Julie Davis, who has been serving as acting U.S. ambassador in Kyiv, is expected to end her diplomatic mission in Ukraine in the coming weeks and retire after around 30 years in the American foreign service. The U.S. State Department confirmed her departure while also stressing that Davis continues to carry out her duties. According to media reports, the diplomat has already informed the department of her decision.
Davis was appointed chargé d’affaires in Kyiv after the departure of Bridget Brink, the previous U.S. ambassador to Ukraine. Formally, Davis remained U.S. ambassador to Cyprus, a post to which she had been appointed during the administration of Joe Biden. Her departure therefore marks another change in one of the most important posts in American diplomacy today — in a country defending itself against Russian aggression and still heavily dependent on political and military support from the West.
According to reports by the Financial Times, cited by other media outlets, Davis’s decision was driven by disappointment with Donald Trump’s policy toward Ukraine. Sources quoted by the media indicate that the diplomat was frustrated by the reduction of support for Kyiv and by the White House’s approach to peace talks with Russia. The State Department, however, has not officially confirmed that political differences were behind her departure, presenting the matter instead as Davis’s retirement.
The case is particularly significant because it is already the second high-profile departure of an American diplomatic representative in Kyiv in a short period of time. Bridget Brink also left her post amid tensions over the Trump administration’s policy toward the Russian-Ukrainian war. After ending her diplomatic career, Brink entered politics and is running for Congress, while criticizing the current administration’s course toward Ukraine.
Former U.S. ambassador to Poland Daniel Fried, commenting on the matter for the Polish Press Agency, described Davis as an exemplary foreign service officer and “a true expert.” In his view, the American administration — whether it fully realizes it or not — needs officials of this caliber, especially at such a critical moment for European security.
Davis’s departure may be read as more than just the personal decision of an experienced diplomat. In practice, it has become another signal of tension between the professional U.S. diplomatic corps and the political direction set by the White House. For Ukraine, it means additional uncertainty at a time when ceasefire talks remain stalled and Kyiv fears that pressure for a quick agreement could come at the expense of its security interests.
The change at the U.S. mission in Kyiv shows that the dispute over Ukraine is taking place not only between Washington, Moscow and Kyiv, but also within the American state apparatus itself. For Central and Eastern Europe, including Poland, this is a development worth watching closely: the stability of American support for Ukraine remains one of the key elements of security for the entire region.

