Zelensky
Suits Up for Trump
Months
after a disastrous visit to the White House, the Ukrainian president had a
whole new look.
Vanessa
Friedman
By
Vanessa Friedman
Aug. 18,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/18/us/zelensky-suit-trump-meeting.html
New
negotiation, new look. When President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine arrived at
the White House on Monday to meet with President Trump, he had swapped the
military-style clothing that has been his de facto uniform since the war with
Russia began in 2022, for a more statesmanlike ensemble: black field jacket,
black shirt and black slacks.
Was it an
early sign he was ready to make some concessions?
That may
seem a ridiculous question. But Mr. Trump is someone who cares deeply about the
ceremony and trappings of office — its regalia, gilt, and even souvenir pins —
and since the start of the war Mr. Zelensky has made his look part of his
message.
Indeed,
during his first, famously acrimonious meeting with Mr. Trump in February, Mr.
Zelensky’s chosen attire — a black long-sleeved polo shirt with the Ukrainian
trident as a crest and matching fatigue-like trousers — became not only a
talking point but, in the view of some Trump officials, a seeming symbol of his
refusal to kowtow to the White House.
Mr. Trump
commented sarcastically on the look as soon as Mr. Zelensky arrived, and a
reporter later implied in a question that the Ukrainian president had been
demonstrating disrespect-through-dress — even though there should have been no
real mystery about what Mr. Zelensky was going to wear.
He had,
after all, made a point of wearing pretty much the same thing no matter where
he was for three years: an olive green or black shirt or sweater, pants, and
combat boots. The look served as both a visual reminder of his status as a
wartime president, and show of solidarity with the men and women fighting for
his country.
He had
worn olive green, for example, to the Oval Office to meet with President Joseph
R. Biden and to address Congress in 2022. He had done the same for a speech to
the European Parliament in 2023, and to meet with King Charles III in 2024.
Thus, despite the fact the White House had reportedly reached out before the
first meeting to inquire about whether Mr. Zelensky was going to wear a suit
(reflecting the fact it clearly mattered to Mr. Trump), there was little doubt
that he would, as he did, stick to his own program.
Not so
much any more.
The new
look black jacket first appeared in April, when Mr. Zelensky and his wife,
Olena Zelenska, attended the funeral of Pope Francis. For that occasion, the
Ukrainian president wore a custom-made look by the Kyiv-based designer Viktor
Anisimov (who also designed the opening ceremony looks for the Ukrainian
Paralympic team). The clothing was part of a larger capsule collection
commissioned by Mr. Zelensky’s team and designed to combine some of the
semiology of the battlefield — patch pockets, a higher neckline — with that of
the suit.
At the
time, Mr. Anisimov told WWD that the goal was to reimagine the military uniform
“in order to create a restrained, functional, and dignified image that reflects
the reality of the time our country is living through.”
The
jacket (or a very similar style), as well as the coordinating black trousers
and a black button-up, appeared to make a reappearance during Mr. Zelensky’s
meeting with Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain in June, as well as just
during the NATO summit in The Hague shortly thereafter, when Mr. Zelensky also
met with Mr. Trump — who reportedly noticed Mr. Zelensky’s fashion evolution
with approval.
He was
not the only one. The Kyiv Post reported on the change, as did Ukrainian Elle.
Whether the ensemble was actually a suit or rather a suit-like
jacket-and-slacks combination caused some debate in the betting market, but
either way, and despite the fact it was still dark, as if to signal the dark
days, it was unquestionably more formal than Mr. Zelensky’s usual attire; a
sort of fashion DMZ situated between the two sides of combat and classic. No
tie, but no cargo pants either.
That may
be the same space Mr. Zelensky was hoping to occupy at the White House on
Monday.
In any
case, the new look seemed to once again please Mr. Trump — it was specifically
mentioned by the reporter who had originally criticized Mr. Zelensky’s attire —
who probably saw it as a “win.” Just as Mr. Trump’s first attacks on Mr.
Zelensky (and his clothing) seemed to be a scripted-for-TV scene, Mr.
Zelensky’s willingness to change his costume may have been taken by Mr. Trump
as a sign that he was running the show.
Whether
it actually signals a change in the storyline is a different question.
Vanessa
Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times
since 2014.
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1 comment:
Demonstrating disrespect-through-dress? Was that something that Trump actually said?
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