One frantic year into what is shaping as a momentous four-year term (if that’s all it is), the world is now wide awake to what it’s like having Donald Trump make play with the most powerful economic and military force in history. It’s not pretty, but it sure has everyone’s attention.
Trump’s imperial America is on the march. Its empire is measured by economic reach and bolstered by a military capable of rapid deployment anywhere – the kind of force that snatched Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from their Caracas bunker ten days ago.
Trump and acolytes like Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff, are triumphant. “You can talk all you want about international niceties and everything else,” Miller said after the raid, “but we live in a world… that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world.”
This is Trump’s America, as the president’s own border police snatch people they deem to be illegal immigrants off streets and out of homes and workplaces, handcuff them and send them into detention, who knows where. Even in America with its violent history, this is new.
The Caracas raid has set the scene for the rest of Trump’s second term, and it’s coloured black. He says America will “take back the oil… we should’ve taken back a long time ago” – a reference to when Venezuela sent US oil companies packing by nationalising the industry in 2007.
Venezuela’s heavy crude is hard to extract and handle, which is not lost on those American companies resisting Trump’s efforts to get them back there. But there’s a bigger issue in play. A ramped-up Venezuelan industry would be a major global source of carbon pollution.
For Trump and the oil executives he met last week, that’s irrelevant. With the world teetering on the brink of unstoppable global warming they have always shown contempt for science and humanity’s wellbeing. Their mantra: Make America great, bugger the planet.
Which brings us to the world’s biggest island.
Historically no-one wanted to know about Greenland, buried under more than a mile of ice, except the handful of Inuit and Norse people who found ways to live there. Three centuries ago Denmark took it on as a colony (now self-governing) and when the nuclear age began it allowed the US as a NATO ally to operate military bases there.
The melting of Greenland ice is now accelerating at a rate that would see global sea levels rise over a metre this century. That would inundate low-lying coastal land including Trump’s Florida home, Mar-a-Largo.
Blind to such a prospect, Trump sees the vanishing ice as a chance to extract mineral wealth while enlarging his empire. He intends to take Greenland, by force if necessary.
In the strongman’s simple world, bigger is always better. Greenland won’t be enough for Trump, and his next target is right next door. Canada is even larger than the US itself. Along with Greenland it would make the US the world’s biggest country. How tantalising is that?
Strongman leaders don’t like having their style cramped by others’ rules, so Trump despises the United Nations. Ironically it was America that in 1945 led the quest for world security. Besides providing the UN with its New York headquarters it seed-funded agencies for peacekeeping, protecting the vulnerable, fighting disease and growing food.
Since the 1980s the UN has also supported climate science, through the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Branding this science as false, Trump now seeks to silence it. Last week he formally withdrew his country from both the IPCC and the 33-year-old bedrock treaty that underpins global climate action.
Trump’s removal of UN guardrails, added to his defunding of science, his territorial ambitions and his exercise of raw power at home and abroad endangers everyone. While the man-boy has his fun with guns and oil, the world is rushing headlong towards self-immolation. In strongman language, that’s betrayal on a planetary scale.
This imposes new responsibilities on all Western democracies including Australia. We need to heed Mark Carney, prime minister of our close Commonwealth sibling Canada, the country most at risk from Trumpian imperialism. He warned several times in 2025 that the old order of things has gone and we must now fashion a new one.
All democracies must redefine their alliance with the US, and their leaders including Anthony Albanese must talk about this, publicly.
We are sailing in uncharted, shark-infested waters. We should all be afraid, and we should all be furious.