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Trump's bold pivot on Ukraine sends major signal
President Donald Trumps meeting on Monday with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte marks more than a diplomatic courtesy. It signals a sharp, strategic shift in the U.S. posture toward Russias war against Ukraineone that replaces hesitation with resolve, passive support with deterrent action, and vague calls for peace with a clear doctrine: peace through strength.Over the past week, the Trump administration has taken several bold steps. First, after briefly pausing military shipments amid a Pentagon inventory review, the president confirmed that the U.S. will resume sendingPatriot missile systems to Ukraine -- air defense platforms capable of intercepting Russian ballistic missiles. These systems are vital, as they are the only defense Ukraine currently possesses against such threats. More importantly, Trump signaled that the United States is now willing to provide offensive weapons as well, marking a clear escalation in Americas role.That alone would mark a major change. But what elevates todays developments into a true turning point is how Trump is structuring the deal: the United States will sell sophisticated military equipment to NATO allies, who will then transfer it to Ukraine. In his own words: "Were going to send them various pieces of verysophisticated military [equipment], and theyre going to pay us 100 percent. Itll be business for us."TRUMP, RUTTE ANNOUNCE 'REALLY BIG' NATO ARMS PACKAGE AMID NEW 50 DAY DEADLINE TO PUTINNow to be clear, President Joe Biden previously promised to send offensive weapons -- specificallyM1A1 Abrams tanks -- to Ukraine. So, this is not a shift in intent, but rather a shift in strategy. Whats new, and smart, is the mechanism: Trumps NATO-centered transfer system streamlines delivery, shares financial responsibility, and empowers the alliance to take ownership of regional security. Thats a great idea -- and one Biden never executed.But Trumps vision needs more than diplomacy and logistics. It needs production. Biden, despite his pledges, failed to put the Americandefense industry on a wartime footing. The shortfall in munitions, air defenses, and heavy armor is real. If Trumps plan is to succeed, he must ignite a national surge in defense manufacturing capacity. The Pentagon should be working overtime with American industry to retool, retrain, and ramp up output -- not just for Ukraine, but for Taiwan, Israel, and our own readiness.This is a profound shift. Under President Biden, U.S. policy vacillated between urgency and caution -- sending large packages of aid but often stumbling under the weight of bureaucratic delay, congressional deadlock, and concerns over escalation. Under President Trumps new model, NATO becomes the buyer, Ukraine becomes the recipient, and American factories become the arsenal of democracy once again -- but without draining the U.S. treasury.TRUMP SAYS US WILL SEND PATRIOT MISSILES TO UKRAINE, ADDS THAT PUTIN 'TALKS NICE AND THEN HE BOMBS EVERYBODY'This is a smart policy. It respects American taxpayers. It leverages our allies. And it sends a strong, unmistakable message to Moscow: The free world is done waiting.What Triggered the Shift?The trigger appears to be Russian President Vladimir Putins continuedintransigence. Despite diplomatic efforts and public pressure, Putin rejects both ceasefire and peace talks. Instead, Russia has launched the heaviest wave of drone and missile attacks since the war began. These are not tactical operations; they are campaigns of terror targeting civilians, schools, and critical infrastructure.President Trump appears to have had enough. "He talks nice," Trump said of Putin, "and then he bombs everybody in the evening." In another candid moment, the Trump added, "He just wants tokill people."Such direct, unapologetic language is quite different from the diplomatic hedging of years past. And it matters -- because it frames the conflict for what it truly is: a battle between a tyrant who thrives on destruction and free nations that are finally waking up.NATO, Tariffs, and Real DeterrenceIn coordination with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, President Trump and NATO have forged a comprehensive framework:At the same time, Trump issued a clear ultimatum to Russia: If no peace deal is reached in 50 days, the U.S. will impose 100% secondary tariffs on countries that continue buying Russian oil and gas -- including China and India. Congress is backing the plan, with bipartisan support led by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.RUSSIA GIVES RUBIO A 'NEW AND DIFFERENT APPROACH' AS TRUMP PUSHES FOR PEACE WITH UKRAINETrump rightly noted that tariffs are leverage -- economic weapons in the war for peace. Hes deploying them with precision.Immediate Action, Real ConsequencesThis isnt theoretical. Patriot missile systems and other air defenses will begin arriving in Ukraine within days. NATO members are preparing to transfer many Patriot units, with U.S. factories set to backfill those stocks.Trumps envoy is coordinating with Germany and other European powers to ensure speed and transparency in delivery. Ukraine will receive what it needs, while the U.S. maintains readiness at home.Peace Through StrengthLets be clear: This is not an open-ended war strategy. Trump still believes the war can and should end swiftly - preferably through negotiations. But as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyys chief of staff, AndriiYermak, put it: "Russia does not want a ceasefire. Peace through strength is President Donald Trumps principle, and we support this approach."That phrase, "peace through strength," isnt new, but its timely. It was President RonaldReagans guiding principle in facing down the Soviet Union. Now, Trump is applying it to a 21st-century version of the same threat.CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINIONWhats new, however, is the delivery mechanism. Trump is achieving deterrence without entangling the U.S. directly in another costly foreign war. His administration is positioning America as the enabler of allied defense, thesupplier of strength, and theeconomic hammer against those who support tyranny.Additionally, Trump is reportedly considering activating$3.85 billion in unused drawdown authority from the Biden era and seizing up to$5 billion in frozen Russian assets to help fund Ukraines defense. If executed effectively, this could finance a robust, sustainable Ukrainian resistancewithout new taxpayer burdens.What Comes Next?Mondays announcement codifies this entire shift:Some critics will accuse Trump of abandoning his promise to end the war in 24 hours. But that criticism misses the point. You dont negotiate from weakness. You negotiate from strength.By arming Ukraine, rallying NATO, and leveraging economic pressure, Trump is giving peace a real chance -- on American terms, not Putins.Final ThoughtFor the first time in months, Kyiv has reason to hope, NATO has reason to believe, and Moscow has reason to fear. Thats what leadership looks like. And thats what the world witnessed Monday at the White House.CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM ROBERT MAGINNIS
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