Tag: Trump is war

  • The Edge of Detonation: How Russia’s Hypersonic Supremacy and Trump’s Gambling Push Europe Toward Catastrophe

    The Edge of Detonation: How Russia’s Hypersonic Supremacy and Trump’s Gambling Push Europe Toward Catastrophe

    by Amal Zadok

    Russia’s advancement in hypersonic missile technology and the latest breakthroughs with the Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile have transformed the global strategic balance. The Kremlin now possesses unmatched means to threaten and deter adversaries—while President Trump’s aggressive missile defense push, arms sales, and economic warfare risk driving Europe into catastrophe.

    Russia’s Hypersonic Arsenal: Avangard, Kinzhal, Zircon

    Russia’s operational hypersonic systems are a potent challenge to Western defense. The Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle achieves speeds up to Mach 27, delivering nuclear payloads with unpredictable flight paths that overwhelm missile defenses. The KH-47M2 Kinzhal air-launched missile strikes from more than 930 miles away at speeds near Mach 10, repeatedly used with effect in Ukraine engagements. The 3M22 Zircon, a naval scramjet-powered missile, can reach Mach 8, allowing Russia to project power across the Baltic and Barents Sea while exposing critical weaknesses in European defense networks.

    Oreshnik: Russia’s New Hypersonic IRBM Gamechanger

    The Oreshnik missile, officially entering service in 2025, is a new pillar in Russia’s offensive repertoire. Launched against Ukraine’s strategic facilities and now deployed to Belarus, Oreshnik outruns interception with speeds over Mach 10 and a range of up to 5,500 kilometers—putting all of Europe within striking distance. Its MIRV warhead capability, paired with conventional or nuclear payloads, allows for simultaneous multiple strikes that few, if any, European defenses can counter. This system closes the “INF Treaty gap,” fulfilling Kremlin ambitions for decisive escalatory options and establishing a new era in missile warfare.

    Burevestnik: The ‘Storm Petrel’ Proven Missile

    The 9M730 Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile—confirmed by Russian and independent observers—achieved a 14,000-kilometer, 15-hour test flight. Putin and top military officials now present it as an “invincible” weapon, with virtually unlimited range, low-altitude maneuvering, and immunity to current missile shields. Western skepticism has faded with clear operational proof; Burevestnik’s unpredictable flight path and reactor-based endurance make it a guaranteed factor in future strategic planning.

    Trump’s Missile Defense and the European Gamble

    President Trump’s Golden Dome missile shield, expanded into Poland, Romania, and the Baltic region, aims to reinforce allies but also spurs Russian paranoia and accelerates the arms race. At the same time, the U.S. and Europe escalate weapons deliveries to Ukraine, directly sustaining the conflict and intensifying Kremlin perceptions of existential threat.

    Trump’s loud claims of detachment from the war are belied by vast arms sales and the orchestration of economic strategies—especially proposals to outright seize Russian assets from Western banks. This policy not only prolongs the war but exposes the entire European financial system to Russian retaliation, including potential energy cutoffs, cyberattacks, and rapid financial destabilization.

    Russia’s Strategic Edge Beyond Ukraine

    Moscow is winning the war of attrition on Ukraine’s battlefields and is better prepared than NATO or the U.S. for broader, high-technology war. Joint Zapad-2025 exercises, rearmament, and doctrinal innovations emphasize “escalate to deescalate”—delivering overwhelming strikes to force adversaries into accepting Russian terms. Meanwhile, NATO is hamstrung by divided political leadership, fragile supply chains, and a crumbling financial architecture now at the mercy of misguided economic warfare.

    Countdown to Catastrophe

    The world sits on the brink of strategic disaster, where technological mastery meets reckless policy. Russia’s proven missile supremacy and Trump’s dangerous game with arms sales and financial aggression are accelerating global destabilization. If misjudgment or provocation continues, it will not simply endanger Ukraine and Western Europe—it will threaten the survival of the global financial system and the architecture of peace itself.

    The stakes are now irreversible. What began as posturing and escalation could soon descend into nuclear brinkmanship and total economic collapse. Only authentic diplomatic imagination—applied today, not tomorrow—can prevent a self-inflicted cataclysm. The countdown has begun, and every second echoes with the roar of hypersonic engines.

