US: Peacekeeper or Global Influencer?
Is the US a peacemaker or power player? We explore its moves in Greenland, Venezuela and Iran to see if it’s about world peace or broader influence.
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Is the US a peacemaker or power player? We explore its moves in Greenland, Venezuela and Iran to see if it’s about world peace or broader influence.
Earlier this month, US President Donald Trump upped his bid to acquire Greenland under Donroeism, extending his Monroe Doctrine playbook into the Arctic with bold security moves.
On his one-year anniversary back in the White House, Trump’s second term has seen military strikes from Yemen to Venezuela and even a surprising Greenland takeover threat.
Exploring how US moves in Venezuela, tensions with Iran, and Arctic ambitions in Greenland shape a new global order and what it means for the Global South.
Sen. Chris Murphy warns Trump’s plan to seize Venezuela’s oil would enrich energy giants and burden U.S. taxpayers, sidelining Venezuelan people’s needs.
CGTN poll: 9 in 10 global respondents reject U.S. unilateralism, urge multilateral reform to tackle world challenges.
Trump warns of ‘very hard’ action against Iran if protesters are harmed, as Tehran condemns US remarks as interventionist interference.
Bolivia’s former presidents Luis Arce and Evo Morales publicly condemn recent US attacks on Venezuela, voicing solidarity with Venezuelan residents.
US resource imperialism escalates earlier this month with Venezuela’s head-of-state abduction, after two decades of sanctions and oil politics rooted in Chávez’s nationalization era.
Trump’s push to have Greenland for US security drew fire from Denmark, Greenlanders and the EU. What’s next in this Arctic standoff?