In an unprecedented computational analysis of 10,000 posts from Donald Trump’s social media feed, we have mapped the digital architecture of a transactional reality. Each sentence, each exaggerated claim, each veiled threat carries a payload that, when detonated at scale, reveals a foreign policy doctrine that should chill every British ally: loyalty is a commodity, alliances are disposable, and truth is negotiable. Our algorithms parsed sentiment, contradiction, and correlation, and the picture is stark.
Trump’s language treats NATO as a protection racket, Britain as an appendage to a trade deal, and strategic stability as a weakness. For Europe, for Japan, for Australia, the decoded message is clear: your partnership is only as valuable as your last concession. The user experience of international relations, once built on shared values and mutual dependencies, is now a transactional interface with no undo button.








