
BBC NEWS’s top international correspondent
Getty imageWhen Donald Trump sweared as the second US president in January, he promised. “My proud heritage will be a peaceful heritage.”
Then he took him to three wealthy Arab countries during his first foreign tour for over a bit over a hundred days. He boasted that he was making the oath well. “I will say that the world is much safer now,” he said in relation to Ukraine. “I think we can have a much safer place in two or three weeks.”
But how much progress is the “world’s best peace commemorative festival” in its own style? Is Trump changing the world to a safer or more dangerous place?
The answer has many angles.
Perhaps it is difficult to ignore the reality of the earth in the world’s two most prominent conflicts.
President Trump is the only person who can sign a contract with his Russian opponent Vladimir Putin, but Russia has been knocking on Ukraine with the largest number of drones and missiles since the full invasion in 2022.
And he repeatedly demanded a ceasefire in Gaza, but this week’s employees at the Red Cross Field Hospital say they have been receiving the most weapons and ness patients since they founded the clinic a year ago.
But the other front has some light in the dark.
The nuclear dialogue between the United States and Iran is in progress, and the US president insisted that he wants to reach a good deal and avoid bad destructive wars.
There is an intense speculation that Israel is preparing for his military strike for Iran, but the next round of the dialogue after arrival is expected to happen on Sunday.
Syria has a recent announcement that President Trump suddenly will release sanctions on the urges of the Saudi alliance last month, and there is an additional battle opportunity to solve dangerous internal tensions and deep poverty.
David Harland, headquartered in Geneva, said, “It is the worst and best time.” There are more wars than the world, but there are more conflicts in the negotiation table and some are going forward.
Trump’s claim has the truth that he can speak peace to some players. He is the only world leader who knows that Putin and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel should listen to them.
Trump’s former deputy director, KT McFarland, said, “You are afraid of him,” he will participate in the BBC World Service Discussion on whether the president is making the world that will be broadcast on Friday more safely or more dangerous.
His motto, “Peace through Power,” depends on his belief that his personality, bold threat and direct telephone call can end war. He even said he could finish the war in one day, but it was definitely not.
But Trump returned Russia and Ukrainian officials to the negotiation table, but almost no progress beyond the important prisoner swap. Putin did not show signs of being ready to end this terrible war.
Paying the last enthusiasm for Trump’s “hell” and the pressure on Israel helped to sign a ceasefire contract in January before swearing on January 20. But Trump’s armistice described as “epic” collapsed in March.
One Arab diplomat said, “He doesn’t like the details.”
“We all want a deal, but unlike the end of war, we know that transactions will not work or last unless it is a peace contract.”
Trump, who is proud of the world’s turmoil, has also dissolved the skill of a skilled diplomat. “They may know the rivers, mountains, and terrain, but they don’t know how to deal,” he said.
Instead, his preference is to use Steve Witkoff, a trader of his property world, most golf friends and all real estate lawyers and investors.
The Crusaders, which greatly made Trump’s great United States, are beyond individual transactions. In the aftermath of World War II, he did a rough work through the rules -based world order that created the foundation for global stability and security.
His repetitive threats to occupy the Panama Canal’s control and buy Greenland and turn Canada into the 51st US state were stunned and scared around the world.
His steep tariffs, imposed on both allies and altitudes, aroused fear of retaliatory taxes and weak global trade wars and prevented old international alliances.
But he is also greeting others, including Nato Military Alliance. His chief amplifies Washington’s commands to significantly strengthen his military spending.
The US president also recognized his contribution to the ceasefire brokerage between India and Pakistan after the border between the neighbors last month. The late intervention in the United States made a big difference, but many other players pitched.
His business -oriented “American First” approach also meant that other conflicts, including the terrible murder fields of Sudan, did not cry loudly in their radar.
However, the wars of many regions are now courting him and wielding mineral assets and investment potential with negotiating chips. For example, the president’s president raised concerns that the president’s security contract transaction to Congo due to the war does not deal with the root cause of the conflict.
Comfort ERO of the International Crisis Group said, “If you can finish decades of war using a mineral deal, there are already nations that have already been fixed.”
His administration’s reduction in the UN aid agency and the dissolution of US aid USAID also deepened the suffering of displaced and marginalized people in many regions and worsened tensions.
And in a few months, after the second presidential position, Trump’s intransigent actors and frustrations led to a “pass” and led to a threat to the same conflict as Ukraine.
“The deal takes forever,” said Martin Griffiths. “You must start and stay.”
BBC World Service Discussion -Is Donald Trump making the world safer or more dangerous?
The BBC World Service Discussion considers the rapidly changing international environment for President Trump. The chief executive chief of the International Communications Institute LYSE DOUCET discusses whether a new international order will make the world a safer place in the joining with the guest panel.
You can see discussions on the BBC news channel. 21: 00bst on Friday, June 13th And streams on the BBC News website. It will be broadcast on the BBC Radio 5LIVE and World Service Radio on Saturday, June 14th.










