Donald Trump sends chilling message with new ‘Department of War’ | World | News

Donald Trump re -branded the American defense department because the previous name was “awakened”. The US President signed an executive order aimed at seeing that the Ministry of Defense was renamed as the Ministry of War.
Mr. Trump said he believes that the more challenging name is more suitable for the state institution that controls the world’s most powerful army. “It is a much more appropriate name in the light of the world, especially in the light of the world,” he said in the oval office. The change is the return to the original name used between 1789-1947.
Mr. Trump said: “We won the First World War, won the Second World War, won everything before and between them. And then we decided to wake up and changed the name to the Ministry of Defense. So we go to the Ministry of War.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said that the United States, which appeared with the President, has not won a great war since then.
He said that the name change was “not only about renamed, but about restore” and “words important”.
“We will attack not only the defense,” he added. “Maximum fatality is not warm legality. The violent effect is not politically correct.
“We will raise not only defenders, but warriors. So this war department, just like America has returned.”
The executive order allows the name to be used as “secondary title iyle with the approval of the Congress, which has the power to establish and rename the departments required to make the change permanent.
Mr. Trump told journalists last month, he added that the Congress was sure that we will “continue if we need it”.
The management did not wait a few minutes after Pentagon’s Savaş.gov was directed to Savaş.gov on Friday.
Mr. Trump and Mr. Hegseth tried to dismantle what they described as “awakened ideology öne from the Pentagon and changed other names.
After a compulsory examination as a Congress, they wanted to regain the names of nine military bases, honoring the leaders of the confederation in 2023 under the Biden administration.
Since the original names are no longer allowed to be permitted in accordance with the law, Mr. Hegseth ordered the bases to be named after new people with similar names.
For example, Fort Bragg is now honoring the Ordu PFC. Confederation Gen. Roland L. Bragg, a Parachutist of the Second World War, decorated instead of Braxton Bragg.




