the end of American Internationalism

US Hegemony in the Western Hemisphere: Resource Control, Small Nation Sovereignty, Leverage and the Limits of American Power

And it’s the latest chapter in a 200-year story about US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere—a story that forces us to confront uncomfortable questions: Is American dominance in Latin America strategic necessity or imperial bullying? Does the United States “protect” smaller nations, or does it exploit them? And in an era when China offers an alternative model of influence, can Washington’s old playbook even work anymore?

The answers aren’t simple. But they matter profoundly—not just for Venezuelans, Nicaraguans, or Hondurans, but for anyone who cares about sovereignty, international law, and the future of global power.

The “Donroe Doctrine”: When a 200-Year-Old Policy Gets a 2026 Makeover

When President Trump announced the military operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, he didn’t just claim success—he claimed history. This wasn’t merely regime change, he declared. This was an update to the Monroe Doctrine, now jokingly rebranded the “Donroe Doctrine.”

For those who slept through high school history: The Monroe Doctrine, articulated by President James Monroe in 1823, essentially told European powers to stay out of the Western Hemisphere. In return, America promised not to meddle in European affairs.

It sounded defensive. It was actually the opening move in two centuries of American intervention.

But here’s what makes 2026 different—and more troubling. US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere is no longer just about keeping European powers out. Trump’s 2025 National Security Strategy explicitly states the United States will “deny non-Hemispheric competitors”—read: China—the ability to operate in Latin America, and that American “preeminence in the Western Hemisphere” is a condition of US “security and prosperity.”

Translation: Your hemisphere is our backyard. And we decide what happens here.

From Monroe to Roosevelt to Trump: The Evolution of American Dominance

To understand where we are, we need to understand how we got here. US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere didn’t emerge fully formed. It evolved through distinct phases, each justified by the politics of its era.

1: The Original Monroe Doctrine (1823-1900s)

When Monroe first articulated his doctrine, America lacked the military power to enforce it. It was aspiration dressed as policy. But as America industrialized and built naval might, the doctrine transformed from symbolic statement to actionable strategy.

2: The Roosevelt Corollary—Imperial Policeman (1904-1930s)

Enter Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt, who in 1904 added his infamous Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. Roosevelt declared that “chronic wrongdoing” by Latin American nations gave the United States the right to “exercise international police power” in the region.

What did “chronic wrongdoing” mean? Whatever Washington decided it meant.

The result? American troops invaded and occupied:

  • Dominican Republic (1904, 1916-1924)
  • Nicaragua (1911-1933)
  • Haiti (1915-1934)
  • Mexico (1914, 1916)
  • Panama (1903, supporting secession from Colombia to secure canal rights)

The pattern was clear: American banks and corporations made risky investments in unstable countries. When those countries couldn’t pay, American gunboats showed up to “restore order”—and coincidentally protect business interests.

3: The Cold War—Communism as Justification (1950s-1990s)

After World War II, the rationale shifted from protecting economic interests to fighting communism. But the method remained the same: intervention—now often covert.

The CIA’s greatest hits in Latin America include:

  • Guatemala (1954): Overthrowing democratically-elected President Jacobo Árbenz, whose land reform threatened United Fruit Company
  • Cuba (1961): The failed Bay of Pigs invasion
  • Chile (1973): Supporting the military coup that overthrew Salvador Allende and installed Augusto Pinochet
  • Nicaragua (1980s): Funding Contra rebels against the Sandinista government, leading to the Iran-Contra scandal

Each intervention was justified as necessary to prevent Soviet expansion. Each left decades of instability, human rights abuses, and deep anti-American sentiment.

4: Post-Cold War—The Quiet Period? (1990s-2010s)

For a brief moment, it seemed like things might change. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “Good Neighbor Policy” in the 1930s had promised non-intervention. After the Cold War, some scholars declared the Monroe Doctrine dead.

They were wrong. American interventions continued, just with different justifications:

  • Haiti (1994, 2004): Multiple interventions
  • Colombia (2000s): Billions in military aid through Plan Colombia
  • Honduras (2009): Supporting a coup against President Manuel Zelaya
  • Venezuela (2002): Backing a failed coup against Hugo Chávez

And then came 2026—and the most brazen display of US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere in decades.

