Monday, 9 February 2026

Joshua Leakey VC and the Lie That Insulted Every Ally Who Bled for America


Introduction

Some statements are not misunderstood. They are not clumsy phrasing. They are not taken out of context. They are simply wrong, and offensive enough that history itself has to step in and say no.

Donald Trump’s claim that European and NATO soldiers in Afghanistan stayed back from the front was not an insult that landed badly. It was a full-scale smear of every allied soldier who fought, bled, and in many cases died backing the United States during a twenty-year war.

If you want a single, documented, unimpeachable rebuttal, read the Victoria Cross citation for Joshua Leakey. It is not opinion. It is not myth. It is an official record of a joint UK US firefight where allied troops went forward under fire and saved each other’s lives.


Afghanistan was a coalition war, fought shoulder to shoulder

Afghanistan was not fought in national silos. British, American, Danish, Estonian, Canadian, Dutch, Polish, Australian, and other forces operated in mixed task groups. Patrol bases were shared. Quick reaction forces crossed national lines. Medics treated whoever was bleeding, regardless of flag.

Allied troops did not stay back. They held ground, ran clearance operations, manned isolated patrol bases, and responded to contact in some of the most contested terrain in Helmand, Kandahar, Uruzgan, and Kunar.

Coalition casualty lists exist for one reason only. Coalition troops were in combat.


Joshua Leakey VC: documented fact, not rhetoric

On 22 August 2013, in Helmand Province, Lance Corporal Joshua Leakey of the Parachute Regiment was part of a joint UK US operation led by the US Marine Corps.

The force was pinned down by intense Taliban fire. A US Marine Corps captain was shot and wounded. Enemy fighters were closing in. Communications were degraded.

Leakey did not stay back.

He ran across open ground under machine-gun fire to reach the pinned command group. He treated the wounded US Marine officer and helped initiate casualty evacuation. He then returned uphill under sustained fire to restore and reposition suppressed machine guns, repeatedly exposing himself to draw fire away from others.

The official citation states that his actions were decisive in preventing further loss of life and enabling the evacuation of the wounded US Marine officer.

That is what allied combat looks like. That is what backing the United States looks like.


The Gurkhas: alone, outnumbered, and under sustained attack

If Trump’s claim were true, it collapses completely when confronted with the actions of the Gurkhas.

Acting Sergeant Dipprasad Pun CGC

On 17 September 2010, Dipprasad Pun, of 1st Battalion, The Royal Gurkha Rifles, was on sentry duty at a checkpoint in Babaji, Helmand Province.

He was alone on the roof of a compound when it came under sustained attack by an estimated 12 to 30 Taliban fighters.

For over 15 minutes, Pun fought alone. He fired more than 400 rounds, threw 17 grenades, and detonated a Claymore mine as insurgents attempted to overrun the position. When his rifle failed, and ammunition ran out, he physically threw a machine-gun tripod at an attacker climbing onto the roof.

He prevented the position from being overrun and saved the lives of three comrades inside the compound.

For this, he was awarded the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross, the second-highest award for bravery in the British Army.

There is no version of Afghanistan where this qualifies as staying back.

Lance Corporal Tuljung Gurung MC

In 2013, Tuljung Gurung, also of the Royal Gurkha Rifles, was awarded the Military Cross after close combat with insurgents during an Afghan operation.

When ammunition was exhausted, Gurung fought with his kukri knife, driving off attackers at close quarters.

Again, not staying back. Not symbolic. Direct, face-to-face combat.


It was not only British forces

British examples are among the best documented, but they are not unique.

Danish troops fought sustained combat operations in Helmand alongside British and US Marines, suffering heavy casualties relative to force size. Estonian infantry units operated in some of the most dangerous districts of Helmand under UK and US command, earning national gallantry awards for combat actions. Canadian troops fought major engagements in Kandahar and received numerous Stars of Military Valour, often during joint operations involving US units.

