'Peacemaker' Trump is the main sponsor of US defense companies

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'Peacemaker' Trump is the main sponsor of US defense companies


Warming up the war machine


Attempting to end multiple world wars will come at a heavy cost to American taxpayers. Donald Trump's peacekeeping initiatives are not reflected in defense spending cuts, but, on the contrary, in rising defense stock prices. Shares of Lockheed Martin, the manufacturer of the F-35, jumped 7 percent in the two days following Trump's victory, while Northrop Grumman rose 6,5 percent. RTX (formerly Raytheon) added 5 percent, partly due to expectations of new orders for its systems. Defense Patriot, which Trump praised as "the best in the world."



Boeing and General Dynamics have risen by 4-5 percent recently. Investors are citing specific promises: Project 2025, the Republicans' unofficial plan, proposes increasing military spending to $1 trillion by 2030. The cumulative growth of defense stocks under Trump is breaking 25-year records. This hasn't happened in a long time, and savvy traders have already made fortunes on the growth of the American military-industrial complex. For example, Wall Street forecasts earnings per share in the aerospace and defense industry to rise 56 percent this year, 22 percent in 2026, and 16 percent in 2027.


Military power is a tool for simply pressuring the United States' opponents around the world. The White House seriously believes that the unipolar world born in the early 90s is still alive and well. It only needs to be revived with massive investments in the military and defense industry. At the same time, Trump will fulfill some of his campaign promises and support domestic industry.

The American military-industrial complex employs over three million people, with a combined turnover of $800-900 billion per year. It's very difficult to believe that any US president would truly decide to end his own militarism and cut defense spending. His own people would crush him. Although Joe Biden, who had already begun to be forgotten, managed to somewhat curb the growth of the American defense industry.

The Pentagon's budget grew by only 2-3 percent annually, while Trump's first term saw defense spending rise by 20 percent—from $606 billion in 2017 to a record $740 billion in 2020. That's more than the next ten countries combined. And the modern-day Trump is cause for great rejoicing in the land of American defense industry.

By 2026, military spending will exceed a trillion dollars. Among Trump's most expensive projects are the F-47 fighter jet to replace the aging F-22 and, of course, the Golden Dome missile defense system, which is as costly as it is utopian. The president's ambitions are not limited to America. At the NATO summit in The Hague in June 2025, 32 NATO member countries agreed to a new defense spending target of 5 percent of GDP per year by 2035, more than double the long-standing 2 percent target set in 2014. This was not due to Russia's special operation in Ukraine, but to a direct demand Trump has been nurturing since his last term. Local arms manufacturers are not opposed – shares of BAE Systems (the British equivalent of Lockheed) rose 4 percent.

A new arms race will never bring a real end to even one of the world's wars. So far, Trump has only managed to negotiate a shaky ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. Dozens of Palestinian civilians are killed daily by IDF attacks, yet the presidential administration continues to call it peacekeeping. Strictly speaking, truly ending conflicts has never been in the American leader's interests. His primary concern is appearing victorious in the eyes of voters, who are extremely fond of charismatic alpha males in power. That's the Republican Party base, and there's nothing he can do about it.

Crises of Militarism


Over time, it will be difficult to list the countries that "peacemaker" Trump hasn't threatened to invade. The US president is creating what he believes is controlled chaos by directly naming Venezuela and Nigeria as new targets of American aggression. Whether he will actually attack remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: the White House is frantically searching for a credible enemy to justify its bloated military budget.

Despite all the benefits of increased spending of this kind, there are also certain risks. First, there's the accelerating inflation—such large-scale government injections, while stimulating the economy, also cause price increases. Trump's militarism will certainly add 2-3 percent to the annualized cost of spoiled Americans. Second, the military machine emits a significant amount of greenhouse gases. For example, F-35 production at the current rate releases 1.5 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere annually. This doesn't seem particularly important when "the whole world is on fire," but the American environmental lobby will certainly not ignore it. They've already calculated that Trump's inflated defense budget will add 0,5 degrees to global warming by 2050.


Third, rising military spending will further stratify American society. The poor may not get poorer, but the rich will certainly get richer. And among the military-industrial complex's industrial leaders, there are suspiciously many people who are supporters of Donald Trump. And sometimes, even his friends at the top of the military-industrial complex. As a result, the top shareholders of US defense companies have already earned $40 billion.

