IMPERFECT AS HE IS, PRESIDENT TRUMP’S EFFORTS TOWARD PEACE ARE COMMENDABLE

US President Donald Trump attracts avalanches of international scrutiny for all the right reasons – he is after all the commander-in-chief of the world’s most potent army and presides over an economy with significant global influence.

Washington’s penchant for a cantankerous foreign policy that is replete with unpredictability is also an added reason to the long list of why the US matters the most in international relations.

However, of all the accusations President Trump may face, he surely deserves credit for effort, at least, to end conflicts, particularly the Ukraine war.

His surprise telephone call to his Russian counterpart, President Vladimir Putin, this week, reveals the sight of the US President that confirmed his unpredictable human nature.

President Trump (left) and President Putin (right) phone call

The one minute, he is bombing Iran under the guise of thwarting Tehran’s nuclear programme. The very next minute, he unilaterally announces the pending resumption of talks between the US and Iran aimed at ending the simmering tensions and military confrontation.

Typically, President Trump seems to revel in leaving his friends and foe alike wondering what his next move would be. Like a hurricane, he leaves everyone scrambling for cover in his wake.

US President Donald Trump, known for his unpredictability (image: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

In East Central Africa, President Trump has recently succeededalmost out of the blue to bring about a peace treaty between long-term neighbouring adversaries in Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). According to the International Rescue Committee, from 1998-2007 an estimated 5.4 million people died as a result of conflict in the DRC, Africa’s foremost producer of minerals and rare earths. Throughout many years until recently, Rwanda stood accused of providing military support to the notorious rebel group the M23 that seeks to topple the DRC’s democratically-elected government.

President Donald Trump (centre), flanked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio (right President) and Vice President JD Vance (left of President) during thier meeting with Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC’s) Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner (right) and Rwanda’s Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe (left) in Washington (June 27, 2025) [Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images]

The African Union has been woefully unable to end the DRC conflict. The regional body, Southern African Development Community (SADC) has attempted to halt the war through military intervention. However, the SADC army has been thoroughly over-run by the Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group, causing a major continental embarrassment as purported peace-keeping soldiers were forced to cut and run with tales between their legs.

South African troops in DR Congo are part of the three-nation SADC mission

It has thus taken great effort from the Trump administration to intervene, and successfully so, in bringing the warring sides to Washington a fortnight ago to put pen to paper, thereby creating a rare sense of normalcy to Africa’s territory that has so far known only terror.

Granted, President Trump’s endorsement and material support for the Israeli genocide against Gaza leaves too much to be desired. With naked impunity and US diplomatic cover, Israel continues to extinguish helpless Palestinians on whose plight the world, except South Africa, has deliberately turned a blind eye. So far, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu aided by the US and EU has killed nearly 60,000 Gazans since 2023. Nearly 20,000 of the victims are innocent children, including newly-born babies in understaffed hospitals that the Western NGO’s have elected to ignore.

Methinks that if President Trump never receives a Nobel Peace Prize he so desperately aspires, Gaza will be the singular cause for that failure.

Images showing the destruction of Gaza amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas War (top image: February 2022) (Bottom image: January 2025) [image: Ain Media Instagram: M_shebrawy]

But then again, nothing in life is ever 100% good or bad, at least in my book. Despite President Trump’s glaring litany of shortcomings, his unexpected nearly 1-hour telephone call to President Putin, during which the elephant in the room was how to end the war in Ukraine, deserves merit.

It happened in the midst of a time when some in Europe and in NATO are desperately investing their time and resources in propaganda to peddle Russophobia, creating an atmosphere of foreboding fear about unsubstantiated claims of Moscow’s dreaded secret intentions to conquer Europe one territory after the other. The Kremlin has consistently dismissed the war-mongering Western drums, dismissing the claims simply as ludicrous.

NATO flag (left) versus Russian National flag (right)

During the Trump-Putin call, according to the Russian Presidential Aide, Yuri Ushakov, the discussions were cordial and meaningful and above all, goal-oriented.

Of greater importance, President Trump raised the issue of an early end to hostilities in Ukraine”. In return, President Putin stressed that “Russia continues to seek a negotiated solution to the Ukrainian conflict”.

