North Korea launched more than 10 ballistic missiles into the sea Saturday during ongoing U.S.-South Korea military exercises, highlighting the volatile situation President Trump inherited from the disastrous Biden administration's foreign policy failures.
The missiles were fired from near Pyongyang around 1:20 p.m. local time, according to South Korean military officials. But here's what the mainstream media won't tell you: this provocation comes as President Trump has renewed his smart diplomatic outreach to North Korea – the same approach that actually WORKED during his first term.
Remember when Trump was the first sitting U.S. president to step foot in North Korea? When he built a real relationship with Kim Jong Un and significantly reduced tensions on the Korean Peninsula? The establishment media mocked him then, but his results spoke for themselves.
Biden's Legacy of Weakness Invites Aggression
For four years, Biden's weak-kneed approach allowed North Korea to rebuild its missile program while China laughed at America's decline. Now Trump has to clean up another mess left by the previous administration – just like he's doing at the border, in our economy, and everywhere else Biden failed.
The timing of these missile tests isn't coincidental. Kim Jong Un is testing Trump early in his second term, but he's about to learn what real strength looks like again. Unlike Biden, who hid in his basement while America's enemies grew bolder, Trump combines military strength with strategic diplomacy.
"Peace through strength isn't just a slogan – it's the Trump doctrine that actually delivers results for the American people."
While the military-industrial complex and their media allies want endless tensions to justify their bloated budgets, Trump understands that smart dealmaking prevents wars and saves American lives. That's exactly what we elected him to do.
Will Trump once again prove that his America First approach achieves better results than the establishment's failed strategies? The Korean Peninsula may be the first test of his second-term foreign policy dominance.