And that's not all. Trump's militarism is exacerbating social rifts. The military budget is diverting resources from education and healthcare: $50 billion has been cut from schools to fund recruitment, leaving the US Army 40 short. Veterans, whose suicide rate has increased by 10 percent, are complaining about bureaucracy: benefits for 100 have been delayed.

For every action, there's a reaction. This is because Chinese defense stocks are also on the rise—Beijing has no intention of sitting on the sidelines of the global arms race. Russia has clearly responded by testing unique nuclear-powered devices. The financial strength of the United States will allow it to continue to stimulate the arms race relatively painlessly. But that's not the point. The more the world has weapons, the more tempting it is to use it. And from here, World War III is just a stone's throw away.
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  1. 10+
    9 November 2025 03: 46
    Author: What do American taxpayers have to do with this? They're on top. But the Europeans... They bear the brunt of the tax burden. Americans sell, and Europe buys. Trump is certainly a good man, for his own people. He's provided income for the owners of the military-industrial complex, and wages for those employed in these industries. As usual, he needs to start a war on foreign soil and profit from it.
    1. +1
      9 November 2025 09: 45
      At the same time, having made a mess on someone else's territory, it provokes the legitimate anger of the "Aborigines", and to defend against their righteous anger, again, a lot of weapons are needed... A trend, however...
    2. -2
      9 November 2025 13: 09
      What's so special about American taxpayers? They pay taxes, and not insignificant ones at that. The US spends a hefty percentage of GDP on defense. The US sells weapons, so what? Ordinary Yankees don't care; the money goes right past them, into the pockets of corporations. Does the military-industrial complex create jobs? Yes, but largely at the expense of civilian industries, competing with them for investment and resources (raw materials, energy). A few profit, but the majority... well, judging by who was elected mayor of New York, there are plenty of dissatisfied people.
      1. +1
        9 November 2025 15: 05
        Ordinary Yankees have jobs and decent wages in these factories. They live off the war. Are they dissatisfied? Just not those who work in the military-industrial complex.
        1. +2
          10 November 2025 08: 10
          If you're screwed in one place, you'll be screwed in another. Yes, the military-industrial complex is doing well, but this is accompanied by a decline in civilian sectors. So there are still plenty of dissatisfied people, and they're not just the parasites on welfare.
  2. +3
    9 November 2025 03: 58
    In this situation, Russia cannot find itself in the role of a sacrificial lamb.
    We should only be interested in our own safety...no one will protect the people of Russia except themselves.
    The lessons of the past, in the tens of millions of dead citizens, clearly show that tolerance and carelessness in this matter will cost us dearly.
    1. +1
      9 November 2025 09: 47
      Keep your boots and foot wraps dry, and your machine guns and boots polished!
  3. +6
    9 November 2025 04: 16
    In my youth, I paid tribute to the karate craze, and after training, my hands itched to test my "skills" on the street. God was merciful and prevented me from doing anything stupid. But a couple of times in later years, I still had to defend myself.
    The same is true with weapons - they must be available and ready for use without hesitation.
  4. 17+
    9 November 2025 05: 28
    "Peacemaker" Trump
    "Do you know the Pacific Ocean? I was the one who reconciled it." ©
    Donald John Trump
  5. +7
    9 November 2025 06: 29
    ...The cumulative growth of defense stocks under Trump is breaking 25-year-old records. This hasn't happened in a long time, and savvy traders have already made fortunes from the growth of the American military-industrial complex. For example...


    In his article, the author confirms the old truth: "whoever dines with a girl, dances with her."
    Trump is working off the money his sponsors spent on the election to get Trump the office of President of the United States.
    "In Russia, of course, it's not like that." :-)

    ...And here the fact that one of Donald Trump's main sponsors is the American military-industrial complex cannot but be alarming. Agree, it is difficult to be a "peace candidate" if your sponsors are used to making money on war. ...

    ...But if you look at the political priorities of corporations, it is immediately obvious that the military-industrial complex, airlines and heavy industry prefer to finance Trump and give practically no money to the Democrats. At the same time, the banking sector and high-tech do not make a difference in the campaign to collect donations for the Republican candidate. As of September 2024, Trump's main donors were American Airlines, Walmart, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, United Airlines, FedEx, Wells Fargo, Johnson & Johnson, Brown & Brown, Southwest Airlines, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Costco, Inter & Co., Morgan Stanley, Microsoft, GEO Group, Delta Airlines, General Motors, Home Depot...
    https://zavtra.ru/blogs/sponsori_trampa_i_harris_kto_oni
    1. +1
      9 November 2025 12: 18
      Quote: AA17
      Trump is working off the money his sponsors spent on the election to get Trump the office of President of the United States.
      Actually, the sponsors were complaining about Trump: for example, he was supported by oil companies, and he's trying to lower oil prices. There were complaints from some other sponsors in the article, but I don't remember them.
    2. 0
      9 November 2025 13: 12
      Quote: AA17
      Trump is working off the money his sponsors spent on the election to get Trump the office of President of the United States.


