Trump’s imperialist dreams: Invading Mexico and buying Greenland
President Donald Trump's foreign policy remains a mystery. However some of his recent statements have raised concerns. He has mentioned the possibility of US intervention in Mexico and has suggested the annexation of territories such as Greenland and even Canada.
Regarding the southern neighbor, Trump frequently repeats the idea that, in the fight against drug trafficking, the United States would have the right to send its soldiers to act on Mexican territory. Some media have called it a "soft invasion" of Mexico.
The Los Angeles Times recalls that during the campaign, Trump said he would order the use of “special forces, cyber warfare and other covert and overt actions to inflict maximum damage on cartel leaders, infrastructure and operations.”
The LA Times believes that Trump's idea should be taken seriously, given that he has appointed Ronald D. Johnson, a former Green Beret with an imperialistic vision who participated in anti-leftist counterinsurgency work in the civil war in El Salvador during the 1980s, as ambassador to Mexico.
While Trump has called the Mexican president a "charming woman," according to EL PAÍS, he has also threatened her with controversial tariffs that would represent a commercial attack on her mandate.
But Trump's imperial dreams do not stop in Mexico. They spread across the American continent and even beyond.
Trump said on social media, as reported by The New York Times: "For purposes of national security and freedom throughout the world, the United States of America considers ownership and control of Greenland to be an absolute necessity."
In Greenland’s case, Trump is not proposing an invasion but rather buying the territory for a “good price”, as the United States did with Alaska, acquired from Russia for a handful of dollars in 1867.
Politico reported the response of Múte B. Egede, Prime Minister of Greenland: "We are not for sale and we never will be." Greenland is officially a territory belonging to Denmark but has an autonomous regional government and its own institutions.
Another idea Trump recently openly expressed was the possibility of the United States regaining ownership of the Panama Canal.
On Saturday, December 21, during a speech at a conservative forum, he said that the tariffs charged at the Panama Canal "are ridiculous" and that perhaps this infrastructure is "in the wrong hands," pointing to Chinese influence.
Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino (pictured) responded immediately: "Every square metre of the Panama Canal and its adjacent areas are part of Panama, and will continue to be part of Panama (...) The sovereignty and independence of our country are not negotiable."
And then there's Trump's recurring joke about Canada, which he says would make a great 51st state of the United States. Canadian President Justin Trudeau doesn't think it’s funny, though.
Some analysts consider all of Trump's striking statements to be mere jokes. But there are those who believe, however, that we are facing an imperialist vision that will have consequences.
The New York Times, referring to the ambitions for Greenland and the Panama Canal, ran the headline: "This Time It's No Joke."
The New York Times says that Trump's 'America First' slogan has an expansionist dimension and that all these statements may anticipate a presidency in which the United States wants to intervene outside its borders.
During the 20th century, Latin America was often disparagingly referred to as "America's backyard." A vast territory with limited sovereignty. Could this scenario be repeated?
Image: Leon Overweel / Unsplash
However, it’s not as easy for Trump to intervene in Latin America like Nixon or Reagan did. The current Latin American political reality has changed and powerful new leaders have emerged who no longer pay attention to what the United States wants to dictate.