MEXICO CITY — In his celebratory news conference on the U.S. capture of Venezuelan strongman leader Nicolás Maduro, President Donald Trump set out an extraordinarily forthright view of the use of U.S. power in Latin America that exposed political divisions from Mexico to Argentina as Trump-friendly leaders rise across the region.
''American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned again," Trump proclaimed just hours before Maduro was perp-walked through the offices of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in New York.
The scene marked a stunning culmination of months of escalation in Washington's confrontation with Caracas that has reawakened memories of a past era of blatant U.S. interventionism in the region.
Since assuming office less than a year ago — and promptly renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America — Trump has launched boat strikes against alleged drug traffickers in the Caribbean, ordered a naval blockade on Venezuelan oil exports and meddled in elections in Honduras and Argentina.
Through a combination of tariffs, sanctions and military force, he has pressured Latin American leaders to advance his administration's goals of combating drug trafficking, halting immigration, securing strategic natural resources and countering the influence of Russia and China.
The new, aggressive foreign policy — which Trump now calls the ''Donroe Doctrine," in reference to 19th-century President James Monroe's belief that the U.S. should dominate its sphere of influence — has carved the hemisphere into allies and foes.
''The Trump administration in multiple different ways has been trying to reshape Latin American politics,'' said Gimena Sanchez, Andes director for the Washington Office on Latin America, a think tank. ''They're showing their teeth in the whole region."
Reactions to US raid put regional divisions on display