Venezuela 2026: What Really Happened and Why It Matters

On January 4, 2026, American forces conducted airstrikes on Caracas and captured President Maduro, bringing him to the United States to face drug trafficking charges. The operation marked the first time since Manuel Noriega in 1989 that America had forcibly removed a Latin American head of state.

Trump’s justification was blunt: “We’ll be selling oil,” he said, “probably in much larger doses because they couldn’t produce very much because their infrastructure was so bad.”

Let’s be clear about what happened here. The United States:

  1. Decided a foreign leader was illegitimate
  2. Launched military strikes without UN authorization
  3. Abducted that leader to face charges in American courts
  4. Announced intentions to “run” the country and extract its oil
  5. Installed an interim leader (Delcy Rodríguez, a Maduro loyalist) rather than the actual democratic opposition

The Strategic Calculus: Why Venezuela, Why Now?

Analysts identify several intersecting motives:

1. Oil and Resources

Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves—more than Saudi Arabia. While the industry has collapsed under mismanagement, American companies see opportunity. Critical minerals and rare earth elements add to Venezuela’s strategic value.

2. Cutting China Out

China has invested billions in Venezuela and across Latin America. The 2025 National Security Strategy explicitly aims to “deny non-Hemispheric competitors” access to the region. Venezuela’s action sends a message: Play with China, pay the price.

3. Domestic Political Theater

Nothing unites Americans quite like foreign military action. Trump, facing political challenges, gets to look decisive, anti-communist, and tough on drugs—all while accessing resources.

4. Threatening Other Left-Wing Governments

Cuba, Nicaragua, Bolivia, and even moderate left governments in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico got the message loud and clear. Step out of line, and you could be next.

The Leverage Playbook: How American Hegemony Actually Works

US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere doesn’t only operate through military invasions. That’s just the most dramatic tool. American influence operates through what scholars call “three dependency mechanisms: markets, leverage, and linkage.”

Markets: Economic Integration as Control

Latin American economies are deeply integrated with the United States. The US is:

  • The largest trading partner for most Latin American nations
  • The primary destination for exports
  • The main source of remittances (money sent home by immigrants)
  • The dominant financial market for investment

This creates asymmetric dependence. When the US threatens tariffs—as Trump routinely does—Latin American governments panic. Their economies can’t afford to lose American market access.

Leverage: The Carrot and Stick

The United States wields enormous financial leverage through:

  • Foreign aid that can be suspended at any moment
  • World Bank and IMF loans where America holds veto power
  • Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) operations that can be used politically
  • Financial sanctions that can cripple economies
  • Visa restrictions that affect elites’ ability to travel and bank internationally

Recent examples of leverage in action:

  • Honduras (2009): US acquiesced to coup after initial criticism
  • Paraguay (2012): US recognized questionable impeachment
  • Brazil (2016): US supported process that removed Dilma Rousseff
  • Bolivia (2019): US quickly recognized interim government after contested election

Linkage: Elite Capture

Perhaps most insidiously, American hegemony operates through elite capture. Latin American political, economic, and military elites are:

  • Educated in American universities
  • Connected to American business interests
  • Invested in American financial markets
  • Reliant on American political support

When these elites govern, they naturally align with American interests—not because of military threats, but because their personal interests are bound up with American power.

The Other Side: Is US Hegemony Sometimes Beneficial?

Before we conclude that US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere is purely exploitative, honesty demands we examine counter-arguments.

1: Stability and Security

Proponents argue that American hegemony prevents great power conflicts in the hemisphere. Without US dominance, might Russia or China establish military bases in Cuba or Venezuela? Would regional conflicts escalate without American mediation?

Colombia’s decades-long conflict, for instance, received billions in American aid that—whatever its problems—did help degrade drug cartels and guerrilla groups.

2: Economic Development

Despite obvious exploitation, American investment has contributed to Latin American development. The Panama Canal, for all its imperial origins, has been an economic boon. Free trade agreements have created jobs and lowered consumer prices.

Panama itself is often cited as a rare successful American intervention—stable democracy, peaceful elections, significant economic growth since Noriega’s removal.

