Close Menu
DemocracyGuyana.comDemocracyGuyana.com

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from DemocracyGuyana.com

    What's Hot

    Gold pauses rally near record high as Trump signals deal on Greenland

    January 22, 2026

    Trump declaration of Greenland framework deal met with scepticism amid tariff relief

    January 22, 2026

    Opposition Leader Vote Set for January 26 as Guyana National Assembly Speaker Mr Manzoor Nadir Warns of “Damaging Choice”

    January 21, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About DG
    • Join as Volunteers
    • Become a Member
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    DemocracyGuyana.comDemocracyGuyana.com
    Jet Global Airways
    • Home
    • Diaspora
    • Guyana News
    • Global News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Opportunities
    • Advertise with us
    • Photo Gallery
    • Videos
    • World Newspapers
    • Contact Us
    DemocracyGuyana.comDemocracyGuyana.com
    Home»Featured»Is Trump changing international geopolitics for good?
    Featured

    Is Trump changing international geopolitics for good?

    Leonard CraigBy Leonard CraigNo Comments5 Mins Read73,427 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Leonard Craig
    Leonard Craig
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    BEFORE Trump, European Union and NATO allies had found a reliable trade and military partner in the American geopolitical comportment. Trump had pursued some steep foreign-relations stratagem, that in their unorthodoxies many world leaders and academics are puzzled to decipher — method or madness.
    His campaign slogan of Make America Great Again (MAGA), which became the cultic nomenclature around which a parallel stream of political adherents emerged to threaten the very foundation and support base of the traditional Republican Party.
    This slogan assumes that both domestic and foreign policies will put “America first.” This posture casts Trump as a unique local and international personality. Many academics have defined him in populist terms; he is able to do and say things that would’ve otherwise instantly ended the career of any other political figure. Trump says what many may think, but dare not utter; what many may wish but dare not attempt.
    There are things that Trump has done that will be irreversible in the practical application of local and geopolitical policies. I have three examples. Firstly, Trump has effectively closed the porous US-Mexican border; any other president following Trump will court a short political career if the border is reverted to caravan-styled undocumented migration.
    Next, Trump moved the US diplomatic Head of Mission in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a diplomatic abomination prior to Trump. Any American politician uttering a single phrase against this move will be out of the political establishment of both parties within weeks. Then, Trump demanded that NATO members increase their contributions to the military alliance and other international formations. It is unthinkable that under some future US president NATO members can renege on their payment commitments.
    In practical terms, there are other policies that are reversable, but would’ve done so much to shift the shape of international trade and diplomatic relations, that walking them back will be a long road.
    For example, the nature of tariffs the US has applied on Canada and the war of words which ensued has pushed Canada into the arms of China. Ottawa has carved out new trade deals with Beijing that positions China (now) at the Most Favoured Nation level. Strong statements out of Ottawa has said that Canada intends to grow its non-US trade by 50% within a decade.
    Once set in motion this cannot be easily walked back. Trump has asserted American dominance over the Panama Canal which links trade routes between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. China has since commenced advanced negotiations with Nicaragua to cut a new waterway to link the two oceans, employing terms that will give China almost perpetual dominance of a rival canalled trade route.
    Trump’s arrest of Maduro and direct verbal threats to Cuba is a resurrection and redefinition of a more aggressive form of the Munroe Doctrine; now realigned as the Donroe Doctrine. The old adage, “when America Sneezes the world catches a cold” is now more real in the Americas than it has ever been at any time in recent memory.
    The invasion of Venezuela, along with other diplomatic manoeuvres and visa-processing adjustments, is shifting countries of the Americas to be more responsive and compliant with US security stimuli, much of which will not be easily reversible in the post-Trump era.
    While Trump is in the midst of military meandering to extract economic benefit from the world’s vastest proven oil reserves, there is a contradiction happening right under his chin. Europe, which held its nose and did not retaliate against the slew of tariffs unleashed by Trump, is now exhaling.
    The EU is fighting back. It is pursuing trade deals with Brazil and the bigger Latin American economies which will effectively establish the largest free-trade area in the world, and one of the largest north-south trade agreements in recent memory.
    The bizarre tensions with Greenland come over as though Trump is finding it difficult to separate US economic interests from its security alliances. This has forced Europe into conversations that seeks to carve its own security arrangements despite the presence of NATO, thereby de-risking its dependency on US security commitments in the region. This cannot be wished away once set in motion.
    For nearly a century, the global order was built on an American foundation, fuelled by US-designed global institutions and monetary instruments, contoured by US-designated trade routes, fashioned by US-styled economic models and protected by US security hardware. There was no global agenda without direct input or engineering from Washington.
    The global system still rests on a US-driven foundation but in the era of Trump, with influence from the rest of the global north, the world is no longer building on that foundation, they are breaking new grounds. At a recent Asian-Pacific business conference, former Singaporean Foreign Minister George Yeo said, “Trump is fast-forwarding the inevitable future of a multipolar world.”

