Donald Trump sparks WW3 fears over pledge to rename Defence Department | US | News

Donald Trump announced that he and his defense secretary Pete Hegset plans to resurrect the title of “Ministry of War” about twenty years ago, led to fears of WW3 on Monday.
The explosive announcement came to sit with Trump’s routine problem with a routine problem with the military deployment on Washington DC, which led to an extraordinary wirade about the identity crisis of the Pentagon.
Trump said that the defense secretary Pete Hegseth was incredible with the battle department, as I said – until 1947, until President Truman returned to the brands before the sweeping defense reforms.
Trump, “You know, we call it the Ministry of Defense, but between us, I think we will change the name. You want to know the truth. I think we will have some information that may be soon.”
The controversial proposal calls the country’s victorious World War, as a justification for the brand, Trump Radikal, which is connected to the magnificent warfare heritage of America.
“I think, you know, the Ministry of Defense, World War I, World War I won the II, it was called the war department. And for me, this is really a part of it. But there is a feeling that we will change.”
“Everyone likes to have an incredible history of victory when we were the Ministry of War, then we changed it to the Ministry of Defense.”
Trump said that the controversial bomb developments will be “within the next few weeks”.
The President of the FireBrand swam hegset as the “War Secretary” many times and argued that the original name change revealed political accuracy and American weakness.
However, historical transformation has actually been due to practical restructuring after war rather than ideological concerns.
Only years after the end of World War II, when Harry Truman signed the groundbreaking National Security Law in July 1947, extensive changes emerged.
The revolutionary legislation transformed the former war department into the Army Department and brought together the Navy Department and brand new Air Force Department under the newly published national military organization led by the American first defense secretary, James Forrestal.




