President Donald Trump’s recent meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, alongside European leaders in Washington, was cast as a step toward peace. The gathering focused on security guarantees, weapons packages, and the prospect of negotiations with Russia. Yet the loudest voices in mainstream media rushed to declare the meeting a failure. That is not a fact—it is an opinion dressed up as news.

The reality is more straightforward. This is not America’s war. Ukraine borders Poland, Slovakia, Romania, and Hungary—not the United States. The threat is immediate for Europe, not for America. But over the last several years, Washington has poured more than $170 billion into this conflict, taken from the pockets of hardworking Americans whose own communities face failing schools, unsafe streets, and crumbling infrastructure.

The media prefers to measure success in terms of victory parades or sweeping agreements, but that misunderstands the situation. Trump’s meeting with Zelensky exposed what many in Washington avoid saying aloud: there will be no decisive victory. Ukraine cannot defeat Russia outright without endless subsidies, and Russia cannot be driven out without concessions. What the public has been sold as a noble fight for democracy is, in reality, a costly stalemate.

Calling the meeting a failure ignores what actually happened. Trump pressed European leaders to take responsibility. He floated a $90–100 billion weapons package to be funded by Europe and pushed for NATO-style security guarantees that Europe, not America, would have to enforce. For decades, America has acted as Europe’s defense department while European governments invested in their own welfare states. Asking Europe to finally shoulder the burden is not a failure—it is a necessary shift.

Read: Trump and Putin in Alaska: Why Talking Peace Is Better Than More War

Americans should care about these talks, but not for the reasons television commentators insist. The real concern is not who controls territory in Donbas or Crimea. The concern is the money already spent. Billions that could have repaired highways, modernized classrooms, or lowered the national debt have instead financed a war thousands of miles away. Every dollar spent abroad is a dollar not invested at home.

Trump, Zelensky, and Europe’s leaders may call this a push for peace, and perhaps it is. But peace will not come from more American checks. It will come when Europe accepts responsibility for its own security and when America stops treating foreign wars as its own burden.

The meeting was not a failure—it was a moment of clarity. And clarity, not illusions, is what America needs.

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