
In Washington presidents often cloak their ambitions in the language of freedom, stability and national security. But sometimes the rhetoric slips, revealing something far more primal beneath it. In the case of Donald Trump’s foreign policy, especially in places like Venezuela and Iran, the mask barely holds. What emerges is not strategy rooted in diplomacy or humanitarian concern but the unmistakable logic of imperial appetite.
Again and again, Trump frames international crises not as human tragedies but as opportunities. Oil fields become “assets.” Governments become obstacles to be removed. Entire nations are reduced to chess pieces in a contest for power and resources. It is the worldview of a corporate raider projected onto global politics.
Look at Venezuela. In recent months, Washington has deepened its involvement in the country’s political and economic turmoil, while American officials openly discuss the restructuring of Venezuela’s oil and mineral sectors. The United States has already moved to assert influence over key resources and industries, including gold mining and petroleum infrastructure.
Supporters argue that these actions are about restoring democracy or countering geopolitical rivals. But the optics and the language tell a different story. When foreign policy revolves around who controls the oil, the gold and the pipelines, it begins to look less like liberation and more like acquisition.
The pattern extends far beyond Latin America. Trump’s confrontational approach to Iran follows a similar script, maximum pressure, economic strangulation and now direct military escalation. Intelligence analysts themselves warn that even massive military force is unlikely to topple Iran’s entrenched leadership.
Yet the administration continues to speak in sweeping terms about reshaping the Middle East, forcing surrender and remaking regimes. It’s a familiar imperial fantasy, the belief that overwhelming power can bend complex societies to Washington’s will.
What gets lost in this muscular rhetoric are the people who live inside these geopolitical experiments.
Economic sanctions aimed at governments rarely stay neatly confined to political elites. They ripple outward, landing hardest on ordinary citizens: families struggling with shortages, patients cut off from medicine, workers watching their economies collapse. In Iran, years of sanctions have contributed to severe economic hardship for civilians, even when humanitarian exemptions technically exist.
But human consequences rarely feature in Trump’s speeches. Instead, his worldview divides the planet into winners and losers, allies and adversaries, assets and obstacles. It is the language of dominance, not stewardship.
History should make Americans wary of this mindset. The United States has spent decades trying and failing to engineer political outcomes abroad through coercion. From Iraq to Afghanistan to countless smaller interventions, the lesson has been painfully consistent, power can destroy regimes but it cannot easily build stable societies.
Trump appears uninterested in that lesson. His instinct is not caution but escalation, not cooperation but confrontation. The world becomes a marketplace of leverage, where strength is measured by how forcefully America can impose its will.
There is a name for that approach. It is not diplomacy. It is not even traditional realism. It is imperialism dressed in modern clothing, transactional, extractive and indifferent to the lives caught in its path. And like every imperial project before it, it risks leaving devastation long after the headlines fade.