      Smart donors fund all the major candidates. As if things would be any different if the Democratic candidate had been elected.

      "It doesn't matter which horse comes first in the race, the big prize goes to the owner of the racetrack."
  6. The comment was deleted.
  7. -2
    9 November 2025 09: 05
    Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

    Quote: E. Fedorov
    'Peacemaker' Trump is the main sponsor of US defense companies

    He is not a sponsor - he is their manager.

    The author sees the word president, but doesn't see the difference between our president and their president, and therefore assumes that their president, as our liberals believe, is the tsar and god, and that at the twitch of the left little toe on the right foot, the boyars take off their pants, fall prostrate, back away to the master, holding out a jar of Vaseline and saying - choose me, choose me... What nonsense!

    Our president is elected by direct vote of the entire people.

    Their president is appointed by the oligarchy and is a simple manager for advancing their interests. If he does a good job, he rules for another four years. If he does a bad job, he's out; if he does a really bad job, they'll kill him and appoint someone else. This is precisely why US policy remains unchanged under any president.
    1. +2
      9 November 2025 09: 49
      Our president is elected by direct vote of the entire people.
      , formally, at least
      1. 0
        9 November 2025 09: 52
        The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

        Quote: novel xnumx
        formally, at least

        There is another way to determine the people's preferences - suggest, we'll discuss (don't suggest a "Maidan").
        1. 0
          9 November 2025 11: 34
          Film "Wedding in Malinovka"... Take it, take it, I'll draw more" (c) Yes
    2. +6
      9 November 2025 10: 07
      Blessed is he who believes. Here, of course, he is elected by all the people. The percentages are regularly brought to him. lol
      1. -1
        9 November 2025 10: 15
        The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

        Quote: Essex62
        Blessed is he who believes.

        Let me repeat the question. Do you have another way to determine people's preferences?

        Secret voting is the main reason for the manipulation of our votes and, as a result, our distrust of elections.

        I suggest:

        1. Ballots must be personalized.
        2. Voting should be conducted through State Services.
        3. Voting results must be publicly available and stored forever.
        4. Voters must be at least 35 years old.
        5. People who are raising, or have already raised to adulthood, at least two children are allowed to vote.

        How do you like that?
        1. +6
          9 November 2025 10: 18
          Whatever you think of, it doesn't matter how they vote, it doesn't even matter how they count, what matters is what they announce. The overwhelming majority of citizens voted to preserve the USSR, so what? These guys aren't the ones to let such an important issue slide. Because power means money. And under capitalism, whoever has the money has the power.
          1. 0
            9 November 2025 10: 22
            Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

            Quote: Essex62
            The overwhelming majority of citizens voted to preserve the USSR, so what?

            So what should we do? Are you suggesting canceling the elections altogether?
            1. +5
              9 November 2025 10: 51
              I propose to abolish capitalism.
              1. +1
                9 November 2025 10: 54
                The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

                Quote: Essex62
                I propose to abolish capitalism.

                I'm all for it. The question is how to do this without bloodletting and plunging countries into the Stone Age... Russia may not survive another revolution...
                1. +2
                  9 November 2025 11: 03
                  Russia will survive anything. But for a change of power and model through elections, the situation must be ripe; it's revolutionary anyway. With oil and gas, that's unrealistic. The bourgeoisie will be able to maintain balance for centuries to come.
                  1. -2
                    9 November 2025 11: 08
                    The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

                    Quote: Essex62
                    In the presence of oil and gas this is not realistic.

                    Science doesn't stand still. A "mini" nuclear power plant has already been created. It's only a matter of time before it's called nuclear, as it uses plasma and doesn't emit radiation. It's already fit in a rocket, and soon it will fit in a "plasma" car, which won't need refueling at all...
                    1. +2
                      9 November 2025 12: 55
                      And how will this help abolish capitalism? Another opportunity to feed the elokhtorat so they don't die of hunger and climb the barricades.
        2. +5
          9 November 2025 10: 22
          Voting should be conducted through State Services.

