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Trump's West Point Differentiation Reference from US First Doctrine on Politics | Donald Trump

Donald Trump announced on Saturday with the cadets of the West Point Military Academy that in a “defined moment in the history of the army” she joined the officer corps in a opening speech that married political attacks and a discourse on the foofness of older men with “trophy women”.

With regard to us political leaders of the past two decades, which “our military had drawn into missions”, in which people were questioned in some cases, Trump said to the young leaders that “as much as they want to fight without fighting it”. He predicted that the opponents of the United States would withdraw through a policy of “peace through strength”. “I just want to look at them and have them fold,” he said.

The President also said that US soldiers “had been sent to nations on nations who wanted to have nothing to do with us, led by managers who had no idea about distant countries and abused our soldiers with absurd ideological experiments here and at home”.

“All of this has ended, strongly ended. You can't even think about it anymore,” added Trump.

Trump made obvious reference to diversity, justice and inclusion programs that Defense Minister Pete Hegseth canceled, and has brought the criticism of his predecessors together with a new focus on the containment of the illegal immigration.

“They entertained the armed forces in all types of social projects and political reasons, while they did not defend our borders and exhausted our arsenals against the wars of other countries. We fought for the limits of other countries, but we did not fought for our own limits, but now we may have been that we have never cost it before,” he said.

He later said that “the task of the US armed forces is not to organize Drag shows or transform foreign cultures”, an indication of drag shows on military bases that his predecessor Joe Biden continued in 2023 after Republican criticism.

The President wore a red campaign hat “Make America Otre Put” and informed the 1,002 graduates of the cadets that the United States was the “hottest country in the world” and boast of its government's achievements.

The president again returned to a warning story that he often tells young people about the danger that the dynamics in life will be lost, which he described by an anecdote about what he described as an unfortunate retirement by the post-war residential developer William Levitt, the Creator of Levittowns, on Long Island, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

The president repeated a story that he told in 2017 on a scout -Jamboree and at the University of Alabama, and said that Levitt was dissatisfied with life without work, although he married a “trophy woman” and bought a yacht. “It didn't work so well, and it doesn't work so well, I have to tell you many trophy women, it doesn't work,” the president told the young women and men. “But it made him happy at least for a while.”

Trump also took the opportunity to repeat an unfounded allegations that he had raised for the first time in 2020: the claim that Russia stole the US hyper -Schallraket technology during Barack Obama's presidency. “The Russians stole it, something bad happened. But we are building them now, many of them,” said Trump, praising eight cadets who had built their own. “We are currently building them. We had stolen our stolen. We are the designers of them. We had stolen it during the Obama government.”

Outside of the gates of West Point, demonstrators gathered with drums, banners and signs to condemn what they called the President's attack on American democracy.

During points during Trump's speech, he switched between the praise of the graduates of military cadets and the maintenance of political criticism of the bidges.

The final speech, which lasted for almost an hour, takes place on June 14 in front of an extensive military parade in Washington to celebrate the celebration of the nation's 250th anniversary. The date is also the president's birthday.

In addition to the military parade with more than 6,700 soldiers, it includes concerts, fireworks, NFL players, fitness competitions and exhibitions throughout the National Mall for days of celebrations. The army assumes that up to 200,000 people could participate and that the celebration will cost $ 25 million to $ 45 million.

The Associated Press has contributed the reporting

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