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A Royal mission to US but can King Charles calm the Trump storm

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A Royal mission to US but can King Charles calm the Trump storm

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Royal mission: calm the storm

King Charles III heads to the United States this week on a high-stakes state visit — part celebration, part damage control.

With Britain refusing to back Donald Trump’s war against Iran, tensions are bubbling beneath the polished surface of the so-called “special relationship.” Now the King is being deployed as the ultimate diplomatic buffer.

Walking in the shadow of a giant

Charles faces an obvious challenge: living up to Queen Elizabeth II, whose 1991 address to Congress is still remembered as a masterclass in soft power.

She invoked giants like Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D. Roosevelt, reminding both nations of their shared democratic DNA. The bar couldn’t be much higher — and Charles knows it.

Behind the smiles, real tension

On the surface, it’s all handshakes and history. But behind the scenes, this visit is anything but routine.

Keir Starmer reportedly resisted calls to cancel the trip after Trump took swipes at Britain’s military record and blasted London’s refusal to join the Iran campaign.

Still, the visit goes ahead — carefully choreographed, politically sensitive, and loaded with symbolism.

The monarchy’s quiet power play

Unlike politicians, the monarchy plays the long game. Governments clash, leaders fall — but the Crown steps in to steady the ship.

That’s been the pattern since King George VI crossed the Atlantic in 1939, even tucking into hot dogs with Franklin D. Roosevelt to charm an isolationist America on the brink of war.

A relationship bigger than politics

The message from Buckingham Palace is clear: presidents and prime ministers come and go — but the alliance endures.

Charles’ job isn’t to pick sides. It’s to remind both nations that, even in a time of war, division and political ego, there’s something deeper holding them together.

And right now, that reminder couldn’t come at a more critical moment.

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