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A day before emergency responders arrived at Sen. Lindsey Graham’s Capitol Hill home on Saturday night, the South Carolina Republican made what would be his last public appearance, standing outside St. Michael’s golden-domed monastery in Kyiv.

Graham, who had spent months pushing for sanctions legislation he and others believed would force Russia to finally end its four-year assault on Ukraine, described the moment as a chance to marshal support from the U.S. and other global powers to finally end the conflict.

“I’ve never been more optimistic than I am today,” he said Friday after meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky . “We have a magic moment in time here.”

A picture taken on July 10, 2026 shows U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) speaking to the media after his meeting with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

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Graham, who had a personal rapport with President Trump, spent his final days in the role of a U.S. power broker that had defined much of his career: meeting foreign leaders, pressing for hawkish U.S. foreign policy and planning to make the rounds on Sunday morning TV news shows.

When Graham landed Saturday in Washington, colleagues said he was tired but elated after a whirlwind of meetings in Europe and Ukraine. He had spent his 71st birthday on the road, buoyed by a NATO summit in Turkey where Trump praised the alliance and embraced Ukraine.

Most important, a revised version of the Russian sanctions bill appeared to have finally clinched White House backing.

“This is a big effing deal—we all did good,” Graham told Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D., Conn.).

Hours later, Graham was pronounced dead.

Trump tensions

Graham began his trip last week in Ankara, Turkey, for a summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He was a man on a mission.

For more than a year, Graham had been urging both Congress and the White House to back a Russia sanctions bill he had helped draft, aimed at tightening the economic noose around Moscow over its war in Ukraine. With Trump, some of his cabinet members, and European leaders all gathered at the NATO summit, Graham saw a make-or-break moment to line up support for tougher sanctions.

President Trump and members of his cabinet and administration at the NATO summit Wednesday in Ankara, Turkey. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

He had lobbied the president for months to get on board, working against the backdrop of failed attempts at a peace deal and Trump’s outreach to Russian President Vladimir Putin . Graham’s efforts sometimes put the largely pro-Ukraine Republican-controlled Congress at odds with Trump and the president’s negotiating team. Trump’s hot-and-cold approach to Ukraine and NATO kept Congress and U.S. allies on edge.

As dozens of presidents and prime ministers descended on Ankara for the summit, Graham and a small group of other U.S. lawmakers met with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte . The mood was tense, as allies waited to hear what Trump would say. The president had for months assailed member nations for failing to help the U.S. with the war in Iran.

On Tuesday evening, Tom Barrack , the U.S. ambassador to Turkey and one of the president’s most trusted Middle East advisers, hosted lawmakers and visiting administration officials at the ambassador’s residence in Ankara. As a harpist played in the background, Graham and other guests chatted over drinks in a garden overlooking the Turkish capital’s red-tile-roofed cityscape.

Over a dinner featuring steaks, salmon and burrata salad, Graham toasted Scott Bessent—Trump’s Treasury secretary and a fellow South Carolinian, who traveled to Ankara on Air Force One with the president. Graham’s bill, introduced with Blumenthal, called for sweeping sanctions and tariffs on Russia’s oil trade and countries that imported Russian oil. Securing Bessent’s blessing would be crucial for the bill’s passage.

“Lindsey spoke there, did an excellent job with sharing what he saw as a path forward for the next couple of weeks with regards to the Russian sanctions bill,” Sen. Mike Rounds (R., S.D.), told NewsNation on Sunday.

The long game

The next day, Graham and the rest of the congressional delegation met in Ankara with Zelensky and Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who was seeking relief from U.S. sanctions.

Graham had for years fought against an undercurrent of isolationism in his Republican Party, first as a vocal opponent of Trump and, later, as one of the president’s greatest cheerleaders. He played a key role in persuading Trump during his first term to back off plans to remove U.S. troops from Syria, ruled at the time by Bashar al-Assad, who was later deposed.

Sharaa wanted the U.S. to lift all Assad-era sanctions to help stabilize his country’s shaky political transition and repair its war-ravaged economy. Graham, who had long shared Israel’s skepticism of Syria’s new government, represented a crucial swing vote for removing the remaining sanctions.

U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa during a bilateral meeting alongside the NATO leaders summit at the Bestepe Presidential Compound in Ankara, Turkey, July 8, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Graham emerged from the meeting with Sharaa and voiced a significant change in tone, saying the new Syrian leader deserved an opportunity to rebuild the country. He urged Israel to reassess its own skepticism of Sharaa’s government. The shift made waves in Arab media, underscoring the South Carolina lawmaker’s outsize influence on U.S. foreign policy.

