World Review: Trump's Expansionist Ambitions and Tech Titan's Disruptions
A brief synopsis of this week's show
Each Friday morning, I host a video podcast called “World Review with Ivo Daalder” where three journalists from major news outlets around the world join me in discussing the latest global news stories of the week.
This morning, December 20, we talked about Trump’s threats to take over Panama and Greenland and the growing global importance of Tech Moguls with Susan Glasser of The New Yorker, Philip Stephens of the Financial Times, and Ravi Agrawal of Foreign Policy.
“World Review is always fascinating. I love the fact that you can get journalists from around the world to participate since zoom is the medium.”
— A Subscriber to America Abroad
While I encourage you to watch or listen to the episode (and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!), here are a few interesting things I took away from our discussion:
We started by discussing the return of 19th century imperialism – or Donald Trump’s threat to seize Panama, invade Greenland, and annex Canada. No, this is not normal. But Trump appears quite serious about his intentions. Susan recounted how she and Peter Baker, while researching The Divider, their terrific book on Trump’s first term, discovered that Trump had been very serious about the possibility of buying Greenland as far back as 2018. At the time, his utterance were dismissed as a joke and largely laughed off. But Trump not only remains serious, there are now fewer people who will oppose his efforts than there were during his first term. Moreover, the repeated insistence that these countries belong in America’s sphere of influence—or even need to be part of the United States—shows that Trump’s America First agenda isn’t the same kind of isolationism that the original America Firsters favored in the 1930s. It’s at the very least a policy that insists not only on keeping foreign influences in the Western Hemisphere out (as the Monroe doctrine did) but extends US control over the entire Hemisphere, to the point of treating Greenland today as Alaska was treated in 1867, when the US bought it from Russia.
This morning’s Financial Times headline said it all: “Musk examines how to oust Starmer as UK prime minister before next election.” This follows his fawning interview with Alice Weidel, leader of the extreme-right German Alternative für Deutschland, on is own X platform. Having spent $250 million to help elect Donald Trump last year, the world’s richest man seems bent on using his money, power, and social media channel to go after the liberal democratic establishment in Europe in favor of his own brand of right-wing politics. Ravi suggested that that Musk appears to have been influenced by the mis- and disinformation that thrives on X. Absurd stories and made-up nonsense seem to drive Musk’s torrent of engagement—and propel his anti-democratic efforts to oust elected leaders and promote parties that have been rejected by the political establishment as too extreme. With Mark Zuckerberg announcement that Facebook and Instagram will no longer moderate content, the big question for Europe, Philip noted, was whether Trump will use America’s influence to seek and curtail content moderation regulations in the UK and European Union—threatening tariffs and other punitive measures unless these laws and regulations are taken down. We’ve of course been here before, with big business barons using money and influence to get their way. But today’s Tech Moguls seem to be drunk with power, and now have someone in the White House who is more than willing to do their bidding.
That’s it for my quick takes of this week’s episode here on America Abroad. To get the full flavor, please listen to the episode itself.
The show will take a three week break, but we will be back on January 10 with a new episode.