    ©️2025 Amal Zadok. All rights reserved.

    Subscribe and never miss an article!

  • America’s Apples Are Bombs Now: Trump, Genocide, and the Shadow Over History

    America’s Apples Are Bombs Now: Trump, Genocide, and the Shadow Over History

    by Amal Zadok

    President Donald Trump has reshaped America’s legacy—not as a nation of peacemakers, but as history’s chief arms merchant. Despite rhetoric about “historic peace,” Trump’s tenure is marked by an unprecedented surge in U.S. weapons exports, strategic escalation in conflict zones, and public boasts about delivering weapons that allies “did not even know existed.” The world received bombs over apples—and lives with the consequences (Independent, 2025).

    From Orchard to Arsenal: How Peace Was Substituted with Arms

    America once sought to balance humanitarian diplomacy—the apple offered—with the realities of global power. Under Trump, this balance shattered. The United States now accounts for 43% of all global arms exports, dominating the world’s weapons market (SIPRI, 2025; DW, 2025; Global Defense Corp, 2025; ChinadailyHK, 2025).

    U.S. arms deals reached $175 billion annually during Trump’s second term, flooding allies and volatile regions with jets, bombs, and drones (Stephen Semler, 2023).

    Trump’s administration actively relaxed restrictions, streamlining arms deals and pushing advanced hardware—including drones and precision-guided munitions—to buyers like Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Nigeria, and Israel; even bargaining on public TV about the “jobs” and “security” they’d bring (War on the Rocks, 2018; Reuters, 2018; Politico, 2017). Former bans linked to human rights concerns dissolved, replaced by transactional embrace and unchecked proliferation.

    Gaza: Partner in Genocide

    This arms trade translated into lethal reality in Gaza. Trump publicly celebrated Israel’s campaign, crowing that Prime Minister Netanyahu received “every weapon he wanted,” fueling a conflict where civilian casualties skyrocketed and humanitarian watchdogs raised charges of ethnic cleansing and genocide (CBC News, 2025; Al Jazeera, 2025; NPR, 2025).

    Far from mediating peace, the United States played quartermaster to the world’s most divisive battles. The apple of diplomacy was never offered. Only bombs—delivered, enabled, and defended at the highest levels.

    International observers denounced America’s complicity, warning that the shadow of partnership in these alleged atrocities will follow Trump, his administration, and the nation for generations (Al Jazeera, 2025; BBC News, 2025; NPR, 2025).

    Ukraine: Betting the World on Brinkmanship

    If Gaza showcased Trump’s willingness to arm and escalate, Ukraine raised the stakes to nuclear heights. In 2025, Trump repeatedly threatened the transfer of Tomahawk and other long-range missiles to Ukraine—potentially enabling strikes deep into Russia. Military analysts warn these moves could force Russian President Putin into existential responses, including nuclear options (NYT, 2025; DW, 2025).

    Trump’s rationale mixed calculated brinksmanship with the pretense of “ending war.” What resulted was the rapid acceleration of arms transfers: Ukraine became the world’s top arms importer, with contracts worth billions and new categories of advanced weaponry flooding the front lines (SIPRI, 2025; CBC News, 2025). Global stability deteriorated, Americans and Europeans feared direct confrontation, and the specter of superpower nuclear disaster returned (DW, 2025).

    The Data: Record-Breaking Exports and Vanishing Restraint

    Under Trump, U.S. arms exports rose sharply, with record annual values and more than 100 countries receiving U.S. hardware (SIPRI, 2025; DW, 2025; Global Defense Corp, 2025). The administration:

    Pushed more than $175 billion per year in arms sales, peaking at $206 billion in 2022 (Stephen Semler, 2023).

    Lifted restrictions on armed drones, precision-guided bombs, and fighter jets once denied for human rights reasons (War on the Rocks, 2018; Politico, 2017).

    Advocated arms sales as a diplomatic priority, recasting embassies and trade offices as marketing hubs for American weapons (Reuters, 2018).

    Shrunk humanitarian aid and diplomacy relative to record military exports (ChinadailyHK, 2025).

    Militarization as Foreign Policy: Covert Action and Global Fallout

    Trump’s arms-first foreign policy spilled into covert operations: the CIA and special forces led missions in Venezuela, Africa, and Asia, while cyberwarfare and clandestine sabotage became normalized American tactics (NYT, 2025; BBC News, 2025; Al Jazeera, 2025).

