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Slot hoping Salah can still burnish Liverpool legacy
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Astronauts strapped in for historic US lunar launch
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Top World Bank official 'extremely concerned' by fallout of Iran war
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'Wake-up call': Megan Thee Stallion falls ill during Broadway show
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Canada's defense enters new phase, Arctic in focus: top military officer
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France charges man over failed attack on US bank
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Bayern reach women's Champions League semis after late show sinks United
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SpaceX files to go public, paving way for record stock offering
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Delhi make winning start to IPL as Rizvi downs LSG
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Final ticket sales phase begins for FIFA World Cup
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Supreme Court skeptical of Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
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Tractors roll through Vienna as farmers protest
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PGA Tour, Masters chairman support Tiger recovery pause
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World Cup winner Goetze extends contract at Frankfurt
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SpaceX files securities documents to go public: source
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Armenia cannot be in both EU and Russian customs bloc, Putin says
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Chelsea announce record pre-tax loss of £262.4 million
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Stocks rally, oil drops on Mideast war optimism
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Starmer says UK to host multi-nation meeting on Hormuz shipping
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Greece train crash trial resumes after courtroom chaos
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Trump says Iran asks for ceasefire as Tehran hit by fresh strikes
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Swiss government eyes dropping purchase of US Patriot air defence system
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Germany halts rescue efforts for stranded whale
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IndiGo lands IATA chief Willie Walsh as new CEO
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Late charging Ganna denies Van Aert at Across Flanders
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'Embarrassed' Spain probes anti-Muslim chants at Egypt friendly
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The 'million dollar' Senna helmet bought at Japan GP
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Could NATO be collateral damage from Trump's Iran war?
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Supreme Court hearing landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
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Three go on trial in Germany over plot to overthrow government
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Anderson backs England for Australia revenge despite Ashes woes
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Italy's sport minister asks football chief to step down after World Cup disaster
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Cambodia extradites accused cyberscam boss to China
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Supreme Court to hear landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
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UK police arrest three more over Jewish ambulance attack
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Macron lauds Europe's 'predictability' in seeming contrast to Trump
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'Indescribable': Bosnia jubilant after securing World Cup return
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Pakistan says holding talks with Afghan govt in China
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Guehi tells England to 'stick together' after World Cup warm-up loss to Japan
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Generation of Italians reeling from World Cup 'apocalypse'
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Australian journeyman emerges as India's unlikely football saviour
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Germany growth forecasts slashed as Mideast war hits economy
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Spanish police open probe into anti-Muslim chants at Egypt friendly
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Ailing Italy at new low after missing out on yet another World Cup
As Trump imposes 'Donroe' Doctrine, murky message to US rivals
With a major attack to arrest Venezuela's leader, President Donald Trump is showing that the United States will impose its will in its neighborhood -- and the lesson may not be lost on Russia and China.
Trump described the raid to seize leftist Nicolas Maduro as an update of the Monroe Doctrine, the 1823 declaration by fifth US president James Monroe that Latin America was closed to other powers, then meaning Europe.
"The Monroe Doctrine is a big deal, but we've superseded it by a lot, by a real lot. They now call it the Donroe document," Trump told a news conference, slapping his name on the policy principle.
"American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned again."
Weeks earlier, White House policymakers had given more intellectual gloss for the same idea in a national security strategy that announced a "Trump Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine.
The policy, the strategy said, will authorize US intervention in Latin America for goals such as seizing strategic assets, fighting crime or ending migration, one of Trump's top domestic goals.
Venezuela has the world's largest proven oil reserves, with China its top partner. Trump had justified intervention by alleging drug-smuggling from small boats off Venezuela and by Maduro himself.
But the United States is not alone in wanting to exert itself over smaller regional neighbors.
Russia's Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022 after questioning the former Soviet republic's historical legitimacy and vowing the removal of its elected president, Volodymyr Zelensky.
China has refused to rule out force to seize Taiwan, a self-governing democracy, and has angered US allies by claiming rights to much of the South China Sea.
The Venezuela raid came days after China carried out major military exercises aimed at simulating a blockade of Taiwan following a major US arms deal. A Chinese envoy met Maduro in Caracas hours before his capture.
- US superpower status slips -
Trump's intervention is also sure to gain the attention of US allies that have been stunned by his threats over resources he sees as strategic.
Trump recently named an envoy who said he would work to seize Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, and he has threatened to take back the Panama Canal.
Jennifer Kavanagh, director of military analysis at Defense Priorities, which supports US restraint, said she had long dismissed Trump's Greenland talk.
"Now I'm not so sure," she said. "It wouldn't be that hard for the US to put a couple hundred or a couple thousand troops inside of Greenland, and it's not clear to me who could do anything about it."
Venezuela "does raise this question that if the US can declare a leader illegitimate, go and remove him and then run the country, why can't other countries?"
The United States, of course, has a long history of interventions without UN authorization, notably the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
The difference, Kavanaugh said, is that back then the United States had far more relative power.
"It wasn't a matter of setting a precedent for other countries, because they just couldn't aspire to that level of military power and the US could stop basically anyone who tried. But that's not true anymore."
- Mixed messages -
The United States for decades stood firm against Moscow and Beijing. But under Trump, Washington's stance has become murkier.
The new national security strategy calls for a refocus closer to home and says comparatively little about Russia and China, leading some critics to conclude that Trump essentially was acknowledging they enjoy their own spheres of influence.
Trump has spoken favorably of China and played down the risks of a Taiwan invasion. Before taking office Trump suggested Taiwan should pay more for its US "insurance policy."
On Ukraine, Trump has mused that the country is destined for defeat against larger Russia, and has pressed Kyiv to accept territorial concessions.
At the very least, Venezuela will herald a harder US line within Latin America, said Alexander Gray, an Atlantic Council scholar who served on the National Security Council during Trump's first term.
"I think it's very clear that there will no longer be a level of tolerance for the type of even lower-level Chinese, Russian and Iranian influence that we've seen over the last couple of decades," Gray said.
O.Karlsson--AMWN