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In an era defined by fractured diplomacy and simmering international resentments, the specter of large-scale conflict no longer feels like a relic of the 20th century. For the global masses, the fear of war has shifted from a dormant anxiety to a persistent, front-of-mind reality. While modern election cycles—most notably President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign—have often leaned on promises of isolationism and the withdrawal of American boots from foreign soil, the reality on the ground tells a more complex story. From the aggressive posture maintained during the political upheaval in Venezuela to a peculiar, documented fixation on the strategic annexation of Greenland, the Trump administration’s recent maneuvers suggest that military intervention is not merely a theoretical “Plan B.” It is an increasingly plausible trajectory.