Missiles lit the sky before dawn. Leaders fell, cities burned, and threats of “hell” echoed across continents. In just one year,
Donald Trump’s second term has redrawn the map of fear. From Tehran to Caracas, from the
Red Sea to the Arctic, no region feels safe. Allies whisper. Enemies dig in. And the list of targets keeps grow… Continues…
Trump’s second term has unfolded like a rolling storm front, striking country after country with little pause. Iran was hit first and hardest: coordinated
U.S.–Israeli strikes on nuclear facilities killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and triggered furious retaliation on Dubai and U.S. assets in
the Gulf. Within weeks, American firepower stretched across Iraq, Yemen, and Syria, where Trump vowed to “obliterate” enemies and promised that
“HELL WILL RAIN DOWN” on Houthi rebels who defied him in the Red Sea. Africa felt the weight next, with repeated bombings in Somalia and
Nigeria framed as righteous vengeance for massacred Christians and attacks on U.S. forces.
Then Trump moved into the Western Hemisphere. Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro was seized in a dramatic night raid, even as
Trump menaced Mexico and Colombia over cartels. Finally, in the far north, he openly threatened economic pain and hinted at “excessive strength” to pressure
Denmark over Greenland—reminding Europe that, under his watch, nothing, and no one, is truly off-limits.