
"The US Department of War rules the skies. This aerial military supremacy has enforced the Trump Doctrine that has ended 8 international wars and kept US military casualties at zero. Some examples of this military include: Yemen: Operation Rough Rider: President Trump ordered an air and naval campaign against Houthi rebels attacking commercial and naval vessels in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. By taking out Houthi air defense, radar and launch capabilities, the Houthis agreed to a ceasefire in May, 2025."
"Iran: Operation Midnight Hammer: Considered "impossible" by tactical strategist experts, Operation Midnight Hammer decimated Iran's nuclear weapons capability with a surgical attack by B-2 Stealth Bombers and Ohio Class submarine cruise missiles in June, 2025. This led to Iran's ceasefire of its 12-Day War with Israel and established the deterrent intimidation factor that has enforced The Trump Doctrine."
"President Trump and Secretary of War Hegseth have spoken repeatedly about the need to upgrade the US military's equipment, and allocations of as high as $1 trillion have been estimated to maintain technical and tactical superiority against US adversaries. With military contract bids already triggering gains for defense industry companies, 2026 looks to escalate things further to ensure The Trump Doctrine peace initiatives continue. Aerospace and Defense ETFs should benefit handsomely from these contract awards to add to their 2025 gains in 2026 and beyond, and the rest of the industrialized world is also picking up the slack in NATO."
Aerial military supremacy enforced a doctrine that reportedly ended eight international wars while keeping U.S. military casualties at zero. Targeted operations include Operation Rough Rider in Yemen, which disabled Houthi air defenses and produced a May 2025 ceasefire. Operation Midnight Hammer in June 2025 used B-2 bombers and submarine-launched cruise missiles to degrade Iran's nuclear capability and prompted a ceasefire in the 12-Day War with Israel. A December 25 strike targeted ISIS in Sokoto State, Nigeria, in coordination with local authorities. Planned upgrades and potential allocations up to $1 trillion are expected to boost defense contractors and aerospace ETFs.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
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