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ARMAGEDDON: Trump Backs biblical battle in Middle East

As the Iran–Israel conflict spirals into its deadliest phase in years, U.S. President Donald Trump has positioned himself not as a broker of peace, but as an unabashed cheerleader for escalation.
From his open support of Israel’s intensified airstrikes to his reckless taunts aimed at Tehran, Trump’s posture reveals not a coherent strategy—but political opportunism cloaked in strongman theatrics.
It is a dangerous mix of provocation, ideological inconsistency, and geopolitical amnesia that risks drawing the United States into yet another costly war in the Middle East.
A Blank Check for War, a Closed Door to Peace
Since Israel launched Operation Rising Lion—its sweeping air campaign targeting Iranian missile sites in Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon—the conflict has intensified beyond anything seen in recent years.
Hundreds are dead, oil markets are in chaos, and proxy militias across the region are mobilizing. Rather than urging caution, Trump doubled down.
He praised the strikes as “excellent” and encouraged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “keep going.”
In the same breath, he mocked Iranian leaders as “pathetic cowards” and dismissed backchannel diplomatic overtures from Tehran.
This is not statesmanship. It’s provocation disguised as patriotism.
By granting Israel a blank check while closing the diplomatic door on Iran, Trump isn’t defending American interests—he’s fanning the flames of a potential regional inferno.
Lebanon, Syria, and the Persian Gulf now stand at the edge of destabilization, and Washington appears to have traded shuttle diplomacy for Twitter tirades and carrier deployments.
So much for being the “great negotiator” he once claimed to be.
“America First”—or Just Another Forever War?
When Trump rode to power in 2016, it was on a wave of anti-war sentiment.
He campaigned on ending America’s involvement in “stupid wars,” pulling troops out of the Middle East, and prioritizing national interest over ideological adventurism. Now, with his eyes on 2026, that doctrine has collapsed.
Trump has redeployed the USS Nimitz strike group to the eastern Mediterranean, greenlit enhanced intelligence-sharing with Israeli forces, and made vague but ominous statements about striking Iran “if necessary.”
Such rhetoric offers no clear red lines or strategic objectives—only chaos wrapped in bravado.
This is not a plan. It’s a provocation without purpose.
Far from putting “America First,” Trump’s saber-rattling could expose U.S. forces across the region—from Bahrain to Qatar—to retaliation.
His moves contradict the very non-interventionist values that once defined his foreign policy and energized his political base.
Economic Consequences Ignored
The fallout isn’t limited to security. Financial markets have already reacted. Crude oil prices have surged past $100 per barrel for the first time since 2022.
Insurance premiums for ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz—through which one-third of the world’s seaborne oil passes—have doubled. Global shipping lanes are at risk, and energy-importing nations are bracing for another inflationary shock.
Yet Trump offers no plan to contain the economic consequences of his war rhetoric—only recycled pledges of “crippling sanctions” and vague promises of “total victory.”
History offers little comfort here. Washington’s prior attempts to isolate Tehran through economic pressure and military threats have not yielded sustainable peace.
If anything, they’ve led to deeper regional entrenchment and hardened resolve within Iran’s leadership.
Dividing the MAGA Base
Even within Trump’s own ideological camp, there is growing discomfort. Isolationist Republicans like Senator J.D. Vance and Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene have openly questioned Trump’s support for Israeli escalation.
Greene, a frequent ally, recently warned that Trump “risks becoming the war president we never wanted.”
Their concern reflects a deeper contradiction: How can Trump claim to oppose “forever wars” while actively courting another one?
Some in the MAGA movement fear that Trump is drifting toward the neoconservative playbook he once derided—replacing troop withdrawals and realism with open-ended military commitments driven by ideology, not interest.
The Verdict: Fury Over Foresight
Trump’s approach to the Iran–Israel crisis is not only reckless—it is fundamentally unserious. In a moment when the world needs de-escalation, strategic clarity, and principled diplomacy, he offers none.
Instead, he delivers rage disguised as resolve and bluster in place of balance. His stance may win applause in certain quarters, but it risks dragging the U.S. into a conflict with no defined objectives, no exit strategy, and no public mandate.
Worse, his refusal to engage with diplomatic efforts undermines America’s moral and strategic credibility. It sends the world a message that Washington no longer leads with reason but with impulse.
As the Middle East burns and alliances are tested, Trump’s voice is not one of leadership. It is one of provocation—a siren song leading toward another needless war.
If this conflict widens, it won’t just be missiles that cause the most damage. It will be words like his.
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