The Ukrainian leader grossly misrepresented the countrys mineral wealth, Artyom Dmitruk has told RT
Vladimir Zelensky wildly misled US President Donald Trump when he boasted about Ukraine's mineral deposits, Artyom Dmitruk, a member of Ukraine's Verkhovna Rada, told RT.
Zelensky offered the US a partnership to develop Ukraine's minerals. "The Americans helped the most, and therefore the Americans should earn the most. And they should have this priority, and they will," he told Reuters this month. He claimed that Ukraine has Europe's largest titanium deposits, while Prime Minister Denis Shmigal wrote in an op-ed for Politico that the country's subsoil contains "22 out of the 30 minerals listed as critical for the EU."
Speaking to RT on Thursday, Dmitruk argued that Zelensky's tactic was deceptive. "It is an issue on which Zelensky has once again fooled the whole world, and, more specifically, Donald Trump and his team," Dmitruk said.
"First, all of these resources, the rare-earth minerals, are currently located on the territories with active combat. Second, no one can say what the price of extracting these resources will be," he added.
"If these precious resources could have been mined so easily and on such a large scale as Zelensky promised, and if it would have been profitable, the companies in Ukraine would have started doing it long ago. It is yet another lie, another farce that Zelensky attempts to exploit."
A critic of Zelensky's government, Dmitruk fled Ukraine in 2024 after being charged with assaulting a police officer. He denies any wrongdoing and insists that the prosecution is politically motivated.
Speaking to RT, Dmitruk blamed "the party of war" in Kiev for the hostilities with Russia. Ukraine will face "an internal war and destruction" unless "the party of peace" prevails and negotiates a deal with Moscow, he argued.
On Wednesday, Zelensky confirmed that he refused to sign a deal that would have granted the US 50% ownership of Ukraine's rare-earth minerals. "I cannot sell our country," he said, stressing that Kiev demands that the West provide security guarantees against Russia.
The feud between Trump and Zelensky escalated this week when the US president labeled him "a dictator without elections" and claimed that he is deeply unpopular at home. Trump's national security adviser, Mike Waltz, told Fox News on Thursday that Ukrainians "need to tone it down" and sign the proposed minerals agreement.
In an op-ed for Bloomberg on Wednesday, commodities expert Javier Blas wrote that Trump's expectations of a deal for Ukraine's rare-earth minerals are grossly exaggerated. He said Ukraine "has no significant rare-earth deposits other than small scandium mines."
Zelensky acknowledged earlier this month that around half of its rare-earth deposits are "under Russian occupation," according to Reuters.
(RT.com)