    Global confidence in U.S. leadership collapsed. NATO allies feared that reckless American escalation would drag Europe into all-out war; Asia witnessed new arms races stoked by American, Chinese, and Russian competition (DW, 2025; ChinadailyHK, 2025).

    Human Rights Forgotten: Peace Sacrificed for Profit

    Trump’s administration dismissed mounting evidence from NGOs and war crimes monitors as “partisan noise” (CBC News, 2025; NPR, 2025). Civilian death tolls in Gaza, Yemen, and Donbas multiplied. For every criticism about the ethics of arms exports—or the risks of “partnering in genocide”—Trump’s team expedited contracts, promising “total support” so long as the payers kept buying.

    The President of Bombs

    Defenders claim overwhelming force deters enemies and secures allies. But the evidence is overwhelming: America’s mass arms exports have not brought peace; they have amplified chaos, fueled global crises, and undermined diplomacy. Trump is the President of Bombs. And always the shadow of being partner in the genocide in Gaza will follow him, his country, and his family. This will be Trump’s legacy to history and the world (Al Jazeera, 2025; BBC News, 2025; CBC News, 2025; NPR, 2025).

    References

    Al Jazeera. (2025, October 13). Five key takeaways from Donald Trump’s Gaza remarks in Middle East. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/10/13/five-key-takeaways-from-donald-trumps-gaza-remarks-in-middle-east

    BBC News. (2025, October 12). Trump says ‘war is over’ in Gaza as he flies to Israel for ceasefire deal. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn409y125v3o

    CBC News. (2025, October 16). Trump’s Gaza deal may be ‘historic,’ but falls short of lasting peace. https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-trump-peace-deal-analysis-9.6940737

    ChinadailyHK. (2025, June 17). US promotes arms sales to revive its faltering economy. https://www.chinadailyhk.com/hk/article/614176

    CNN. (2025, October 14). How Trump’s Gaza triumph could change his presidency. https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/14/politics/trump-israel-hostages-gaza-ceasefire-deal-analysis

    DW. (2025, March 9). US increases dominance as world’s biggest arms exporter. https://www.dw.com/en/us-increases-dominance-as-worlds-biggest-arms-exporter/a-71860617

    Global Defense Corp. (2025, March 10). United States has strengthened its dominance in the global arms trade. https://www.globaldefensecorp.com/2025/03/11/united-states-has-strengthened-its-dominance-in-the-global-arms-trade-accounting-for-43-percent/

    Independent. (2025, October 16). Tomahawk missiles are Trump’s ace card for Ukraine. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/tomahawk-missiles-ukraine-trump-russia-b2846089.html

    New York Times. (2025, October 14). Trump says he may give Tomahawks to Ukraine. Is he serious? https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/14/us/politics/trump-tomahawks-ukraine-russia.html

    NPR. (2025, September 25). A question of intent: Is what’s happening in Gaza genocide? https://www.npr.org/2025/09/25/g-s1-89678/israel-gaza-genocide-debates-united-nations

    Politico. (2017, September 28). Trump to unleash more global arms sales. https://www.politico.com/story/2017/09/29/trump-global-arms-sales-243282

    Reuters. (2018, April 20). Arming the world – Inside Trump’s ‘Buy American’ drive to expand weapons exports. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-arms-insight/arming-the-world-inside-trumps-buy-american-drive-to-expand-weapons-exports-idUSKBN1HO2PT/

    SIPRI. (2025, March 9). Ukraine the world’s biggest arms importer; United States dominance in global arms exports grows. https://www.sipri.org/media/press-release/2025/ukraine-worlds-biggest-arms-importer-united-states-dominance-global-arms-exports-grows-russian

    Stephen Semler. (2023, March 7). Comparing arms sales under Trump & Biden. https://www.stephensemler.com/p/comparing-arms-sales-under-trump

    War on the Rocks. (2018, September 26). Trump’s Arms Exports Policy: Debunking Key Assumptions. https://warontherocks.com/2018/09/trumps-arms-exports-policy-debunking-key-assumptions/

    ©️2025 Amal Zadok. All rights reserved.

    Subscribe and never miss an article!