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Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Everlasting Empire: Trump USA's Donroe Doctrine

(Staff post from the WIKIPEDIA’s DONROE DOCTRINE in January 2026.)

The Donroe Doctrine, alternatively styled as the Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, refers to principles of President Donald Trump's foreign policy in the Americas. An adaption of the historical Monroe Doctrine, it describes a perceived desire by the second Trump administration to assert American predominance in the Western Hemisphere.

Trump's efforts to rename the Gulf of Mexico, acquire Canada, the Panama Canal and Greenland as well as pursuing military action against Venezuela have all been cited as part of a Trump corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. Additionally, Trump's "America First" agenda and skepticism of multilateralism has contributed to a view that the U.S. is focusing on its own hemisphere at the expense of traditional alliances, such as NATO.

Following U.S. strikes in Venezuela, Trump himself referred to "the Donroe Doctrine", stating that "American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned again". While supporters see the doctrine as restoring American primacy and combatting the influence of China and Russia in the region, critics have suggested that it could set a precedent for illiberal regimes to violate the rule of law and pursue territorial expansion.

The original 19th-century Monroe Doctrine was outlined in James Monroe's December 1823 State of the Union Address. It opposed European intervention in the Americas and warned foreign powers that the United States would not tolerate colonization of its neighbors.

Theodore Roosevelt's military expeditions in Latin America (Santo Domingo and Nicaragua) arguably extended the principle of the Monroe Doctrine to justifying intervention to prevent foreign powers from gaining influence in a U.S. zone of influence.

Is the USA an eternal superpower that will never fall? There's a saying, "No empire lasts forever." Throughout history, there have been dominant world powers like Rome, the British Empire, and the Mongol Empire, but they all eventually fell to stronger adversaries. I'm skeptical that the USA will follow this historical pattern.

Unlike previous empires, the US. is overwhelmingly dominant in all fields—economy, military, and culture. People worldwide use the dollar and speak English. And the US is the only country that can absorb global talent and continue to grow. I can't imagine a scenario where the Us would fall. It seems to be an exception to the rule of collapsing empires. I think any nation that threatens the USA will collapse before it can.