3: Democratic Support (Sometimes)

The United States has, at times, supported democratic transitions and human rights. American pressure helped end military dictatorships in Argentina, Chile, and Brazil in the 1980s. American election monitors and civil society funding have supported democracy.

The problem? American support for democracy is highly selective. When democratic governments threaten American interests—as in Guatemala (1954) or Chile (1973)—democracy suddenly matters less than “stability.”

4: Countering Genuine Threats

Some Latin American governments pose legitimate concerns:

  • Drug trafficking: Cocaine and fentanyl flowing north kill Americans
  • Corruption: Some governments are kleptocracies that torture opponents
  • Humanitarian crises: Venezuela’s collapse created 7+ million refugees
  • Terrorism: Groups like Shining Path genuinely threatened civilians

Is American intervention justified if it addresses real problems? Or does intervention typically make things worse?

The China Challenge: A New Model or New Master?

The elephant—or dragon—in the room is China. Beijing has dramatically increased its presence in Latin America over the past two decades:

China’s Playbook:

  • $140+ billion in loans since 2005, dwarfing World Bank lending
  • Trade partnerships that don’t impose political conditions
  • Infrastructure investment in ports, railways, 5G networks
  • No military interventions or regime change operations
  • No human rights lectures or democracy promotion

For Latin American governments frustrated with American heavy-handedness, China offers an alternative. You can trade with Beijing without fearing a coup.

But is China’s model better? Critics note:

  • Debt traps: Loans that countries struggle to repay
  • Environmental damage: Chinese mining and logging with minimal oversight
  • Labor exploitation: Poor conditions in Chinese-run operations
  • Surveillance technology: Exporting authoritarian tools to willing governments
  • Strategic control: China now owns or operates major ports across the region

The choice facing Latin America isn’t between American hegemony and independence. It’s between American hegemony and Chinese hegemony. Neither is ideal.

Small Nation Sovereignty: The Voices Nobody Hears

Lost in great power competition are the voices of Latin Americans themselves. What do they think about US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere?

The Left-Wing Perspective

Leaders like Brazil’s Lula, Mexico’s Sheinbaum, Colombia’s Petro, and Chile’s Boric condemned the Venezuela intervention as illegal and destabilizing. Their argument:

Even if Maduro is a dictator, military intervention sets an “extremely dangerous precedent.” International law exists for a reason. If the United States can unilaterally invade and remove leaders, what stops any powerful nation from doing the same? This is might-makes-right imperialism, not a rules-based international order.

The Right-Wing Perspective

Conservative governments in Argentina, Chile (under previous administration), Ecuador, and Bolivia initially praised Maduro’s removal—until Trump announced he’d work with Maduro’s vice president rather than the democratic opposition. Suddenly, the intervention looked less like support for democracy and more like resource grab.

The Popular Perspective

Public opinion varies dramatically. Some Venezuelans celebrated Maduro’s capture, seeing him as a brutal dictator who destroyed their country. Others, even those who hate Maduro, resented American military intervention as violation of sovereignty.

A Guatemalan taxi driver might worry about CIA-backed coups returning. A Nicaraguan farmer might appreciate American aid programs. A Colombian business owner might want closer US ties for security and investment. A Bolivian indigenous leader might see American influence as existential threat to traditional ways of life.

There is no monolithic “Latin American view”—which is precisely why treating the entire hemisphere as America’s strategic backyard is so problematic.

The Ultimate Question: Is This System Sustainable?

Here’s the brutal truth: US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere is simultaneously:

  • Historically unprecedented in its reach
  • Economically asymmetric and often exploitative
  • Strategically rational from Washington’s perspective
  • Internationally illegal by UN Charter standards
  • Deeply resented by many Latin Americans
  • Pragmatically accepted by others who see no alternative
  • Under challenge from China’s rising influence
  • Maintained through economic leverage more than military force
  • Based on elite capture as much as coercion

Can it last?