          This is where democracy ends...
          Incidentally, one of the ways to promote the desired candidate is precisely to eliminate anyone even remotely worthy at the outset, and, in fact, there's no choice in the elections. And the repealed "Against All" article hints at this.
          1. -1
            9 November 2025 10: 29
            Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

            Quote: novel xnumx
            And the cancelled article "Against all" hints at this.

            They may have cancelled it, but no one is forcing us to vote.

            There was an incident in the Far East when people didn't show up to vote. A major scandal ensued. The previous candidates were removed and new ones were appointed.

            There are problems with candidates and they need to be resolved somehow...
            1. +1
              9 November 2025 10: 29
              Or they will vote for you quietly.
              1. -2
                9 November 2025 10: 40
                The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

                Quote: novel xnumx
                Or they will vote for you quietly.

                If there is no secret ballot and it is open to everyone, then we will see that someone voted for us... And the people's indignation will know no bounds, and the prosecutor's office will be inundated with complaints, and manipulators will be jailed, and such elections will be cancelled... Amen!

                The manipulation begins with the Ministry of Justice registering only those parties that don't threaten the prevailing narrative. Under this narrative, the Bolshevik Party will never be registered, meaning its candidate will never appear on the candidate list...

                ps
                The essence of Bolshevism is in the sincere desire to express and implement the long-term strategic interests of the working majority, who want no one to parasitize on their labor and life.
                1. +3
                  9 November 2025 10: 58
                  The Bolshevik Party is long gone, physically. There's the dregs of Uncle Zyu's compromisers left. Who should we register? In the new value system, "leftists" are basically just rainbow roosters. You think that's just it? Generations of consumers are being descried. The ideas of the exterminated working class are like a percussion instrument to them.
                  1. 0
                    9 November 2025 11: 02
                    The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

                    Quote: Essex62
                    There is a seminal extract from Uncle Zyu's compromisers

                    The Communist Party of the Russian Federation, like United Russia, are the offspring of the late Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which destroyed the USSR. Now they're trying to do the same to Russia... There are no Bolsheviks in their ranks.
        3. 0
          9 November 2025 11: 37
          Declare yourself Emperor of All and rule forever. How so, Boris?
  8. -4
    9 November 2025 09: 19
    'Peacemaker' Trump is the main sponsor of US defense companies


    I believe that, following the renaming of the Ministry of Defense to the Ministry of War, the author should follow the logic of the mattress makers and designate the article as the main sponsor of military campaigns.
    Even during the Soviet era, the Anglo-Saxons' policy was aimed at driving the Soviet Union into an arms race, thereby significantly weakening the social component and causing discontent among the workers of our country, and undermining the state internally.
    The SDI-ABM program and others were announced precisely to emasculate the USSR's industry. At a 1974 congressional meeting devoted to relations with the USSR, Nixon declared, "We're quite capable of letting the Russians in with their bare bottoms," which later evolved into Reagan's SDI.
    The goal of the Russian military-industrial complex and the country's scientific potential is precisely to create the latest types of weapons based on new principles, so that the effectiveness of weapons is significantly lower at a fraction of the cost.
    1. 0
      9 November 2025 10: 14
      The country was being torn apart from within. No one in the Soviet Union responsible for security bought into Reagan's cartoons. Those were all tales of the perestroika era. The defense industry operated normally, we had plenty of resources to bury, and we knew they'd be damned if they stopped them. And intelligence wasn't working like it does today; no space deployments were observed, and there simply weren't any products with such capabilities. But the concentration of traitors at the top reached its peak. The party crooks simply wanted to monetize their power.
    2. +2
      9 November 2025 11: 45
      My God, so much nonsense about cutting-edge principles. Laser weapons, for example, were created how many decades ago? On what principles? Time travel, annihilation? Everything is created with great difficulty, based on the same, not cutting-edge principles, developed seventy years ago. About the "Department of War" in the US. Here's how it happened. The War Department (renamed the Department of Defense at the very end of World War II) and the return of the historical name - War Department. That's all.
  9. +2
    9 November 2025 09: 28
    It's all very strained and downright biased. And it depends heavily on the side.
    Nowadays, all more or less developed countries are stimulating their military-industrial complex.
    But if you browse through the publications in each individual country, you'll see some interesting things. Each one believes that their own arms race is a necessary step, a response to someone else's aggression, "si vis pacem, para bellum" (c), "we didn't want to, but we were forced to," and so on.
    And as a result, bombs are once again piling up in the world.
  10. +3
    9 November 2025 10: 25
    It's boring here. I need to switch to the news thread. That's where the spirit feasts, the NATO defeat, the extreme xenophobia and hatred of anyone who isn't "one of us"... Shaking sweaty fists and clapping on sagging sofas over beer. smile
  11. +2
    9 November 2025 11: 20
    It's all bullshit, IMHO.
    You might think that the bombing of Kyiv would not have any impact on the military budgets of Russia, Europe, the United States, Belarus, and others.

