between Ukraine’s President Zelensky and President Trump and his V-P JD Vance. Then it was over to Keir Starmer to provide a more muted spectacle — from accompanying him to his car to the supportive hand on his shoulder. It was all a riveting display, because it was for real.

Can we take it as read that most of us were watching between our fingers as the Trump and Vance versus Zelensky confrontation unfolded on Friday? It was partly the fact that it was two against one; partly that the Ukrainian president was shouted down; partly the failure to acknowledge that Ukraine had indeed been the victim of aggression; partly the sheer petulance of Vance’s pronouncement: “You never said thank you.”

Actually, Vance was the real disappointment: there we were — I can’t have been alone — thinking that the author of Hillbilly Elegy, the underdog made good, the thoughtful one, would have been an influence for restraint on the flammable president, and there he was, looking like the school bully’s best friend.

Many of us, then, will be inclined to think that it’s the Europeans who are the grown-ups in this debacle, trying their best to restrain the wayward, unpredictable, unhappily crucial US president, while Starmer and Emmanuel Macron cobble together some sort of framework for a deal that includes the Ukrainian president.

Thinking the unthinkable

The London Standard からのその他のストーリー

The London Standard

The London Standard

The philosopher who says big tech has got it wrong on superintelligence

Where does science end and philosophy begin?

time to read

2 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

The bitter battle over the future of Truman Brewery

A £500m redevelopment plan is pitting Labour's data-centre ambitions against Brick Lane's heritage and a desperate need for housing — it's a political powder keg.

time to read

5 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Goldin's family album is as radical as ever

Diaries are irresistible to the nosy, an artist's one even more so. They are portals into another person's life in another time.

time to read

3 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Bathroom confidential: inside the calming sanctums of London's top hair and beauty experts

Fancy your own private ritual space at home? Then take a few tips from these masters of elegant self-care.

time to read

6 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Revival of an American classic is a luridly weird study in power dynamics

A study of two damaged brothers whose lives are disrupted by an outsider, Lyle Kessler's blend of absurdism and realism could be a Philadelphia-set companion to Pinter's The Caretaker.

time to read

1 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Ex-tennis star Andy Murray celebrates at Nobu, shops at Whole Foods and dates at... McDonald's

The Tube has become so much easier for me now people don't look up from their phones

time to read

3 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

London's hottest postcodes

THE NEIGHBOURHOODS WHERE DEMAND FOR HOMES IS AT FEVER PITCH. BY ANNA WHITE

time to read

3 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

How to style out your great winter escape

Whether it's swimming, skiing or sandalling, here's every label you need to know for a super-chic holiday wardrobe update

time to read

3 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Pilates queen Bryony Deery

The mind-body expert has a morning ritual, but with soundbaths and sleep supplements her evening routine is where it gets serious

time to read

3 mins

January 15, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

My adult gap year changed my life — I fell in love with the whole crazy world again

didn't imagine I'd meet the man I would marry in a queue for the long drop on the side of a mountain in Peru.

time to read

4 mins

January 15, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size