Donald Trump commander has just shared 3 words that may keep you up at night

Fifteen soldiers say their commander called Trump “anointed by Jesus” to spark Armageddon.

More than 200 others now claim religious war rhetoric is seeping through the ranks. Some are terrified to speak, trapped in a chain of command they can’t escape.

Christian nationalism, nuclear tensions, and Iran collide in a single, chilling messa…

What’s emerging from these complaints is not a minor misunderstanding, but a crisis of trust at the heart of the armed forces. When a commander allegedly tells deployable troops that Trump is divinely chosen to ignite Armageddon in Iran, it blurs the line between lawful orders and apocalyptic prophecy.

For the Christians, Muslims, and Jews in that unit who objected, the fear was not just theological; it was existential. If your superior officer believes he is participating in God’s final war, what does that mean for restraint, judgment, and the value of human life?

The wider pattern described to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation suggests something deeper than one rogue voice. It points to an emboldened Christian nationalist current, encouraged by figures who speak openly of a “Christian nation” and “End Times” signs.

In a military built on obedience, those who dissent feel cornered: sworn to defend the Constitution, yet pressured to bow to someone else’s prophecy.

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