Why It Might Continue

  • Military dominance: No Latin American nation can challenge American military supremacy
  • Economic integration: Decades of trade ties can’t be easily unwound
  • Elite alignment: Powerful Latin Americans benefit from the current system
  • Chinese limitations: Beijing’s model has its own problems and limitations
  • Domestic challenges: Many Latin American nations face internal crises that distract from challenging US power

Why It Might Crumble

  • Legitimacy deficit: Interventions like Venezuela 2026 destroy any pretense of “partnership”
  • Economic alternatives: China offers a different model of engagement
  • Demographic shifts: Younger Latin Americans less sympathetic to US
  • American overreach: Every brazen intervention creates more enemies
  • Multipolar world: US hegemony anywhere requires hegemony everywhere—increasingly difficult

Academic research suggests that hegemons who rely primarily on coercion rather than persuasion and benefits create unstable systems. Trump’s approach—demanding obedience, threatening military force, extracting resources without compensation—represents a shift from traditional hegemony to something closer to naked imperialism.

And history shows us: naked imperialism ultimately fails. It’s too expensive to maintain, generates too much resistance, and becomes unsustainable as rivals emerge.

The Path Forward: Beyond Hegemony?

What would a better relationship between the United States and Latin America look like?

Option 1: Actual Partnership

Instead of US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere, imagine genuine regional cooperation:

  • Mutual respect for sovereignty
  • Economic relationships that benefit both sides
  • Security cooperation against shared threats (drug trafficking, climate change)
  • No military interventions without UN authorization
  • Support for democracy that’s consistent, not selective
  • Development aid without political strings

Sounds utopian? Perhaps. But consider: The European Union evolved from centuries of warfare into genuine partnership. Is a Western Hemisphere Community too much to imagine?

Option 2: Managed Decline

America accepts it can no longer dominate the hemisphere unilaterally. Instead of fighting Chinese influence, Washington competes on better terms—offering better deals, respecting sovereignty more, using force less.

This requires swallowing American pride. Can Washington accept being one power among several in “its” backyard?

Option 3: Doubling Down

This appears to be Trump’s choice: reassert American dominance through force, threaten anyone who challenges US interests, and dare the world to stop us.

The problem? Every doubling-down requires more force, creates more enemies, costs more treasure, and ultimately proves unsustainable. Ask the British Empire how that worked out.

What You Should Take Away From This

If you’ve read this far, you’ve earned some hard truths:

1: US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere is real, extensive, and often destructive to small nation sovereignty.

2: The system serves American interests, which doesn’t automatically make it wrong—but doesn’t make it right either.

3: Latin American nations face a choice between American hegemony and Chinese hegemony, neither of which respects their full sovereignty.

4: Military interventions like Venezuela 2026 represent a dangerous escalation that undermines any pretense of rules-based international order.

5: The system is changing. Whether it evolves toward genuine partnership or descends into naked imperialism depends on choices being made right now.

6: Your opinion on this matters—because democratic societies theoretically control their foreign policy. If Americans demand better, better becomes possible.

Join the Conversation: Where Do You Stand?

This isn’t an easy topic. Reasonable people can disagree about whether American influence in Latin America is primarily beneficial or harmful, whether national security justifies intervention, whether sovereignty should be absolute or conditional.

But we can’t have that conversation if we’re not honest about what’s actually happening.

So here’s the uncomfortable question: When a military superpower tells smaller, poorer nations that “your hemisphere is our backyard” and enforces that claim with bombs and sanctions—is that leadership, or is that bullying?

Your answer reveals what you believe about power, justice, and the world we want to build.

What do you think? Is US hegemony in the Western Hemisphere necessary for stability, or does it perpetuate injustice? Should America maintain dominance, or step back and allow genuine multipolarity?

Share this article with someone who needs to understand the complexity beyond simple “America bad” or “America good” narratives. Subscribe to Ultimate Causes for more honest analysis of global power dynamics. Comment below with your perspective—even if you disagree with everything written here. Especially if you disagree.

Because the only way we move beyond endless cycles of hegemony and resistance is by honestly reckoning with what we’re doing—and deciding whether we want to keep doing it.

