Donald Trump’s dramatic claim of a “triple sabotage” at the United Nations sent shockwaves across social media — but the real story, confirmed by multiple news outlets, paints a far less sinister picture. During his UNGA appearance, Trump said an escalator froze under him and Melania, his teleprompter failed mid-speech, and delegates struggled to hear him. He blasted the UN online, calling the incidents “too coincidental,” and insisted the Secret Service had opened a review. But UN officials quickly responded with their own explanations: the escalator’s safety system was triggered by a U.S. videographer walking backward, the teleprompter was operated entirely by Trump’s own team, and interpreter headsets continued working normally despite minor glitches.
The UN stated there is zero evidence of sabotage — and so far, no independent confirmation that the Secret Service launched an investigation. While Trump’s supporters pushed the “Escalatorgate” narrative, critics pointed out that the malfunctions closely match routine technical issues. For now, nothing suggests a coordinated attack. The chaos was real — but the conspiracy? Still unproven.