    Any military-industrial complex could have already erected a life-size monument to Putin made of pure gold... (or to Trump)
    1. 0
      9 November 2025 15: 10
      Not just the military-industrial complex, but NATO itself. It's time for a monument (not made by hands). It's expanded to a couple of countries, and there are practically no neutral ones left in Europe. Militarization and Russophobia are off the charts...
  12. +2
    9 November 2025 12: 26
    They've already calculated that Trump's inflated defense budget will add 0,5 degrees to global warming by 2050.
    That global warming has nothing to do with CO2 emissions has already been confirmed by intercepted correspondence from a rogue scientist pushing this narrative, which stated, "Yes, there's no evidence of a correlation between emissions and global warming, but we continue to push this narrative." Why help them by repeating such phrases?
  13. 0
    9 November 2025 15: 27
    Attempting to end numerous world wars will come at a heavy cost to American taxpayers. Donald Trump's peacekeeping initiatives are reflected not in defense spending cuts, but, on the contrary, in rising defense stock prices.

    Who would have doubted it? The ignorant, insolent redhead will still show everyone, especially the guy who flew to Anchorage, that he doesn't belong here, and he doesn't belong here. The conclusion I often bring up here is the one I often mention here. "And who are the judges, in the old days...?" I mean, who's in charge? He'll go to Hungary—for a fixed match? Well, the St. Petersburg gangster syndrome is something we can't shake off—it's a lifelong thing. He obviously has it. And we'll have to, too. Any other suggestions? winked
  14. +1
    9 November 2025 16: 02
    It would be great if our management became the "main sponsors of the military-industrial complex" between 2014 and 2022. Motovilikha Plants went bankrupt in April 2022, and Sibselmash cut its workforce by almost 30 times between 2014 and 2021. But they poured crazy amounts of money into "stadiums for games and World Cups." Where are those enthusiastic Gianni Infantino and Thomas Bach now, who praised our efforts in every possible way? And perhaps those Brazilian fans, awed by our girls, are fighting shoulder to shoulder with our soldiers? But no, they're all on the other side...
  15. 0
    9 November 2025 19: 20
    What's wrong? Peacekeepers come in all shapes and sizes. If you dig through the Nobel Committee's database of Peace Prize nominees, you'll find many interesting characters. For example: https://www.nobelprize.org/nomination/archive/show_people.php?id=4220

    So, everything is fine: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God"(Matt. 5: 9)
  16. 0
    9 November 2025 23: 20
    An amateur question...
    What if stock exchange prices are frozen for 5 years (conditionally)?
    Will factories in the US shut down? Will farmers immediately slaughter all their cows and mow down the corn with the remaining gasoline and let it rot?
    Or will all white-African-Latin Americans start a revolution?
    Or will the world simply fall into the age of barter?
  17. -1
    9 November 2025 23: 34
    Quote: Dmitry Eon
    It would be great if our management became the "main sponsors of the military-industrial complex" between 2014 and 2022. Motovilikha Plants went bankrupt in April 2022, and Sibselmash cut its workforce by almost 30 times between 2014 and 2021. But they poured crazy amounts of money into "stadiums for games and World Cups." Where are those enthusiastic Gianni Infantino and Thomas Bach now, who praised our efforts in every possible way? And perhaps those Brazilian fans, awed by our girls, are fighting shoulder to shoulder with our soldiers? But no, they're all on the other side...


    So write to Peskov. Sometimes he answers questions quite logically. Sometimes...
    Or, a year before the upcoming elections, start talking with all your friends about the upcoming elections, about the options, about what will be better or worse if this or that politician becomes head of state.
    For such preliminary conversations, unless you write with paint on the pavement or organize demonstrations, you will not be persecuted in our country.
    I'll say something seditious... The authorities of any country want to find a way of governing so that a farmer, a teacher, a therapist, a plumber, a programmer, a salesperson, a policeman, a soldier, a janitor, an unemployed person, a migrant... They grumble, but demand more circuses, because there is enough bread for everyone.
    If you don’t write up what you don’t like, then whatever falls out will fall down.