As someone whoās been digging into global conflicts and the U.S.ās role in them, I canāt help but see a pattern. The U.S. portrays itself as a champion of peace, brokering deals and waving the flag of diplomacy, but the ground reality tells a different story. In 2025, while the U.S. claims to be a peacemaker, itās fueling wars and raking in profits as the worldās biggest arms supplier. Letās break it down and look at the so-called "7 wars" where peace was promised on paper but war raged on the ground.
The U.S. war industry is booming. Ukraine and the EU have received over $70 billion in U.S. weapons since 2022, and Israel gets $3.8 billion annually, with extra bombs rushed in during the Iran conflict. Defense contractors are hitting record stock highsācheck global arms stock prices from just three days ago, and youāll see how instability is a goldmine for them. Trumpās recent U-turn on Ukraine only proves the point: war is big business.
Hereās my take on the ā7 warsā and the truth behind the headlines:
CambodiaāThailand: The border clashes near Preah Vihear temple were already dying down before Trump claimed a ceasefire on social media. No major war was resolved hereājust skirmishes that fizzled out naturally.
KosovoāSerbia: Trumpās envoy pushed an economic deal, but the core issue of sovereignty is still a mess. Violence flared up again after the so-called agreement, proving the āpeaceā was just for show.
DRCāRwanda: The U.S. bragged about a ceasefire, but fighting in Congo never stopped. Hundreds died even after the deal was signed, showing how hollow these claims are.
PakistanāIndia: Both countries outright rejected U.S. mediation. The Pahalgam terror attack in April 2025, which killed 26 tourists, triggered Indiaās Operation Sindoor and Pakistanās counterstrikes. A ceasefire followed, but PM Modi made it clear in Parliament that India wanted no foreign interference. Pakistanās Deputy PM even confirmed India shut down U.S. involvement.
IsraelāIran: Peace? Hardly. In June 2025, a 12-day war erupted. Israel struck 27 Iranian provinces, targeting nuclear sites. Iran hit back with 550 missiles and over 1,000 drones, killing more than 1,000 people. Israel bombed Evin Prison, killing 79. The U.S. didnāt broker peaceāit joined the fight with Operation Midnight Hammer, pounding Iranās nuclear facilities with bunker-buster bombs. Both sides claimed victory, but the conflict is far from over.
EgyptāEthiopia: The Nile dam dispute is still a ticking time bomb. Ethiopia rejected U.S. mediation, accusing it of favoring Egypt. No progress, no peaceājust more tension.
ArmeniaāAzerbaijan: Trump got a photo-op with both leaders, but Russia, not the U.S., mediated the real ceasefire. By 2025, Azerbaijan had full control of Nagorno-Karabakh, and the U.S. role was little more than symbolic.
The U.S. talks peace while arming wars and cashing in. These āceasefiresā are more about optics than reality, and the profits keep rolling in for defense contractors. The truth is clear: peace on paper, war on the ground.
#WarAndProfits #USForeignPolicy #GlobalConflicts
#TruthBehindTheHeadlines #war