-Friday World — April 4, 2026
Trump’s Dangerous Path Is a Threat to America, the World, and Our Future — It’s Time to Remove Him and Restore Peace Through Brotherhood, Not Bullying
Dear Fellow American Citizens,
We, the people of the United States, have always believed in a simple truth: the world runs on peace and brotherhood, not on dadagiri (bullying and aggression). Yet today, under Donald Trump’s leadership in his second term, America stands at a dangerous crossroads. His unilateral decisions, broken promises, and reckless foreign policy are not just harming other nations — they are putting our own country, our values, our economy, and our human rights at serious risk.
The clearest example is the Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA) of 2015. This historic agreement was not a gift to Iran — it was a carefully negotiated multilateral deal involving the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain, Germany, the European Union, and Iran. Its goal was simple and vital: keep Iran’s nuclear program peaceful and prevent the development of nuclear weapons.
Iran accepted strict limits:
Uranium enrichment capped at 3.67%
Stockpile limited to 300 kilograms
Fewer centrifuges
Full access for IAEA inspectors
In return, nuclear-related sanctions were lifted, giving Iran economic relief while blocking its path to a bomb. The IAEA repeatedly verified Iran’s compliance. This was multilateral diplomacy at its best — proof that nations can solve complex problems together.
But on May 8, 2018, President Trump unilaterally pulled the United States out of the deal. He called it a “horrible, one-sided deal” and reimposed harsh sanctions, including secondary sanctions that punished even European companies doing business with Iran. He did this alone, ignoring our closest allies.
European leaders — France’s Macron, Germany’s Merkel, and Britain’s May — begged America to stay in the deal. They issued joint statements and tried to save it. But Trump’s decision was final and unilateral.
What happened next? Iran, feeling betrayed, began rolling back its commitments from 2019 onward. It increased uranium enrichment to 60%, expanded its stockpile, and restricted IAEA access. The “breakout time” — how long it would take Iran to produce enough material for a nuclear weapon — shrank from over a year under the deal to just weeks. The very threat the agreement was meant to contain became worse because of Trump’s move.
This was not leadership. This was a betrayal of international trust.
The Global Trust Deficit: How Can Anyone Trust America Again?
Trump’s action sent a clear message to the entire world: American commitments are not reliable. If the United States can walk away from a major deal it helped negotiate — even when international monitors confirmed compliance — then why should any country sign a new agreement with us?
This doubt now hangs over every future negotiation — with North Korea, China, Russia, or anyone else. Allies began speaking of “strategic autonomy,” meaning they must reduce dependence on unpredictable
American policy. Russia and China gained space to strengthen their own partnerships.
Today, in 2026 during Trump’s second term, the world increasingly views him not as a peacemaker, but as an aggressor and warmonger. His style of “America First”
through threats, tariffs, and sudden military actions has isolated the United States. Many nations see Trump’s approach as a threat to global stability, human rights, and the rules-based international order.
A Direct Appeal to American Citizens
My fellow Americans, this is not just about foreign policy — it is about our own future and our moral standing in the world.
When other countries hesitate to do business with American companies or sign agreements with our government, they ask a simple question: “If the American president can tear up one deal today, what stops him from tearing up another tomorrow?” Your jobs, your investments, and your safety depend on America being seen as a trustworthy partner, not an unreliable bully.
Trump’s actions are also a danger to human rights. His unilateralism weakens international institutions that protect freedoms and prevent conflicts. When America abandons multilateralism, it gives space to authoritarian regimes to act more boldly. This ultimately harms ordinary people everywhere — including us.
The world does not run on dadagiri. It runs on peace, dialogue, and mutual respect. Trump’s approach of threats and sudden withdrawals has damaged the spirit of global brotherhood that America once helped build after World War II.
It Is Time for Americans to Raise Their Voice
We, the American people, have the power and the responsibility to correct this dangerous course. When we see our president acting in ways that isolate our nation, damage our economy, and threaten global peace, we must speak up.
Raise your voice for:
Responsible leadership that honors commitments
Diplomacy based on alliances and trust, not unilateral bullying
Policies that protect American interests without making us the world’s villain
History will judge this moment. Future generations will ask whether we allowed short-term aggression to destroy America’s long-term credibility and moral leadership.
The Iran Nuclear Deal betrayal was a turning point. It showed the world that under Trump, American promises come with an expiration date decided by one man’s mood. This is not strength — it is recklessness that endangers all of us.
Dear fellow citizens, the world is watching. Other nations are asking: Can we ever trust America again while Trump remains in power? The answer lies with us.
Let us choose peace and brotherhood over aggression. Let us demand leadership that unites rather than divides, that builds trust rather than destroys it.
Dear fellow citizens, the world is watching. Other nations are asking: Can we ever trust America again while Trump remains in power? The answer lies with us. Let us choose peace and brotherhood over aggression. Let us demand leadership that unites rather than divides, that builds trust rather than destroys it.
America is greater when it leads with wisdom, not with threats. It is time to remove the danger posed by this style of governance and restore America as a beacon of stability, human rights, and cooperative progress.
The world does not need another aggressor. It needs a reliable partner. Let us be that partner again.
For a peaceful, trustworthy, and brotherhood-based America.
By Sajjadali Nayani
Friday World — April 4, 2026