That afternoon, Trump had his own meeting with Zelensky. The president praised Ukraine for its fighting prowess and offered new avenues of U.S. military cooperation, suggesting that Ukraine’s strategy of striking targets deep inside Russian territory could more quickly bring about an end to the war.

Trump’s comments, a striking reversal from the president’s antagonistic meeting with Zelensky last year, drew sighs of relief from Ukrainian officials and NATO allies.

Lawmakers and European officials at the summit, reflecting on Graham’s death, said the warm Trump-Zelensky meeting vindicated the senator’s strategy of playing the long game by advocating for Ukraine behind the scenes, despite the president’s swings between pro-Russia and pro-Ukraine views.

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump holds a bilateral meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy alongside the NATO leaders summit at the Bestepe Presidential Compound, in Ankara, Turkey, July 8, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

During a break, Graham texted Sen. Chris Coons (D., Del.) and said they should have dinner. It was a special occasion for the two lawmakers, who had worked closely for years—and not just because of the NATO summit. Graham’s 71st birthday was the next day.

At a Turkish restaurant that evening, a short distance away from the security lockdowns and buzz of the summit, Coons and Graham shared a meal and discussed plans to get the Russia sanctions bill across the finish line. Then they toasted Graham’s birthday.

“He was in a great mood,” Coons said, as Graham had just won his primary and secured Trump’s commitment to back the sanctions bill. As the two senators walked back to the hotel after dinner, Graham just wanted “to talk about what’s next,” Coons recalled.

Swan song

On Thursday, Graham departed Ankara for his 10th visit to Ukraine since Russia launched its 2022 invasion. With Ukrainian airspace closed, the trip to Kyiv required an overnight train from Poland, a roughly 10-hour journey.

Graham arrived in Kyiv at a moment in the war marked by stepped-up Russian missile and drone attacks against Ukrainian cities. On battlefields farther east, Moscow’s forces had gained almost no territory, despite staggering numbers of casualties.

When Zelensky met Graham in his presidential office on Friday, the two exchanged smiles and shook hands. Zelensky wished him a happy birthday and asked how he was doing.

“Older, but no wiser,” Graham said, patting the Ukrainian president on the shoulder.

Zelensky handed Graham a traditional Ukrainian shirt—a vyshyvanka.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy welcomes U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) before their meeting, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine July 10, 2026. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS – THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY./File Photo TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

That afternoon, Graham toured a production facility operated by SkyFall, a Ukrainian defense-tech company that since the start of the war has become one of the country’s largest drone manufacturers. Walking down a brightly lighted factory floor, Graham inspected rows of heavy Vampire bomber drones—known to Russian troops as “Baba Yaga,” after witchlike figures in Slavic folklore—and smaller Shrike attack drones.

In one photo, Graham posed, grinning, holding a black P1-SUN interceptor built to bring down Russian Shahed drones. “I think it would be a huge mistake for America not to work with Ukraine in the drone space,” he said.

Later on Friday, Graham joined colleagues in announcing that they had reached an agreement with the Trump administration to move forward with a revised version of the Russia sanctions bill. In Kyiv, Graham told reporters the deal had been reached 30 minutes earlier.

“It means it’s going to become law,” he said.

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) speaks to the media after his meeting with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine July 10, 2026. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

Rep. Michael McCaul, a Texas Republican and chairman emeritus of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was in Ukraine at the same time as Graham. They spoke repeatedly about securing White House support for the sanctions legislation, which McCaul later attributed to Ukraine’s successful long-range strikes on Russian cities. “President Trump likes a winner,” he said.

Maintaining Trump’s interest in supporting Ukraine was in many ways Graham’s doing, McCaul said. “They played a lot of golf together,” ample time together for discussion, whether through nine or 18 holes.

“The thing about Lindsey, I always knew in his heart where he wanted to go, but he was a very astute politician to get there,” McCaul said. “You can fall on your sword for things, but if you want to be effective, you got to know how to maneuver.”

McCaul learned of Graham’s death on the long train ride from Kyiv back to Poland, where he planned to push for more ways to help Ukraine. “Lindsey would be really helpful,” he said. “He maneuvered politically very well through the good and bad times.”

On Saturday, Graham returned to Washington, still making calls and sending texts. He reached Trump and said he felt tired but good after returning from Kyiv, the president said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“Honestly, he was a great politician,” Trump said. “I thought Lindsey was going to be living forever.”

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D., N.H.), the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who worked with Graham at the NATO summit, urged Congress to pass the sanctions bill and realize Graham’s “long-held dream of an independent and secure Ukraine.”