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Trump's 'Golden Fleet' Plans Promise Hypersonic Weapons and Laser-Armed Battleships

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 hours ago
President Trump unveiled ambitious plans for a new class of Navy battleships dubbed the 'Golden Fleet,' promising vessels equipped with hypersonic missiles and lasers that will be "100 times more powerful" than anything previously built, as naval shortages and Latin American tensions intensify.

President Donald Trump announced plans Monday for what he's calling the "Golden Fleet"—a new class of Navy battleships that he claims will be the most powerful warships ever constructed. Speaking from Mar-a-Lago alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Trump painted an ambitious picture of American naval power.

A Fleet of Steel and Firepower

Trump approved construction of two initial ships that will pack quite the punch: guns, missiles, hypersonic weapons, and high-powered lasers. "They'll be the fastest, the biggest and by far, 100 times more powerful than any battleship ever built," Trump declared.

The vessels will be constructed entirely of steel and designed to counter "everybody," according to Trump—not targeting any specific adversary, but apparently all of them at once.

USS Defiant Leads the Charge

The first vessel will be named USS Defiant, and it's not just for show. Phelan revealed it will carry a nuclear-capable, sea-launched cruise missile. The administration envisions eventually building 20 to 25 ships total, upgrading existing Arleigh Burke-class destroyers as part of a broader effort to expand Navy capabilities.

The timing isn't coincidental. Navy leadership has been sounding alarms about fleet shortages for months. Just last week, Adm. Daryl Caudle, Chief of Naval Operations, noted that the U.S. small surface combatant inventory stands at only one-third of what's actually needed. "We need more capable blue-water small combatants to close the gap and keep our DDGs [guided-missile destroyers] focused on the high-end fight," Caudle said.

Latin American Tensions Boil Over

The Golden Fleet announcement came on the same day Trump escalated tensions with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, warning him to "watch it" over cocaine production and criticizing his stance on U.S. demands for Venezuela to return seized oil assets.

The dispute intensified following recent U.S. enforcement actions against Venezuela's oil exports. The Coast Guard recently intercepted the Panama-flagged tanker Centuries, which officials described as part of Maduro's shadow fleet. Venezuela condemned the seizure as "international piracy," reported its crew missing, and vowed to escalate the matter to the United Nations.

Whether the Golden Fleet will materialize as described remains to be seen, but the message is clear: Trump wants bigger boats with bigger weapons, and he wants them soon.

Trump's 'Golden Fleet' Plans Promise Hypersonic Weapons and Laser-Armed Battleships

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 hours ago
President Trump unveiled ambitious plans for a new class of Navy battleships dubbed the 'Golden Fleet,' promising vessels equipped with hypersonic missiles and lasers that will be "100 times more powerful" than anything previously built, as naval shortages and Latin American tensions intensify.

President Donald Trump announced plans Monday for what he's calling the "Golden Fleet"—a new class of Navy battleships that he claims will be the most powerful warships ever constructed. Speaking from Mar-a-Lago alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Trump painted an ambitious picture of American naval power.

A Fleet of Steel and Firepower

Trump approved construction of two initial ships that will pack quite the punch: guns, missiles, hypersonic weapons, and high-powered lasers. "They'll be the fastest, the biggest and by far, 100 times more powerful than any battleship ever built," Trump declared.

The vessels will be constructed entirely of steel and designed to counter "everybody," according to Trump—not targeting any specific adversary, but apparently all of them at once.

USS Defiant Leads the Charge

The first vessel will be named USS Defiant, and it's not just for show. Phelan revealed it will carry a nuclear-capable, sea-launched cruise missile. The administration envisions eventually building 20 to 25 ships total, upgrading existing Arleigh Burke-class destroyers as part of a broader effort to expand Navy capabilities.

The timing isn't coincidental. Navy leadership has been sounding alarms about fleet shortages for months. Just last week, Adm. Daryl Caudle, Chief of Naval Operations, noted that the U.S. small surface combatant inventory stands at only one-third of what's actually needed. "We need more capable blue-water small combatants to close the gap and keep our DDGs [guided-missile destroyers] focused on the high-end fight," Caudle said.

Latin American Tensions Boil Over

The Golden Fleet announcement came on the same day Trump escalated tensions with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, warning him to "watch it" over cocaine production and criticizing his stance on U.S. demands for Venezuela to return seized oil assets.

The dispute intensified following recent U.S. enforcement actions against Venezuela's oil exports. The Coast Guard recently intercepted the Panama-flagged tanker Centuries, which officials described as part of Maduro's shadow fleet. Venezuela condemned the seizure as "international piracy," reported its crew missing, and vowed to escalate the matter to the United Nations.

Whether the Golden Fleet will materialize as described remains to be seen, but the message is clear: Trump wants bigger boats with bigger weapons, and he wants them soon.