


President Donald Trump’s diplomatic strategies have curbed world conflicts, de-escalated military hostilities, and provided the global community with harmony, despite his opponents’ claim that the President would lead the United States and its allies to almost certain annihilation.
Under his leadership, one of the largest and most devastating global conflicts, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, has proven to be highly damaging to the aggressor thanks to America’s newfound diplomacy.
Recommended Stories
- Want to defeat the Houthis? Here's how to do it
- Foreign communists are funding and training violent leftist radicals in US
- The Democrats shutdown theater won't get them anything
OPINION: AMERICA’S BOLD DEFENSE PUSH SIGNALS GLOBAL COMEBACK
Months into his second term, Trump made a deal with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to aid Ukraine with U.S. weapon stockpiles. With the new military capabilities, Ukraine’s show of American force has halted Russia’s attempted takeover of the country and even paved the way for Trump to broker a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia.
“It has to be settled up with [Russian President Vladimir] Putin, and [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelensky. We have to get them together and get it done,” Trump said in today’s address to military leaders. “The only way we can do that is through strength. I mean, if we were weak, they wouldn’t even take my phone call. But we have extreme strength.”
Days before, Trump wrote on Truth Social that with the new armaments, Ukraine can “win all of Ukraine back in its original form” and retake its “original borders.”
“Putin and Russia are in BIG economic trouble, and this is the time for Ukraine to act,” he added.
Trump’s de-escalation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine is hardly unique. Yesterday, Trump announced a historic peace plan for Israel and Gaza.
The deal would end the armed conflict, decommission Hamas’s weapons and anti-Israel teachings, ease restrictions on the humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza, and prevent Israel from occupying the Gaza Strip.
Moreover, in his historic address to the United Nations last week, Trump commented on the “seven unendable wars” he has put to rest.
In today’s address to military leaders, the president shed light on the diplomacy that discontinued a portion of those conflicts once more.
For example, as stated by the president, India and Pakistan “were going at it” until he threatened their leaders with economic restrictions on their trade industries.
After they agreed to stop the conflict in the face of U.S. retaliation, Pakistan’s top military official credited Trump with having “saved millions of lives.”
Several other examples in his second term should be acknowledged as well. In June, Trump brokered a ceasefire between Iran and Israel, which stopped Iran’s launch of missiles against innocent Israeli civilians.
Furthermore, the president illuminated his resolution to solve the conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has claimed and displaced the lives of nearly a million people over the years.
His successes through diplomacy are only a continuation of his actions from his first administration.
In his first term, Trump became the first modern president not to begin a new war. Additionally, Trump withdrew from the Obama-era Iran nuclear agreement and reimposed sanctions on the Iranian regime, which significantly incapacitated its nuclear and military capabilities in the region.
The president then signed the Abraham Accords with Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain, which codified a multilateral commitment to peace.
TRUMP PUSHES FOR ABRAHAM ACCORDS IN MEETING WITH SYRIAN PRESIDENT AHMED AL SHARAA
Furthermore, Trump severed America’s ties and reimposed sanctions on the communist Cuban dictatorship, halting it from exerting its communist and anti-American agendas in the strategic region.
Several other agreements under both of his administrations underscore the president’s unwavering commitment to and success in diplomacy.