
Donald Trump at a âLatinos for Trumpâ event at Trump National Doral Miami resort in late September, 2020. Photo: Evan Vucci/AP/file photo.

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Donald Trump at a âLatinos for Trumpâ event at Trump National Doral Miami resort in late September, 2020. Photo: Evan Vucci/AP/file photo.
By Roger D. Harris and John Perry – Jul 23, 2025
With the Trump imperium passing the half-year mark, the posture of the US empire is ever clearer. Whether animated by âAmerica Firstâ or globalism, the objective remains âfull spectrum dominance.â And now with the neocon capture of the Democrats, there are no guardrails from the so-called opposition party.
Call it the ânew cold war,â the âbeginning of World War III,â or â in Trumpâs words â âendless war,â this is the era that the world has entered. The US/Zionist war against Iran has paused, but no one has any illusions that it is over. And it wonât likely be resolved until one side decisively and totally prevails. Ditto for the proxy war with Russia in Ukraine. Likely the same with Palestine, where the barbarity of war worsened to genocide. Meanwhile, since Obamaâs âpivot to Asia,â the empire is building up for war with China.
In Latin America and the Caribbean, the empireâs war on the world assumes a hybrid form. The carnage is less apparent because the weapons take the form of âsoft powerâ â sanctions, tariffs, and deportations. These can have the same lethal consequences as bombs, only less overt.Â
Making the world unsafe for socialism
Some Western leftists vilify the defensive measures that Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua must take to protect themselves from the empireâs regime-change schemes. In contrast, Washington clearly understands that these countries pose âthreats of a good exampleâ to the empire. Each subsequent US president, from Obama on, has certified them as âextraordinary threats to US national security.â Accordingly, they are targeted with the harshest coercive measures.Â
In this war of attrition, historian Isaac Saney uses the example of Cuba to show how any misstep by the revolutionary government or deficiency within society is exaggerated and weaponized. The empireâs siege, he explains, is not merely an attempt to destabilize the economy but is a deliberate strategy of suffocation. The empireâs aim is to incite internal discontent, distort peopleâs image of the government, and ultimately dismantle social gains.Â
While Cuba is affected worst by the hybrid war, both Venezuela and Nicaragua have also been damaged. All three countries have seen âhumanitarian paroleâ for their migrants in the US ended. Temporary Protected Status (TPS) was also withdrawn for Venezuelans and Nicaraguans. The strain of returning migrants along with cuts in the remittances they had sent (amounting to a quarter of Nicaraguaâs GDP) further impact their respective economies.Â
Higher-than-average tariffs are threatened on Venezuelan and Nicaraguan exports to the US, together with severe restrictions on Caracasâs oil exports. Meanwhile, the screws have been tightened on the six-decade US blockade of Cuba with disastrous humanitarian consequences.
However, all three countries are fighting back. They are forming new trade alliances with China and elsewhere. Providing relief to Cuba, Mexico has supplied oil and China is installing solar panel farms to address the now daily losses of electrical power. High levels of food security in Venezuela and Nicaragua have strengthened their ability to resist US sanctions, while Caracas successfully defeated one of Washingtonâs harshest migration measures by securing the release of 252 of its citizens who had been incarcerated in El Salvadorâs torturous CECOT prison.
Venezuelaâs US-backed far-right opposition is in disarray. The first Trump administration had recognized the âinterim presidencyâ of Juan GuaidĂł, followed by the Biden administration declaring Edmundo GonzĂĄlez winner of Venezuelaâs last presidential election. But the current Trump administration has yet to back GonzĂĄlez, de facto recognizing Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro.Â
Nicaraguaâs right-wing opposition is also reeling from a side-effect of Trumpâs harsh treatment of migrants â many are returning voluntarily to a country claimed by the opposition to be âunsafe,â while US Homeland Security has even extolled their home countryâs recent achievements. And some of Trumpâs prominent Cuban-American supporters are now questioning his âmaximum pressureâ campaign for going too far.
Troubled waters for the Pink Tide
The current progressive wave, the so-called Pink Tide, was initiated by Mexican President AndrĂŠs Manuel LĂłpez Obradorâs landslide victory in 2018. His MORENA Party successor, Claudia Sheinbaum, won by an even greater margin in 2024. Mexicoâs first woman president has proven to be perhaps the worldâs most dignified and capable sparring partner with the buffoon in White House, who has threatened tariffs, deportations, military interdictions and more on his southern neighbor.Â
Left-leaning presidents GabrielâŻBoric in Chile and Gustavo Petro in Colombia are limited to single terms. Both have faced opposition-aligned legislatures and deep-rooted reactionary power blocs. Chilean Communist Party candidate Jeanette Jara is favored to make it through their first-round presidential election in November 2025, but will face a challenging final round if the right unifies, as is likely, around an extremist candidate.Â
As the first non-rightist in Colombiaâs history, Petro has had a tumultuous presidential tenure. He credibly accuses his former foreign minister of colluding with the US to overthrow him. However, the presidency could well revert to the right in the May 2026 elections.
