TRUMP’S LAST EXIT: A CLEAN BREAK FROM THE MIDDLE EAST – AND ISRAEL
By Jamie McIntyre, Founder of Australian National Review
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There are moments in history where empires don’t collapse with a bang… they quietly step off the battlefield and declare victory.
This may be one of those moments.
With ongoing tensions surrounding Israel, ceasefire negotiations, and the strategic chokepoint of the Strait of Hormuz, the opportunity now sits squarely in front of Donald Trump to do what no modern American leader has had the courage to do:
Exit the Middle East—completely.
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The Ceasefire Illusion
Ceasefires in the region have historically been less like peace treaties and more like ticking clocks.
They hold… until they don’t.
The reality is that any fragile truce involving Israel is unlikely to remain intact long-term. The geopolitical landscape is too volatile, the grievances too entrenched, and the competing interests too powerful.
Which presents a strategic paradox:
If conflict resumes, it creates the perfect justification for the United States to step back and say—“We did our part.”
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Declare Victory and Walk Away
Trump’s path to salvaging his presidency may not lie in doubling down… but in stepping out.
Imagine the narrative:
•A ceasefire is brokered
•The Strait of Hormuz reopens
•Oil flows stabilize
•America declares success
Then, instead of re-engaging when tensions inevitably flare again, the U.S. simply does not return to the arena.
No more endless wars.
No more trillion-dollar interventions.
No more being the global referee.
Just a clean, calculated exit.
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Let Regional Powers Handle Regional Problems
For decades, America has acted as both shield and sword across the Middle East.
But in a rapidly shifting global order—one increasingly influenced by blocs like BRICS—the cost-benefit equation is changing.
A multipolar world does not require a single policeman.
It requires balance.
If Israel continues to engage in conflict, then under this doctrine, it must stand on its own military, economic, and diplomatic footing—as every other nation is expected to do.
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America First… Finally
Trump built his brand on the idea of “America First.”
Yet continued entanglement in Middle Eastern conflicts contradicts that very principle.
A full withdrawal would:
•Redirect resources back to domestic priorities
•Reduce military expenditure
•Lower geopolitical risk exposure
•Reposition the U.S. as a strategic, not reactive, power
It transforms America from a nation constantly dragged into conflict… into one that chooses its battles with precision.
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The Harsh Reality for Israel
Without automatic U.S. backing, Israel would face a dramatically altered strategic environment.
It would need to:
•Reassess its regional posture
•Strengthen independent defense capabilities
•Navigate diplomacy without guaranteed superpower support
This is not abandonment—it is normalization.
Every nation ultimately bears responsibility for its own survival.
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A Presidency at the Crossroads
Trump’s presidency, as critics argue, has been weighed down by foreign entanglements and geopolitical contradictions.
But history has a curious habit:
It remembers not the chaos… but the final move.
If Trump executes a decisive withdrawal, frames it as a victory, and avoids re-engagement, he could redefine his legacy from turbulent… to transformational.
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Final Thought
Empires don’t always fall because they are defeated.
Sometimes, they fall because they refuse to leave.
The smarter play?
Leave first. Win the narrative. And let the world rebalance itself.
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