Across NATO, gallantry citations repeatedly reference:

  • extraction of wounded US personnel,

  • suppression of enemy fire to allow US manoeuvre,

  • defence of joint patrol bases under sustained attack.

These medals were not handed out for presence. They were awarded for contact.


The insult to US troops is built into the lie

Trump’s claim does not just smear allies. It insults US forces as well.

US medals for valour frequently cite actions taken to rescue or reinforce NATO troops under fire. You cannot praise those US soldiers while pretending the people they were saving were not in combat.

If allies stayed back, then US troops were apparently risking their lives for people who were not there. That is absurd.


The backtrack does not repair the damage

After the backlash, Trump attempted to soften the fallout by praising British soldiers as brave and acknowledging UK casualties.

That does not undo the original statement.

It simply singles out one ally for damage control while leaving every other NATO partner implicitly accused of cowardice. It also avoids the core issue, which is that the original claim was untrue.

You do not get credit for partial praise after full erasure.


Leadership, sacrifice, and the right to speak

When a leader rewrites the history of a war like Afghanistan, they do more than fracture trust. They hand propaganda victories to adversaries, weaken alliances from the inside, and degrade collective defence by undermining the shared memory that holds it together.

And in Trump’s case, there is an added layer of hypocrisy that cannot be ignored.

Donald Trump and his family have no military service anywhere in their history. None. No enlistment, no combat, no command, no sacrifice. Yet he feels entitled to insult soldiers from multiple nations who went forward under fire, backed US forces in contact, and in many cases did not come home.

He has no such right.

Respect for military service is not conferred by holding office. It is earned through understanding, restraint, and humility. Trump shows none of those qualities. He speaks about war as if it were a business negotiation, and about soldiers as if they were contractors who failed to deliver value.

That alone disqualifies him from passing judgment on those who fought.

A real comparison of leadership

If anyone wants a real comparison between leadership and cowardice, it is not found in speeches or slogans. It is found in actions when everything is on the line.

When Russia invaded Ukraine and attempted within days to seize Kyiv, Volodymyr Zelensky was given clear options. He could flee. He could form a government in exile. He could survive.

Instead, he stayed.

Zelensky knew that if Kyiv fell, his capture or death was almost certain. Russian forces were advancing rapidly. Assassination teams were active. Yet he remained in the capital, rallied his troops, addressed his people, and made it clear that the leadership would not abandon them.

That decision mattered. It stiffened resistance. It bought time. It saved Ukraine from collapse.

Trump, by contrast, has never faced anything remotely comparable. And there is not a shred of evidence to suggest that, under similar circumstances, he would have done anything other than run. Loud men who belittle courage from a safe distance are rarely brave when the danger is real.

That is the difference between a snake oil salesman and a leader. One sells strength, lies and Misinformation. The other proves it when it counts with actions.



Soapbox Comment

This was not a gaffe. It was not careless phrasing. It was a lie that spat on the graves of allied soldiers and on the US troops who fought beside them.

Trump is not fit to lead a military alliance. He is not fit to lecture anyone on courage. He is not fit to be the shit stain on the boots of those who served backing the United States up, often at the cost of their lives.

How many times does someone get to demean the armed forces, rewrite wars, and fracture alliances before the US political system does more than issue statements and move on? There is always noise in Congress. There is always outrage on cue. Then there is silence, and the next disgrace follows.

That silence does damage too.

Wake up, America.



Coalition Casualties in Afghanistan


















Thursday, 29 January 2026

Trump, Farage, NATO and the Question Putin Never Had to Ask

 




Isn’t it funny. Funny strange, not funny haha.

Both Donald Trump and Nigel Farage have, time and again, taken positions that just happen to benefit one man above all others. Vladimir Putin.

Farage was the chief cheerleader for the UK leaving the EU. Brexit did exactly what the Kremlin wanted. It fractured Europe, weakened collective bargaining power, and made the continent less cohesive politically, economically, and militarily. Putin could not have scripted it better if he had written the campaign leaflets himself.

