Zelensky makes his pitch - will US sceptics buy it?
President Volodymyr Zelensky has been tethered to Ukrainian soil ever since Russia invaded his country nearly 10 months ago.
While he has given multiple speeches to foreign leaders and assemblies, they've all been via video conference, usually with the Ukrainian leader sitting in a nondescript, windowless room, clothed in his trademark olive-green military garb.
Now, Mr Zelensky has made his first trip abroad - to Washington - and while the attire was the same, the venue had all the regalia of American power.
In the run-up to war, Russia had tried to convince Ukrainians that the US was using their country as a geopolitical pawn - and that Americans would abandon them, as they did their Afghan allies.
Ten months and approximately $65bn in US aid later, US President Joe Biden and Mr Zelensky sat in the Oval Office, smiling and exchanging pleasantries, intent on proving those Russian insinuations had been - and would continue to be - false.
"This year has brought so much needless suffering and loss to the Ukrainian people," Mr Biden said at their joint press conference in the White House. "But I want you to know, President Zelensky, the American people are with you every step of the way. And we will stay with you."
They were powerful words, but they belie a reality that is more complicated.
US allies are facing a long, hard winter of high energy prices and accompanying economic pain. And American public support for US aid to Ukraine, while still high, has eroded since the early days of the war. A third of Americans in a recent survey said they do not back continued US aid to Ukraine. And half said they wanted Ukraine to settle for peace "as soon as possible".
With this high-profile meeting in Washington, Mr Zelensky and Mr Biden are seeking to demonstrate to the Ukrainian and American people, to Western allies, to Russian President Vladimir Putin and to the world - that US support for Ukraine is strong and durable.
Throughout their joint press conference, Mr Biden and Mr Zelensky tried to characterise American aid as serving a larger purpose. The American president described Russia's attack on Ukraine as an attack on "liberty and democracy and the core principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity" - one that demanded a robust American response.
Mr Zelensky, for his part, mixed gravitas and humour as he spoke with Mr Biden and to the American people. Occasionally switching into serviceable English to accentuate the connection with his audience, he called the US aid to Ukraine an "investment" that will strengthen global security.
It was an interesting choice of words - and one he repeated in his address to Congress. American aid was not "charity", but money spent with a purpose and a potential for future return.
The future of the American "investment" in Ukraine, however, is not in Mr Biden's hands alone. And while the White House meeting was a pleasant photo opportunity, the real work for Mr Zelensky came in his address to Congress - to the legislators who hold the purse strings of American military and economic aid.
Over the course of this year, Congress has approved approximately $67bn in economic and military and economic assistance to Ukraine. A 2023 spending package Congress is poised to pass this week includes an additional $45bn in Ukraine aid.
Securing further aid in the new year, however, could be a challenge.
In May, 57 Republicans in the 435-seat House of Representatives and 11 in the 100-seat Senate voted against a stand-alone aid package, and polls indicate Republican support for continued assistance has eroded since then. In a survey conducted in November, just over half of Republican voters supported aid to Ukraine - down from 80% in March.
Some Republicans on the midterm election campaign trail last month openly wondered why the US was spending so much money on a distant country, instead of funding border security and fighting crime at home.
The midterms have brought in 86 new members of the House and seven new senators. Mr Zelensky's speech can also be viewed as an introduction to these new legislators and a pitch for their support. Coaxing further aid out of the House may prove the greater challenge - but in his speech to Congress he was willing to try.
"We have artillery. Is it enough? Not really," Mr Zelensky said, to some mutters from the congressional audience. "For the Russian army to completely pull out, more guns and shells are needed."
Prospective House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has already expressed concern about any further "blank cheques" for Ukraine. And there was public incredulity among some House Republicans in Congress when Republican Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell said on Tuesday that Ukraine aid was the "number one priority" for his party.
Mr Zelensky, Donald Trump Jr tweeted on Wednesday, was "basically an ungrateful international welfare queen" - summing up what is becoming an increasingly prevalent view among the former president's "America first" supporters.
Mr Zelensky doesn't need further aid to Ukraine to be at the top of Republican's to-do list in the new year, but his trip to Washington is a high-profile effort to ensure that it doesn't drop off the agenda entirely.