Boric, Petro, Uruguayâs YamandĂş Orsi and Brazilâs Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva met in July as the regionâs center-left presidents, with an agenda of dealing with Trump, promoting multilateralism and (we can assume) keeping their distance from the regionâs more left-wing governments.Â
With shaky popularity ratings, Lula will likely run for reelection in October 2026. As head of the regionâs largest economy, Lula plays a world leadership role, chairing three global summits in a year. Yet with less than majority legislative backing, Lula has triangulated between Washington and the Global South, often capitulating to US interests (as in his veto of BRICS membership for Nicaragua and Venezuela). Regardless, Trump is threatening Brazil with a crippling 50% export tariff and is blatantly interfering in the trial of former right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, accused of insurrection. So far, Trumpâs actions have backfired, arousing anger among Brazilians. Lula commented that Trump was ânot elected to be emperor of the world.â
In 2021, Honduran President XiomaraâŻCastro took over a narcostate subservient to Washington and has tried to push the envelope to the left. Being constitutionally restricted to one term, Castro hands the Libre party candidacy in Novemberâs election to former defense minister Rixi Moncada who faces a tough contest with persistent US interference.Â
Boliviaâs ruling Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) Party is locked in a self-destructive internecine clash between former President Evo Morales and his ex-protĂŠgĂŠ and current President Luis Arce. The energized Bolivian rightwing is spoiling for the August 17th presidential election.Â
Punishing Progress: Washington Targets Social Achievements of Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela
Israeli infiltration accompanies US military penetration
Analyst Joe Emersberger notes: âToday, all geopolitics relates back to Gaza where the imperial order has been unmasked like never before.â Defying Washington, the Hague Group met in Colombia for an emergency summit on Gaza to âtake collective action grounded in international law.â On July 16, regional states â Bolivia, Cuba, Colombia, Nicaragua and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines â endorsed the pledge to take measures in support of Palestine, with others likely to follow. Brazil will join South Africaâs ICJ complaint against Israel.
At the other end of the political spectrum are self-described âworldâs coolest dictatorâ Nayib Bukele of El Salvador and confederates Javier Milei of Argentina and Daniel Noboa of Ecuador. As well as cozying up to Trump, they devotedly support Israel, which has been instrumental in enabling the most brutal reactionaries in the region. Noboa duly tells Israelâs Netanyahu that they âshare the same enemies.â
In February, the US Southern Command warned: âTime is not on our side.â The perceived danger is âmethodical incursionâ into our âneighborhoodâ by both Russia and China. Indeed, China has become the regionâs second largest trading partner after the US, and even right-wing governments are reluctant to jeopardize their relations with Beijing. The empireâs solution is to âredouble our efforts to nest military engagement,â using humanitarian assistance as âan essential soft power tool.âÂ
Picking up where Biden left off, Trump has furthered US military penetration, notably in Ecuador, Guyana, Brazil, Panama, and Argentina. The pandemic of narcotics trafficking, itself a product of US-induced demand, has been a Trojan Horse for militarist US intervention in Haiti, Ecuador, Peru, and threatened in Mexico.Â
In Panama, President JosĂŠ Mulinoâs obeisance to Trumpâs ambitions to control the Panama Canal and reduce Chinaâs influence provoked massive protests. Trumpâs collaboration in the genocide of Palestinians motivated Petro to declare that Colombia must leave the NATO alliance and keep its distance from âmilitaries that drop bombs on children.â Colombia had been collaborating with NATO since 2013 and became the only Latin American global partner in 2017.Â
Despite Trumpâs bluster â what the Financial Times calls âimperial incontinenceâ â his administration has produced mixed results. While rightist political movements have basked in Trumpâs fitful praise, his escalating coercion provokes resentment against Yankee influence. Resistance is growing, with new alliances bypassing Washington. As the empireâs grip tightens, so too does the resolve of those determined to break free from it.
RDH/JP/OT
Roger D. Harris lives in California and is with the anti-imperialist human rights organization Task Force on the Americas, the Venezuela Solidarity Network, the US Peace Council, and the Marxist Forum. He writes regularly on Latin American and the Caribbean with a special emphasis on Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua.
John Perry is a writer based in Masaya, Nicaragua whose work has appeared in the Nation, the London Review of Books, and many other publications.
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