When President Donald Trump ordered a B-2 Spirit stealth bomber to fly over Vladimir Putin’s arrival in Alaska, it wasn’t just military showmanship—it was a statement. The $2 billion nuclear-capable aircraft, flanked by F-22 Raptors and F-35 Lightning IIs, roared across the sky as the Russian president set foot on U.S. soil for the first time in a decade.
Defense analysts say the move was a calculated geopolitical message. The B-2, capable of striking anywhere on Earth undetected, is a symbol of America’s unmatched reach. “It tells Moscow—and the world—that the U.S. is entering talks from a position of absolute strength,” one retired Air Force commander told The Daily Beast
While supporters hailed the flyover as a power flex that would rattle the Kremlin, critics in Europe and Ukraine condemned it as theatrical provocation. “This is saber-rattling at the highest level,” said one European diplomat. “It plays well at home, but it carries risks.”
Still, the imagery was undeniable—Trump and Putin on the tarmac, the shadow of the B-2 passing over them, the unmistakable hum of a machine built for stealth and dominance.
Was it intimidation? A negotiation tactic? Or simply Trump’s taste for grand spectacle? Whatever the case, the world is talking—and watching.