Trump has been circling the Chagos Islands like a man trying to remember why he walked into the room. When Britain first agreed to transfer sovereignty to Mauritius while leasing back Diego Garcia, he called it weakness. Later, he conceded it might be the best deal available. Now, once again, it is a catastrophic surrender. Meanwhile, the United States government itself - the part staffed by admirals, diplomats, and people with maps - has formally backed the arrangement because it guarantees continued military access. The base remains. The runway does not dissolve simply because the paperwork changes hands.
Faced with this latest presidential lurch, Karoline Leavitt stepped forward and delivered what sounded like a clarifying statement but was, in reality, something far more revealing. When Trump posts on Truth Social, she said, it is “straight from the horse’s mouth.” In other words, this is not commentary. It is not impulse. It is policy. The President is speaking directly, and the world should listen accordingly.
This was not a casual remark. It was an attempt to elevate Trump’s latest Chagos pronouncement above the inconvenient fact that his own State Department had already endorsed the deal. It told allies to ignore the formal machinery of American foreign policy and focus instead on the President’s personal feed. The signal was clear: the post outranks the paperwork.
But this presents an obvious difficulty, because earlier this month the same “horse’s mouth” posted a video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as monkeys. At that point, the White House’s enthusiasm for direct authorship cooled noticeably. Now there was talk of staff. Of process. Of material that had somehow slipped through. The pure, unfiltered presidential voice became, briefly, a shared administrative responsibility.
Yet Leavitt herself had already defined the terms. If Truth Social is the direct voice of the President when criticising Britain’s handling of Diego Garcia, then it is the direct voice of the President at all times. You cannot promote it to an instrument of state authority when it suits your geopolitical argument and demote it to a staff-managed accident when it becomes embarrassing. The mouth cannot be presidential on Monday and clerical by Friday.
What this reveals is not merely inconsistency, but function. Truth Social serves as both amplifier and shield. When the message projects strength, it is presented as authentic presidential leadership. When the message creates discomfort, it becomes a misunderstanding, a technicality, a staff matter. Authority is claimed when useful and diffused when necessary.
And that leaves allies in an impossible position. When Trump declares Starmer is making a historic mistake over Chagos, are they hearing US policy, or are they watching performance? His own government continues to support the base lease. The strategic reality has not changed. Only the rhetoric has. Yet his press secretary insists the rhetoric itself is the true signal.
The result is a communications system that asserts absolute authority while retaining absolute deniability. It is designed to sound definitive without ever being binding. The President speaks directly, except when he does not. The platform carries the full weight of statecraft, except when it suddenly carries none at all. Truth Social, it turns out, is straight from the horse’s mouth only when the horse likes the sound of its own voice.