    Featured Top Right
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Leonard Craig
    Leonard Craig
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Gold pauses rally near record high as Trump signals deal on Greenland

    Trump declaration of Greenland framework deal met with scepticism amid tariff relief

    Opposition Leader Vote Set for January 26 as Guyana National Assembly Speaker Mr Manzoor Nadir Warns of “Damaging Choice”

    EU on cusp of historic trade deal with India: Ursula von der Leyen

    “Mr President, F*** Off”: Danish MP To Trump During Greenland Debate

    Budget 2026 to Signal Government’s Renewed Economic Direction

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    The Hollow Ambitions of Nigel Hughes: A Political Opportunist and Exhibitionist with Empty Promises.

    July 11, 2024980K Views

    What do you make of it? by Leonard Craig

    November 18, 2024744K Views

    President Irfaan Ali Emphasises Discipline and Accountability Over Project Delays

    November 13, 2024566K Views
    Don't Miss

    Gold pauses rally near record high as Trump signals deal on Greenland

    Gold prices paused near record highs on Thursday as investors reassessed risk after former US…

    Trump declaration of Greenland framework deal met with scepticism amid tariff relief

    January 22, 2026

    Opposition Leader Vote Set for January 26 as Guyana National Assembly Speaker Mr Manzoor Nadir Warns of “Damaging Choice”

    January 21, 2026

    EU on cusp of historic trade deal with India: Ursula von der Leyen

    January 21, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    72

    Over 50 poisoned at wedding in Iraq

    8.9

    EAM Jaishankar Meets Guyanese PM Mark Phillips, Discuss Energy, Disaster Resilience And Defence Cooperation

    Most Popular

    The Hollow Ambitions of Nigel Hughes: A Political Opportunist and Exhibitionist with Empty Promises.

    July 11, 2024980K Views

    What do you make of it? by Leonard Craig

    November 18, 2024744K Views

    President Irfaan Ali Emphasises Discipline and Accountability Over Project Delays

    November 13, 2024566K Views
    Our Picks

    Gold pauses rally near record high as Trump signals deal on Greenland

    January 22, 2026

    Trump declaration of Greenland framework deal met with scepticism amid tariff relief

    January 22, 2026

    Opposition Leader Vote Set for January 26 as Guyana National Assembly Speaker Mr Manzoor Nadir Warns of “Damaging Choice”

    January 21, 2026
    Popular Categories
    • Global News
    • Election Rigging
    • Sports
    • Special News
    • Guyana and Private Tenders
    Do you want to associate with us
    • Business Opportunities
    • Advertise with us
    • Contact Us
    • www.democracyguyana.com Guyana – London – India

      For more information, contact us.
    DemocracyGuyana.com
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    • Home
    • About DG
    • Become a Member
    • Join as Volunteers
    • Forum
    • Advertise with us
    DG BRANCHES: GUYANA, USA, CANADA, UK, CARIBBEAN, AND INDIA
    © 2026 DemocracyGuyana.com.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.