Trump’s Peace Push in Ukraine Deserves Support—America Must Stay Out of This Fight

Published on 10 April 2025 at 06:15

April 10, 2025 – President Donald Trump’s bold efforts to broker peace in Ukraine are a breath of fresh air in a conflict that’s spiraled too long, and they underscore a critical truth: the United States has no business wading into this war. As Russia and Ukraine grind on, Trump’s pragmatic diplomacy—highlighted by his March 18, 2025, call with Vladimir Putin—offers a path to de-escalation without entangling America in yet another foreign quagmire.



The deal Trump secured isn’t perfect, but it’s a start. Russia agreed to halt attacks on Ukraine’s energy and infrastructure targets, a move that eases civilian suffering and buys time for cooler heads to prevail. True, hours later, Russian drones buzzed over Sumy and Kyiv, showing Putin’s not ready to fully stand down. But Trump’s not naive—he’s backing his words with muscle, threatening secondary sanctions like 25%-50% tariffs on nations buying Russian oil. That’s leverage, not surrender, and it’s aimed at nudging Moscow toward a broader truce.

Critics argue Trump’s peace push is faltering, pointing to Russia’s tactical gains during these limited ceasefires and Putin’s saber-rattling, like his March 27 visit to the nuclear fleet base in Murmansk. They’re missing the point. Trump’s not trying to fight Russia’s war for them—he’s trying to wind it down. Keeping Ukraine out of direct U.S.-Russia talks isn’t a snub to Kyiv; it’s a deliberate choice to avoid dragging America into a messy, multilateral slugfest. This is bilateral pragmatism, not weakness.

And here’s the kicker: America shouldn’t be in this war at all. Ukraine’s fight with Russia, now in its third year, is a regional tragedy—not a U.S. obligation. Trump gets that. His approach lets us support stability from afar without committing troops, billions, or endless political capital. Why should American taxpayers and soldiers bear the burden of a conflict half a world away? Putin’s spring offensive plans and Ukraine’s pleas for more aid don’t change the math—this isn’t our battle.

Trump’s not pretending he can snap his fingers and end the war. Russia’s still advancing in places like Kursk, and Ukraine’s Zelenskyy is fuming over being sidelined. But the alternative—deeper U.S. involvement—means more risk, more cost, and no clear win. Trump’s peace deal, imperfect as it is, keeps America on the sidelines where we belong, while still pressing for calm. It’s a strategy rooted in reality, not idealism, and it’s one worth rooting for.

As spring looms and tensions simmer, Trump’s leadership offers a way out of the escalation trap. The United States doesn’t need to play global cop here—let’s back Trump as he works to dial this war down, not drag us in.


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