Jake Broe: Please Understand Trump Is a Russian Asset, Not an Agent of Russia
- john raymond
- May 29
- 3 min read

Jake Broe is sharp. He’s consistent, focused, and well-versed in military tactics. His ability to explain conventional war—troop movements, missile inventories, armored columns—is virtually unmatched in the YouTube space. But when it comes to the war Trump is fighting for Russia, Jake’s analysis falls short. And that’s not a failure of character—it’s a misunderstanding of domain.
So let’s set the record straight. Donald Trump is not a Russian agent. He is far more dangerous than that. Donald Trump is a Russian asset.
What Jake Gets Wrong
In a recent video, Broe questioned the idea that Trump is doing Putin’s bidding. His logic was that if Trump were “really working for Russia,” he would go all-in—lift sanctions, return frozen money, abandon Ukraine, say the quiet parts loud.
But that’s a misunderstanding of how asymmetric warfare works.
In conventional war, allies are clear, orders are direct, movements are overt. In asymmetric war, the battlefield is information, perception, delay, and misdirection.
An agent takes orders. An asset serves interests—sometimes without even needing to be told.
Trump doesn’t wave a Russian flag. He doesn’t need to. His job is more subtle and much more corrosive: To confuse. To delay. To demoralize. To divide.
Trump’s Role in Asymmetric Warfare
Think of Trump as a smoke grenade lobbed into the middle of American resolve. Every time pressure mounts against Russia—Trump offers noise, not force. He says he’ll get tough “in two weeks,” then doesn’t. That is not accidental. He might say Putin’s a criminal, but never follows with policy. He calls for peace, but always blames Ukraine for not giving in.
This isn’t confusion. This is the job of assets like Trump.
Trump’s value to Putin lies not in overt servitude, but in the illusion of independence. He acts the part of a strongman while sabotaging the strength of alliances. He fans division while pretending to seek unity. And all the while, he rewrites betrayal as strategy.
The Proof Is in the Pattern
Consider the facts:
Trump sided with Putin over U.S. intelligence in Helsinki.
He withheld aid from Ukraine to extort political favors.
He praised Putin’s “genius” even after Russia invaded Ukraine.
And now, he has confessed—in his own words—that he protected Russia from “really bad things.”
That last admission is the clearest of all. No Russian agent would say it. But a Russian asset might. Especially one trying to launder his relationship with Putin.
Because the job of an asset is not to look loyal. It’s to serve interests while maintaining deniability.
Trump did just that. Again. And he will again. It is all but guaranteed.
It’s Not Jake’s Fault—But It Must Be Corrected
The reason Jake, and many others, miss this is not lack of intelligence—it’s lack of adaptation. They are applying the logic of tanks and treaties to a war of whispers and wedges. They are looking for loyalty pledges instead of behavioral patterns. They expect agents, when the real danger is assets.
Trump doesn’t need to meet in back rooms with handlers. He just needs to do the job—and he’s done it with disturbing consistency.
Conclusion: The Battlefield Has Shifted
We are no longer living in a world where the threat wears enemy uniforms. The new war is fought in narratives, in votes delayed, in truths denied. And Trump is not a rogue actor. He is a consistent conduit for Kremlin strategy—chaos in the West, immunity in the East.
Jake Broe: this is not a callout. This is a call-in.
You are a trusted voice in understanding war. Now we need you to understand this one. Trump is not an agent. He’s an asset. And unless we treat him as such, America remains undefended—by the very people who should know better.
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