Trump, meanwhile, has spent years doing Russia’s work for it. He has undermined the relationship between the US and Europe, sneered at allies, and openly questioned the value of NATO. Is it still relevant. Will the US honour it. Would America actually step in if Article 5 were triggered? All now conveniently in doubt because Trump cannot go five minutes without lobbing a grenade into the alliance that has kept the West stable for decades.

And let’s be clear. When the US needed help after 9/11, Article 5 was triggered for the first and only time. European allies, including the UK, backed America without hesitation. No hand-wringing. No transactional bullshit. We showed up.

Trump, on the other hand, does not give a shit about that history. He treats alliances like a protection racket and loyalty like a subscription service. Miss a payment and you are on your own. That is not leadership. It is vandalism.

Right now, Putin is effectively having his birthday party every single day. Western unity weakened. NATO credibility questioned. Democratic systems under internal attack by their own politicians. Champagne corks popping in the Kremlin.

If Trump and Farage are not Russian assets, then frankly they are doing the job so well they might as well be.

And there is one question that has stuck in my mind ever since Trump first came out with it.

If Europe supposedly needs the US more than the US needs Europe, then why the fuck did America trigger Article 5 and ask for help when it needed it most?

Funny that.


Gary’s Soapbox Comment

What makes this so dangerous is not that Trump or Farage openly wave Russian flags. It is that they do not need to. The damage is done through doubt, division, and the quiet erosion of trust between allies. NATO was never meant to be a pay-as-you-go service, nor was democracy meant to be run like a grift.

Putin did not have to fire a shot to weaken the West. He simply had to sit back and watch as Western politicians did it for him, loudly, proudly, and in public. When alliances are questioned, when Article 5 is treated like a bargaining chip, and when unity is portrayed as weakness, only one side benefits.

The most damning part is this: when America needed help, Europe answered without hesitation. No invoices. No threats. No tantrums. That solidarity is now treated as optional by people who claim to be patriots.

Putin never had to ask whether NATO would survive. Others asked it for him.

Monday, 12 January 2026

Trump, Chess, Checkers, or Schoolyard Bully Chaos?

 


Trump, Chess, Checkers, or Schoolyard Bully Chaos?

For years, Trump supporters have insisted that Donald Trump is playing chess while everyone else is playing checkers. The phrase is used whenever his actions appear reckless, contradictory, or destabilising. The implication is simple: what looks like chaos is actually genius, and what looks like failure is merely a move several steps ahead.

But when you strip away the slogan and examine outcomes, incentives, and consequences, the chess metaphor collapses. What remains looks far less like grand strategy and far more like leverage-driven bullying with little regard for long-term cost.


The Chess Myth and Why It Persists

The chess narrative is powerful because it works backwards. Any outcome, good or bad, can be reframed as intentional. Allies unsettled? That was the plan. Institutions undermined? Clearing the board. Opponents angry? Psychological warfare.

Real chess players reduce uncertainty. They protect their king. They trade pieces only when the position improves. Trump’s approach does the opposite. It increases uncertainty, weakens alliances, and forces partners into defensive reactions.

That is not chess. That is disruption without structure.

There is also a simpler point. There is no evidence that Trump has ever played chess, publicly or privately. Chess requires patience, sustained concentration, and respect for constraints. None of those traits feature prominently in Trump’s documented behaviour. The metaphor survives because it flatters supporters, not because it fits reality.


Greenland: Security Theatre or Resource Play?

Greenland has been presented by Trump as a security issue, with claims of Russian and Chinese naval presence used to justify increased US control. Danish, Greenlandic, and NATO-linked sources have repeatedly stated that such claims do not match tracking data or intelligence reporting. There are no Russian or Chinese warships swarming Greenland.

