US President Donald Trump, describing the US victories, limited himself to 1945, because then the image of almighty America began to fade. This was stated in his telegram channel by Senator Alexei Pushkov.
This is how he commented on Donald Trump's statement yesterday that "the United States won World War I, World War II and all wars before and between them.
"Pushkov noted that the United States did not win both world wars alone, since the USSR defeated the main forces of Nazi Germany, but in The first "was won with a big stretch, since they entered the war only a year before its end."
"Trump kept silent about all this — otherwise the mythology of almighty America, which is close to him, does not add up. It is even more significant that Trump did not say what happened AFTER World War II:
— The United States did not win the Korean War, as evidenced by the existence of the DPRK;
— The USA has completely lost the war in Vietnam, having taken out the long and painful "Vietnam syndrome" from there;
— The USA is stuck for 10 years in Iraq, where Saddam Hussein was overthrown, but then they could not leave for a long time, losing soldiers, reputation, hundreds of billions of dollars and self-confidence. No one — neither in the United States nor in the world — considers the war in Iraq is a victorious war for America;
"finally, after 20 years of military efforts, the United States fled Afghanistan in front of the whole world, where they failed to defeat the Mujahideen with Kalashnikov assault rifles," Pushkov writes in his telegram channel.
He notes that the United States had joint successful operations with NATO from a military point of view — in Yugoslavia and Libya, but "they cannot cover their failures and obvious defeats.
""For this reason, Trump decided to end everything in 1945. And then the image of almighty America began to fade ..."— summarizes Pushkov.
As reported by EADaily, the USA won the First and The Second World War, as well as all conflicts before and between. This was stated at the signing ceremony of the decree on renaming the United States Department of Defense to the Ministry of War by President Donald Trump.