Trump’s threats of intervention jolt allies and foes alike

Trump’s threats of intervention jolt allies and foes alike


Venezuela risks โ€œa second strikeโ€ if its interim government doesnโ€™t acquiesce to U.S. demands. Cuba is โ€œready to fall,โ€ and Colombia is โ€œvery sick, too.โ€

Iran may get โ€œhit very hardโ€ if its government cracks down on protesters. And Denmark risks U.S. intervention, as well, because โ€œwe need Greenland,โ€ President Trump said.

In just 37 minutes while speaking with reporters Sunday aboard Air Force One, Trump threatened to attack five countries, both allies and adversaries, with the might of the U.S. military โ€” an extraordinary turn for a president who built his political career rejecting traditional conservative views on the exercise of American power and vowing to put America first.

The presidentโ€™s threats come as a third of the U.S. naval fleet remains stationed in the Caribbean, after Trump launched a daring attack on Venezuela that seized its president, Nicolรกs Maduro, and his wife over the weekend.

The goal, U.S. officials said, was to show the Venezuelan government and the wider world what the American military is capable of โ€” and to compel partners and foes alike to adhere to Trumpโ€™s demands through intimidation, rather than commit the U.S. military to more complex, conventional, long-term engagements.

It is the deployment of overwhelming and spectacular force in surgical military operations โ€” Maduroโ€™s capture, last yearโ€™s strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities, assassinations of Islamic State leadership and Iranโ€™s top general in Iraq โ€” that demonstrate Trump as a brazen leader willing to risk war, thereby effectively avoiding it, one Trump administration official said, explaining the presidentโ€™s strategic thinking.

Yet experts and former Trump aides warn the presidentโ€™s approach risks miscalculation, alienating vital allies and emboldening U.S. competitors.

At a Security Council meeting Monday at the United Nations in New York โ€” called by Colombia, a long-standing and major non-North Atlantic Treaty Oranization ally to the United States โ€” Trumpโ€™s moves were widely condemned. โ€œViolations of the U.N. Charter,โ€ a French diplomat told the council, โ€œchips away at the very foundation of international order.โ€

Even the envoy from Russia, which has cultivated historically strong ties with the Trump administration, said the White House operation was an act of โ€œbanditry,โ€ marking โ€œa return to the era of illegality and American dominance through force, chaos and lawlessness.โ€

Trumpโ€™s threats to annex Greenland, an autonomous territory of the Kingdom of Denmark with vast natural resources, drew particular concern across Europe on Monday, with leaders across the continent warning the United States against an attack that would violate the sovereignty of a NATO ally and European Union member state.

โ€œThatโ€™s enough now,โ€ Greenlandโ€™s prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, said after Trump told reporters that his attention would turn to the worldโ€™s largest island in a matter of weeks.

โ€œIf the United States decides to militarily attack another NATO country, then everything would stop,โ€ Denmarkโ€™s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, told local press. โ€œThat includes NATO, and therefore, post-World War II security.โ€

Trump also threatened to strike Iran, where anti-government protests have spread throughout the country in recent days. Trump had previously said the U.S. military was โ€œlocked and loadedโ€ if Iranian security forces begin firing on protesters, โ€œwhich is their custom.โ€

โ€œThe United States of America will come to their rescue,โ€ Trump wrote on social media on Jan. 2, hours before launching the Venezuela mission. โ€œWe are locked and loaded and ready to go. Thank you for your attention to this matter!โ€

In Colombia, there was widespread outrage after Trump threatened military action against leftist President Gustavo Petro, whom Trump accused, without evidence, of running โ€œcocaine mills and cocaine factories.โ€

Petro is a frequent critic of the American president and has slammed as illegal a series of lethal U.S. airstrikes against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific.

โ€œStop slandering me,โ€ Petro wrote on X, warning that any U.S. attempts against his presidency โ€œwill unleash the peopleโ€™s fury.โ€

Petro, a former leftist guerrilla, said he would go to war to defend Colombia.

โ€œI swore not to touch a weapon again,โ€ he said. โ€œBut for the homeland, I will take up arms.โ€

Trumpโ€™s threats have strained relations with Colombia, a devoted U.S. ally. For decades, the countries have shared military intelligence, a robust trade relationship and a multibillion-dollar fight against drug trafficking.

Even some of Petroโ€™s domestic critics have comes to his defense. Presidential candidate Juan Manuel Galรกn, who opposes Petroโ€™s rule, said Colombiaโ€™s sovereignty โ€œmust be defended.โ€

โ€œColombia is not Venezuela,โ€ Galรกn wrote on X. โ€œIt is not a failed state, and we will not allow it to be treated as such. Here we have institutions, democracy and sovereignty that must be defended.โ€

The president of Mexico, another longtime U.S. ally and its largest trading partner, has also spoken out forcefully against the American operation in Caracas, and said the Trump administrationโ€™s aggressive foreign policy in Latin America threatens the stability of the region.

โ€œWe categorically reject intervention in the internal affairs of other countries,โ€ President Claudia Sheinbaum said in her daily news conference Monday. โ€œThe history of Latin America is clear and compelling: Intervention has never brought democracy, has never generated well-being or lasting stability.โ€

She addressed Trumpโ€™s comments over the weekend that drugs were โ€œpouringโ€ through Mexico, and that the United States was โ€œgoing to have to do something.โ€

Trump has been threatening action against cartels for months, with some members of his administration suggesting that the United States may soon carry out drone strikes on drug laboratories and other targets inside Mexican territory. Sheinbaum has repeatedly said such strikes would be a clear violation of Mexican sovereignty.

โ€œSovereignty and the self-determination of peoples are non-negotiable,โ€ she said. โ€œThey are fundamental principles of international law and must always be respected without exception.โ€

Cuba also rejected Trumpโ€™s threat of a military intervention there, after Trumpโ€™s secretary of State, Marco Rubio, himself the descendant of Cuban immigrants, suggested that Havana may be next in Washingtonโ€™s crosshairs.

โ€œWe call on the international community to stop this dangerous, aggressive escalation and to preserve peace,โ€ Cuban President Miguel Dรญaz-Canel posted on social media.

The U.S. attacks on Venezuela, and Trumpโ€™s threats of additional military ventures, have caused deep unease in a relatively peaceful region that has seen fewer interstate wars in recent decades than Europe, Asia or Africa.

It also caused unease among some Trump supporters, who remembered his pledge to get the United States out of โ€œendlessโ€ military conflicts for good.

โ€œI was the first president in modern times,โ€ Trump said, accepting the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, โ€œto start no new wars.โ€

Wilner reported from Washington and Linthicum from Mexico City.

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