References & Further Reading

  1. NBC News: US Allies and Foes Fear Venezuela Precedent
  2. Geopolitical Economy Report: Donroe Doctrine Analysis
  3. SAGE Journals: Hegemony and Dependency in Latin America
  4. Taylor & Francis: Hegemony and Resistance Strategies
  5. Brookings Institution: Making Sense of Venezuela Operation
  6. NPR: US Interventions in Latin America History
  7. National Archives: Monroe Doctrine Original Document
  8. PBS: Monroe Doctrine and Maduro Capture
  9. Chatham House: Trump Corollary Security Strategy
  10. Americas Quarterly: Monroe Doctrine Turns 200
  11. US State Department: Roosevelt Corollary History
  12. SAGE: US Hegemony Perception Study
  13. Wikipedia: Monroe Doctrine
  14. NPR: Venezuela vs Panama Intervention Comparison
  15. PBS: US Capture Divides Latin America

the leader of the Western Hemisphere

Trump’s Hemispheric Power Play: When America Declares Itself Supreme Leader of the Western Hemisphere

When Donald Trump positioned himself as the leader of the Western Hemisphere during his presidency—and continues this narrative in his 2025 return to office—he wasn’t just making a bold claim. He was announcing a seismic shift in how America views its role in global affairs, one that threatens to upend seven decades of multilateral world order.

Here’s the uncomfortable reality: Trump’s self-appointed hemispheric leadership isn’t just rhetorical bluster. It represents a deliberate return to 19th-century spheres of influence, where great powers carve up the world into exclusive domains. And the implications reach far beyond the Americas.

Let’s dissect what this power grab really means—for democracy, sovereignty, and the fragile architecture holding the international system together.

The Audacious Claim: “Our Hemisphere”

Trump’s framing of hemispheric leadership wasn’t subtle. Throughout his first term and now into his second, he’s consistently referred to Latin America and the Caribbean as America’s natural domain—language that echoes imperial powers dividing Africa at the Berlin Conference.

In his 2019 State of the Union address, Trump declared: “We stand with the Venezuelan people in their noble quest for freedom—and we condemn the brutality of the Maduro regime, whose socialist policies have turned that nation from being the wealthiest in South America into a state of abject poverty and despair.”

Notice the framing: “We stand with”—as if American blessing determines legitimacy throughout the hemisphere.

His administration’s National Security Strategy explicitly stated that the U.S. would prioritize “energy dominance” and counter “adversarial regional powers” in the Western Hemisphere. The document positioned Latin America not as a region of sovereign nations, but as strategic territory where American interests must prevail.

During his 2024 campaign, Trump doubled down, promising to invoke the Alien Enemies Act to remove gang members and threatening military action against Mexican drug cartels—all without consultation with the affected nations. He’s treating sovereign countries as subordinate territories requiring American management.

This isn’t leadership. It’s self-appointed dominion.

The Historical Precedent Nobody’s Acknowledging

Trump isn’t inventing this hemispheric supremacy narrative—he’s resurrecting it from America’s most imperial period.

The concept of the U.S. as the leader of the Western Hemisphere has deep roots:

The Monroe Doctrine (1823): Originally a defensive statement against European colonialism, it was later twisted to justify American intervention throughout Latin America.

Manifest Destiny (1840s): The belief that American expansion across North America was inevitable and divinely ordained—a mentality that didn’t stop at the Pacific.

The Roosevelt Corollary (1904): Theodore Roosevelt explicitly claimed the right to exercise “international police power” in Latin America, turning hemispheric leadership into military intervention doctrine.

The Big Stick Era (1900-1934): The U.S. militarily intervened in Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Mexico, and Panama—all justified by its self-declared hemispheric authority.

According to historical data compiled by the Congressional Research Service, the United States conducted over 50 military interventions in Latin America between 1898 and 1994.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “Good Neighbor Policy” in the 1930s explicitly rejected this interventionist approach, recognizing it had bred resentment and instability. For decades afterward, American policy—at least officially—emphasized partnership over paternalism.

Trump’s narrative reverses 90 years of diplomatic evolution.

What “Hemispheric Leadership” Actually Means in Practice

Let’s translate Trump’s rhetoric into concrete policy to understand what this leadership claim actually entails:

Economic Subordination

Trump’s approach to hemispheric leadership manifests primarily through economic coercion:

Trade as leverage: His renegotiation of NAFTA into USMCA included mechanisms giving the U.S. extraordinary oversight of Mexican and Canadian trade deals with other countries—particularly China. This wasn’t negotiation; it was asserting veto power over neighbors’ economic sovereignty.