What Greenland does have is oil, gas, and rare earth minerals, all of which matter enormously in future energy and technology supply chains.

Crucially, Denmark has already stated that the US can expand its military presence in Greenland without any change in sovereignty. If security were the genuine concern, the issue would already be resolved.

That leaves resources. And leverage.

When security arguments are made where the threat is unverified and the assets are very real, scepticism is not only justified, it is necessary.


Venezuela: Drugs, Democracy, or Oil?

Venezuela has been framed as a drugs and democracy problem. Yet most narcotics entering the US flow through Mexico, not Venezuela. What Venezuela does have is the world’s largest proven oil reserves.

The language of enforcement masks the economic reality. Control of energy assets is power. The question is not whether intervention can be dressed up as law enforcement, but who benefits once the oil flows.

History suggests it will not be ordinary Venezuelans.


Russia, China, and Who Really Benefits

There is no proven evidence that Trump is a Russian asset. That claim requires a level of control and direction that has not been demonstrated.

But a more uncomfortable truth remains. Trump’s actions repeatedly benefit Russia without requiring coordination.

NATO cohesion weakens. The EU fractures. Alliances are strained. Democratic institutions are questioned. These outcomes align neatly with Russian strategic objectives, regardless of intent.

If someone behaves exactly as a hostile power would hope, intent becomes almost irrelevant. Outcomes matter.

Putin does not need to control Trump. He merely needs to watch him work.


Brexit and the UK’s Shrinking Leverage

Brexit removed the UK as a bridge between the US and the EU. That role mattered. It gave Britain influence and gave Washington insight and access.

Post-Brexit, the UK is less useful as an intermediary and more exposed as a strategic outpost. American airbases remain, but political leverage has diminished. If the US pursues aggressive unilateral moves, such as coercion over Greenland, the UK faces an uncomfortable choice.

Europe or unquestioning alignment.

Legally, the UK can restrict US operations launched from its bases. Politically, doing so would test the relationship like never before. That is not strength. It is vulnerability.


Deutsche Bank, Debt, and the Business Genius Illusion

Trump’s reputation as a business mastermind does not survive scrutiny.

He inherited enormous wealth, yet repeatedly ran major ventures into bankruptcy. Casinos, one of the most forgiving businesses imaginable, failed under his control.

When US banks lost patience, Deutsche Bank stepped in. This does not prove foreign influence, but it does show that Trump survived not through exceptional performance, but through continued access to credit when others would have been cut off.

Trump’s wealth model is not value creation. It is leverage, refinancing, branding, and survival. That is legal. It is not genius.


America’s Debt and the Temptation of Asset Thinking

The US faces rising interest costs on its national debt. There is no easy fix. Cutting spending is politically painful. Raising taxes is unpopular.

In that context, the temptation to think in terms of acquiring external assets is obvious. Oil fields. Minerals. Strategic territory.

But nations are not corporations. You cannot solve sovereign debt by grabbing resources. Those assets require stability, investment, and cooperation. Coercion raises costs, not value.


So What Is Trump Actually Doing?

Trump is not playing chess.
He is not playing checkers either.

He is playing schoolyard dominance politics on a global scale.

Push hard.
Create fear.
Force submission.
Declare victory.
Move on.

That approach can work briefly. It does not build systems. It does not create durable power. It leaves behind resentment, resistance, and strategic holes others are eager to fill.


Conclusion

Trump’s greatest skill is not strategy. It is narrative control.

He survives by reframing chaos as brilliance and leverage as strength. But when measured by outcomes rather than slogans, his actions weaken alliances, empower adversaries, and trade long-term stability for short-term dominance.

That is not chess.

It is noise, pressure, and spectacle.

And history is rarely kind to leaders who mistake those things for strategy.


Gary’s Soapbox Comment

Real strategy reduces risk and builds resilience. Bullying creates fear but leaves nothing solid behind. When power is mistaken for genius, the bill always arrives later.