President Donald Trump delivered a scathing rebuke of his predecessor's reckless foreign policy, blasting Joe Biden for hemorrhaging billions of dollars in high-grade American weapons to Ukraine while leaving our own military dangerously vulnerable.
Speaking with characteristic directness, Trump accused the former president of essentially gutting America's defense stockpiles in service of a proxy war that has drained U.S. resources for nearly two years. The Biden administration's Ukraine obsession saw taxpayers foot the bill for an estimated $113 billion in aid, much of it in the form of advanced weaponry that should have been protecting Americans.
"Biden gave away our best equipment—billions and billions of dollars worth of high-grade munitions—while our own forces were left scrambling," Trump said, highlighting yet another catastrophic failure of the previous administration's America Last agenda.
America First Arsenal Restored
But Trump wasn't just delivering bad news. The President confidently assured Americans that under his leadership, our military stockpiles have been rebuilt and our nation is prepared for whatever challenges lie ahead.
"We're stocked and ready to win," Trump declared, embodying the strength and preparation that patriotic Americans have come to expect from real leadership.
This stark contrast perfectly encapsulates the difference between the Trump-Vance administration's America First approach and Biden's globalist giveaway mentality. While Biden was busy playing world police with other people's money and weapons, Trump focuses on ensuring America's defense capabilities come first.
The President's comments underscore a broader pattern from the Biden years: endless foreign entanglements that benefited everyone except the American people who paid for them. From the Afghanistan disaster to the Ukraine money pit, Biden's legacy is one of weakened American security and depleted resources.
Now, under Trump's steady hand, America is rebuilding its strength while pursuing the kind of peace-through-strength diplomacy that actually works. The question isn't whether America can win—it's whether our enemies are smart enough to avoid finding out just how ready we really are.