Sanction diplomacy: Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua have faced escalating U.S. economic sanctions designed to force regime change. These unilateral measures—imposed without UN authorization—treat hemispheric nations as subjects rather than sovereign equals.

Development aid as control: Trump slashed foreign aid to Central America by over 40% between 2016-2020 as punishment for migration flows, then restored it conditionally. Aid became a leash, not assistance.

Military Dominance

Trump’s hemispheric leadership relies heavily on military superiority:

Military PresenceTrump Era Reality
U.S. military bases in region76+ installations across Latin America
Annual military aid$2.5+ billion to hemisphere
Joint military exercises35+ annual operations asserting U.S. military preeminence
Naval presence4th Fleet reactivated, constant Caribbean/Pacific patrols

Trump’s threat to use military force against Venezuelan leadership, his deployment of troops to the border, and his willingness to act unilaterally (as in the 2020 Venezuela mercenary incident) all signal that hemispheric leadership includes the option of military intervention.

Political Interference

Perhaps most troubling is the political dimension:

Recognition games: Trump’s decision to recognize Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s president—despite Maduro controlling the country—set a precedent where Washington decides which governments are legitimate within “its” hemisphere.

Election involvement: The U.S. has funneled millions through organizations like USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy to support opposition parties in countries with governments Washington opposes.

Regime change operations: While details remain classified, reporting suggests ongoing covert operations in Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Cuba—classic Cold War tactics repackaged for the 21st century.

The message is unmistakable: Governments in the Western Hemisphere serve at American pleasure.

The Ripple Effects on Global Order

Here’s where Trump’s hemispheric leadership claim becomes everyone’s problem—not just Latin America’s.

Legitimizing Spheres of Influence

If America can claim exclusive authority over the Western Hemisphere, what stops other powers from making similar claims?

Russia has already taken notes. Vladimir Putin’s justification for intervention in Ukraine, Georgia, and other former Soviet states mirrors American hemispheric rhetoric: these are traditionally Russian areas of influence where Moscow has special interests and responsibilities.

China is watching closely. Beijing’s increasing assertiveness in the South China Sea and its claims over Taiwan echo the same logic Trump applies to Latin America—these are naturally part of China’s sphere.

When the U.S. asserts the right to be the leader of the Western Hemisphere, it demolishes the post-World War II principle that all nations, regardless of size, possess equal sovereignty. That principle—enshrined in the UN Charter—is all that prevents a return to great power imperialism.

Weakening International Institutions

Trump’s unilateral approach bypasses international organizations designed to manage global affairs:

The Organization of American States (OAS) was created to promote cooperation among equals. Trump’s administration weaponized it, pressuring members to support U.S. positions or face consequences—transforming it from a forum into an instrument of American policy.

The United Nations becomes irrelevant if hemispheric leadership justifies ignoring Security Council processes. Why seek UN approval for actions in “your” hemisphere?

The International Criminal Court and other accountability mechanisms lose authority when powerful nations claim special regional privileges exempting them from universal rules.

According to analysis from the International Crisis Group, Trump’s hemispheric approach has accelerated the fragmentation of international law and multilateral institutions.

The Democracy Paradox

Here’s a devastating irony: Trump claims hemispheric leadership to promote democracy while undermining democratic principles.

Sovereignty is foundational to democracy. Nations must be free to choose their own governments without external coercion. Yet Trump’s approach explicitly denies this right to hemispheric neighbors.

International law protects small democracies. When powerful nations can ignore rules in their “sphere of influence,” smaller democracies lose the legal protections that prevent domination by neighbors.

Peaceful conflict resolution suffers. If might makes right within spheres of influence, diplomatic negotiation becomes meaningless. Why negotiate with a self-appointed leader who claims authority to impose solutions?

The Varieties of Democracy Project at the University of Gothenburg has documented how great power spheres of influence correlate with declining democracy in affected regions—precisely because local sovereignty becomes subordinate to external interests.

What Latin America Actually Wants

Let’s inject some reality about how hemispheric nations view this leadership claim.

Mexico’s response has been firm. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador created a new regional organization explicitly excluding the U.S. and Canada—the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC)—specifically to reduce American influence.

Brazil oscillates between accepting U.S. leadership under right-wing governments and asserting independence under left-wing ones—revealing how the concept of hemispheric leadership depends on regime compatibility rather than genuine partnership.

