Brussels Sprouts

The Donroe Doctrine? Venezuela, Greenland, and America's New Agenda

9 snips
Jan 8, 2026
Shashank Joshi, defense editor at The Economist, and Lawrence Freedman, emeritus professor of war studies, dive into the geopolitical fallout from Nicolás Maduro's capture. They explore Europe's legal concerns about U.S. military actions and dissect Trump's aggressive rhetoric regarding Greenland and its implications for NATO. With discussions on the limits of military interventions and Europe's anxiety over U.S. reliability, they paint a picture of a world teetering on the brink of new power dynamics. Plus, they outline key security flashpoints to watch.
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INSIGHT

Shock To Transatlantic Trust

  • Europeans are deeply unsettled by the US rendition of Nicolás Maduro and the brazen rhetoric about Greenland.
  • The episode weakens Western cohesion and raises hard questions about US reliability and NATO's future role.
INSIGHT

Tactical Win, Strategic Hubris

  • The raid's tactical success shocked observers, but the president's subsequent tone revealed risky hubris.
  • That mindset — confident unilateral action across the hemisphere — alarms European governments.
ADVICE

Manage The Relationship Pragmatically

  • European governments must acknowledge differences with the US while preserving cooperation where possible.
  • They should build military capacity, work Congress, and keep focus on Ukraine rather than Western Hemisphere theatrics.
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