Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says a prolonged Middle East war—specifically the US-Israel conflict with Iran—could divert American attention and resources, weakening Washington’s support for Kyiv’s fight against Russia. Zelenskyy also signals that Ukraine may face reduced deliveries of critically needed air-defense capabilities, including Patriot missiles, as US priorities shift. At the same time, Ukraine expects senior US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to visit Kyiv this month to help reboot peace talks. Separately, Zelenskyy says Egypt will refuse to accept Ukrainian wheat exported by Russia that is sourced from occupied Ukrainian territory, highlighting how the Ukraine-Russia war is increasingly shaping sanctions enforcement, food-security trade flows, and diplomatic positioning across the Middle East and North Africa. The near-term outlook hinges on whether US engagement on diplomacy offsets the risk of reduced military support, and whether grain-trade restrictions intensify compliance disputes between Ukraine, Russia, and third countries.
Competition for US strategic bandwidth: Middle East conflict may constrain Ukraine-focused military and diplomatic resources.
Diplomacy vs deterrence trade-off: envoy-led talks could be used to manage escalation while support levels remain uncertain.
Sanctions and compliance politics expand beyond Europe: third-country market decisions (Egypt) can reshape Russia-linked commodity flows.
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