Picture this: A 47-year-old nation, barely able to defend its own borders, tells the mighty European empires to stay out of an entire hemisphere. That's essentially what President Monroe did in 1823 with his famous doctrine: "Europe, hands off the Americas!"
The hilarious part? America had neither the navy nor the economy to back it up. The British Royal Navy was doing the real heavy lifting. But here's the thing about audacious bluffs—sometimes you grow into them.
Fast forward through two world wars. America becomes the undisputed superpower, and Latin America becomes its literal playground. During the Cold War, the pattern was simple: Soviet influence appears → CIA operation follows.
The greatest hits include:
It wasn't pretty, but it was consistent. The Monroe Doctrine wasn't just alive—it was thriving.
Then came the 2000s. America decided the Middle East needed two decades of attention. Iraq. Afghanistan. Nation-building. Democracy-spreading.
Meanwhile, Latin America was like that friend you stop calling. The Obama-Biden era embraced "smart power" and soft diplomacy. No more gunboat diplomacy! We're sophisticated now!
Into this vacuum walked China, briefcase in hand, checkbook open, and zero lectures about human rights.
मतदान की अवधि
विषय दर्ज करें, टिप्पणी करें, और आसानी से भाग लें और मज़ा लें।
मतदान की अवधि
विषय दर्ज करें, टिप्पणी करें, और आसानी से भाग लें और मज़ा लें।