Caribbean nations increasingly turn to China. Despite geographic proximity to the U.S., countries like Jamaica and Barbados have embraced Chinese investment specifically to reduce dependence on American leadership.

Regional integration without Washington has accelerated. Organizations like UNASUR, ALBA, and MERCOSUR were all created partly to build Latin American cooperation independent of U.S. oversight.

A 2024 Latinobarómetro survey found that only 28% of Latin Americans view U.S. influence positively—down from 51% in 2009. Trump’s hemispheric leadership rhetoric is alienating the very nations it claims to lead.

The Alternatives Nobody’s Discussing

What if we rejected the entire concept of the leader of the Western Hemisphere?

True Multilateralism

Imagine hemispheric affairs managed through genuinely democratic regional organizations where votes aren’t weighted by military spending. Where Costa Rica’s voice carries the same weight as the United States. Where collective decisions replace unilateral impositions.

The African Union provides a model—imperfect but instructive—of how regions can manage their own affairs without external hegemony.

Economic Partnership Over Dominance

Rather than using trade as leverage, what if the U.S. offered partnerships based on mutual benefit? The European Union’s relationship with neighboring regions shows how economic integration can occur without political subordination.

China’s Belt and Road Initiative, whatever its flaws, demonstrates that developing nations crave investment without the political strings American “leadership” attaches.

Sovereignty as Strategy

Counterintuitively, respecting sovereignty might serve American interests better than asserting dominance. Nations treated as equals become genuine partners. Those treated as subordinates seek alternative relationships—with China, Russia, or regional powers.

The Dangerous Future We’re Building

If Trump’s hemispheric leadership narrative becomes permanent American policy—and indications suggest it’s outlasting his presidency—the consequences will reshape global order fundamentally.

Expect more regional conflicts as nations resist external domination. Venezuela’s crisis will repeat across the hemisphere.

Watch China expand influence precisely in America’s “backyard.” When Washington offers dominance and Beijing offers investment without political conditions, the choice becomes obvious for many nations.

See international law erode as the precedent of spheres of influence justifies Russian aggression in Eastern Europe, Chinese expansion in Asia, and potential Turkish or Iranian regional ambitions.

Witness democracy decline as local sovereignty becomes subordinate to great power interests. Why develop democratic institutions when external powers determine outcomes?

According to projections from the Carnegie Endowment, continued assertion of hemispheric leadership will likely result in Latin America distancing itself from Washington—the opposite of Trump’s stated goal.

The Uncomfortable Truth

Trump’s self-designation as the leader of the Western Hemisphere isn’t making America safer, more influential, or more respected. It’s reviving the most destructive aspects of 20th-century imperialism while abandoning the multilateral system that—for all its flaws—prevented another world war for 80 years.

The Western Hemisphere doesn’t need a leader. It needs partners committed to sovereignty, international law, and genuine cooperation.

The tragic irony is that America had already achieved remarkable influence through soft power, economic opportunity, and cultural appeal. By demanding formal dominance, Trump-era policy is squandering the voluntary cooperation that served American interests far better than imperial posturing ever could.

The world is watching. When America declares itself supreme in its hemisphere, it writes the script for every other power to claim similar authority in theirs. That’s not world order—that’s world chaos with a thin diplomatic veneer.

We can do better. We must do better. Because the alternative is a planet divided into competing empires, where might makes right and sovereignty is a privilege granted by the powerful rather than a right inherent to all nations.

The question isn’t whether America can be the leader of the Western Hemisphere—it’s whether America should want to be. And whether the hemisphere will accept it.

History suggests the answer to both is no.


Your Turn: Leadership or Imperialism?

Does the United States have a legitimate claim to hemispheric leadership, or is this 19th-century thinking that needs to end? Can great powers exercise regional influence without becoming imperial? Drop your perspective in the comments—especially if you’re from Latin America or the Caribbean, whose voices are often excluded from these debates.

If this analysis challenged your assumptions, share it widely. These conversations need to happen before spheres of influence become permanent features of international relations. Subscribe for more unflinching analysis of how power actually works in global politics—no propaganda, just uncomfortable truths.

Essential References