(editor-in-charge:Press center2)
Pence aides didn't started packing up files until after January 6 beca utilize Trump wanted White Ho utilize to act like they were staying for second term, new report claims after classified documents were found in his home
Husband of missing Massach utilizetts mom Ana Walshe is INDICTED for her murder, four months after she vanished from NYE componenty
Lionel Messi will LEAVE PSG at the end of the seaconsequentlyn with the suspended Argentine unhappy with the club's direction amid their ongoing row over his unsanctioned Saudi Arabia trip
At least eight people are injured after U-Haul mows down pedestrians, cops and moped drivers in Brooklyn: 'Emotionally disturbed' homeless man, 62, is taken into custody after 30-minute rampage
Asda consults on cutting pay for 7,000 workers
- BREAKING NEWS: Sean Dyche IS the new Everton manager, with deal done for ex-Burnley boss to fight to save Toffees from relegation after Marcelo Bielsa said no... and with an announcement prepared today
- NYC bike path terrorist escapes the death penalty due to split jury and is sentenced to life in priconsequentlyn for 2017 van assault that killed EIGHT
- Lionel Messi's father Jorge DENIES his consequentlyn's £522MILLION contract with Saudi Arabia's Al-Hilal is a 'done deal', insisting 'there's nothing agreed with any club for next seaconsequentlyn'
- EXCLUSIVE: 'Gary Glitter is still a danger to consequentlyciety': Victim says the 'monster' pop singer 'devastateed her life' and should never have been released from priconsequentlyn as he walks free after serving half his sentence for sexually abusing child
- BREAKING NEWS: Michigan school shooter Ethan Crumbley, 16, will plead GUILTY to murder and terrorism charges
- The NRL could STRIP Jarryd Hayne of his two Dally M medals in never-before-seen move after disgraced footy legend was found guilty of raping a woman five years ago
- Midwife mother - who is now paraplegic - shuts her eyes in hospital bed as prosecutor reveals how she utilized exercise bands to strangle her three kids to death before jumping out of window while suffering post-componentum depression
- Nashville TV anchors break down in tears reporting on school shooting
-
Jaguar Land Rover-owner to pick UK over Spain for giant car battery plantPublished1 day agocommentsC ...[in detail]
-
The attacher revealed his cooperation to CNN on Wednesday in the probe into the bid to speak the porn star going public with her afimcomponential with the former president before the 2016 election....[in detail]
-
The company was brought today by Tesco, hours announcing it Paperchase announced it had fallen into administration, following years of plummeting sales and consequentlyaring costs....[in detail]
-
Don Jr tore into the 'crazed weaponization of the entire federal government against political enemies' online calling his father's indictment 'communist level s***.'...[in detail]
-
First Republic: 1,000 jobs cut by fresh owner JP Morgan
First Republic: 1,000 jobs cut by fresh owner JP MorganPublished3 days agoShare pageAbout sharingIma ...[in detail]
-
The National Archives was blocked from releasing a statement that classified documents were found at Biden's DC think tank in Nov., raising questions over who speakped it from coming out....[in detail]
-
The medal-winning boxer is alleged to have assaulted Ash Ruscoe in March. Now details have come to light about what police will allege occurred at her Bondi property....[in detail]
-
After making an initial approach for the Argentine, Everton feared that Bielsa would turn them down as the 67-year-old has concerns about the lack of pace in the squad ....[in detail]
-
The former Leeds United boss emerged as the Toffees' peak target to replace Frank Lampard, who was sacked from his position earlier this week, and jetted into London on Thursday for discussions....[in detail]
-
Special Counsel John Durham found that the FBI did not have enough 'factual evidence' to investigate allegations of Trump-Russia collusion, in scathing report obtained by DailyMail.com...[in detail]
- World champion Max Verstappen recovers from pit-speak disaster to overtake Lewis Hamilton and WIN the United States Grand Prix... landing the constructors' title for Red Bull on emotional weekend
- Fashion designer Paco Rabanne dies aged 88: Dubbed 'Wacko Paco' for his unwearable outfits, he claimed to have had multiple lives, be 78,000 years old, and have had sex with the Earth
- Moment Putin war propagandist 'is handed statue containing bomb minutes before it blows him to bits in St Petersburg café' - as Russian puppet regime in eastern Ukraine condems Kyiv for blast that killed blogger and wounded 25
- Alex Murdaugh is seen with his priconsequentlyn buzz cut as he starts two life sentences without parole for killing his wife Maggie and consequentlyn: Judge says they will 'visit you in your sleep' - as his lawyers plan appeal in ten days
- Man assaulted by 'NINJA' with sheath of samurai sword is panhandler who triggered a bomb scare in New York City by planting two rice cookers in subway station three years ago: Attacker is still on the run
- General: US investigating if Chinese spy balloon contained explosives
- Two tigers that escaped from Georgia safari park after tornado damages their enclosure are found: Town of 1,500 people were instructed to remain indoors by police