Illustration of President Trump (left) and President Putin (right) on phone call (image: GSMN files)

Although other issues were also discussed, the spirit of conviviality that characterized the discussion, and their clear convergence of standpoints, hint at the renewed path, and hope, that the road to a peace deal is getting clearer by the day. Finally, thanks to President Trump, there is a thaw in bilateral relations between the two nuclear powers.

Furthermore, the jovial discussions took place during a week in which President Trump suspended the supply of US arms deliveries to Ukraine. This included a pause in the delivery of several critical munitions to Ukraine, including the patriot interceptors. Reports attributed the decision to Washington’s concerns over dwindling US stockpiles. In my view, it matters less what the real reason could be. The move expedites the push toward the attainment of the much-needed truce in the Ukraine conflict. Too many lives have been lost, and unless there is a halt to the hostilities, and pretty soon, Ukraine could end up as one gigantic heap of rubble.

A drone image shows destruction in Toretsk, Ukraine (image: Ukraine Patrol Police Department/Reuters)

The Trump administration’s moves in global affairs of course affects every nation. But the greatest effects are inevitably felt across Europe, where Washington’s traditional allies find themselves at the receiving end of devastating imposition of tariffs on various goods by the Trump administration.

Additionally, at the level of NATO, the unity that until recently held the bloc together is rapidly disintegrating. NATO is no longer certain that under Trump, the US still adheres to Article 5, which refers to “an attack on one is an attack on all”.

An illustration of President Trump shredding NATO’s Article 5 agreement (image: Ali Walker)

Instead, Trump has implored Europe to pull itself up by the bootstraps, and increase military expenditure to 5% of each country’s GDP. This is a tall order. At the moment, many EU economies are reeling, and any expenditure on arms ahead of welfare, healthcare and social services is highly likely to trigger upheavals. This is an eventuality the EU politicians are not prepared to face.

Washington’s push for peace in Ukraine has also forced Europe to rethink their aggressive propaganda against Russia, and instead re-start ways to seek a negotiated settlement.

Map showing European Union nations (left), Russia (right), and Ukraine (centre) [Image: Adobe Stock]

This week’s out-of-the-blue call by the French President Emmanuel Macron to President Putin the first in a long time signaled Europe’s acceptance that without the US backing, the EU can no longer continue to threaten Russia with military force.

Macron’s call to his Russian counterpart follows EU’s years of demanding Russia’s defeat, and sending SCALP missiles, and spewing anti-Putin rhetoric. These latest moves, and a rare posture that cries out for peace talks, is a drastic change in EU’s foreign policy toward Moscow. The unprecedented barrage of economic sanctions that the EU had imposed on Moscow at the behest of the Biden administration has had a boomerang effect on Europe. It has caused EU economies to contract, such as the Germans, and at the same time the Russian economy flourished in spite of the sanctions.

Europe’s talk of going it alone if President Trump pushes for peace has dissipated very quickly. So has the talk of the so-called Coalition of the willing led by the UK and France’s Macron, aka “Little Napoleon”.

The Coalition of the Willing, spearheaded by French President Emmanuel Macron (left), UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer (centre) and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (right) (image: Javad Parsa/ NTB via Reuters)

War talk, seemingly, has short legs.

And now, as peace looms ever so large on the horizon, Moscow is insisting on the West to address the fundamental causes of the Ukraine conflict, which is NATO’s expansion eastward, especially to Russia’s doorstep.

Seemingly, the situation is back to square one. The war, as Trump is wont to say, is needless and would never have started had he been President.

All of a sudden, there is a silver lining emerging. The light at the end of the tunnel is beaming with brightness. And grudgingly, if you will, this is thanks to President Trump, imperfect as he is. Sometimes, as they say, peace can be better than being right. As long as no one lose their lives. It is, after all, perhaps what humanity requires of us all.

US President Donald Trump
US President Donald Trump
Abbey Makoe

Abbey Makoe is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief: Global South Media Network (GSMN)

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  • Abbey Makoe

    Abbey Makoe is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief: Global South Media Network (GSMN)

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