Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The New York Times - The World - November 18, 2025 - bu Katrin Bennhold - The U.N. approves Trump’s Gaza plan - Selling U.S. fighter jets to Saudi Arabia - Tracking monarch butterfli

 

The World
November 18, 2025

Good morning, world! I took a year off before going to university and traveled in Latin America. That’s where I learned how to speak Spanish, how to make a caipirinha and how unpopular “Yankees” were. American backpackers I met along the way often sewed a Canadian flag onto their backpacks.

Some of that anti-American sentiment came out of decades of U.S. interventions in the region, which subsided at the end of the Cold War. But now a version seems to be returning.

Also:

  • The U.N. approves Trump’s Gaza plan
  • Selling U.S. fighter jets to Saudi Arabia
  • Tracking monarch butterflies
Donald Trump, in a suit and a red tie, holds a document. Next to him, a person holds a map of the Gulf Coast that reads "Gulf of America."
Pete Marovich for The New York Times

Trump and the ‘Donroe Doctrine’

Even before it deployed a giant aircraft carrier to the Caribbean, the Trump administration had already paid a lot of attention to America’s neighbors in the Western Hemisphere.

President Trump started his second term vowing to seize the Panama Canal, annex Greenland and make Canada the 51st state. He renamed the Gulf of Mexico, rechristening it the Gulf of America.

Over the summer, he used American economic might to punish Brazil with tariffs and sanctions for prosecuting his ally, the former president Jair Bolsonaro. This fall, he threw another ally, President Javier Milei of Argentina, a $20 billion economic lifeline.

But now, in what’s probably the administration’s most conspicuous intervention so far, the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, has arrived within striking distance of Venezuela. Fifteen thousand American troops now sit in the region as the administration contemplates whether to take military action against the country.

Latin America has been at the receiving end of interventions from U.S. presidents before. But as my colleague Jack Nicas, our Mexico City bureau chief, writes in his very good analysis, what we’re seeing right now is “a sharp shift of decades of U.S. foreign policy” — a pivot to the Western Hemisphere.

Some foreign policy analysts told Jack they believed Trump would like to divide the world so that the U.S., China and Russia each dominate their own spheres of influence. Trump, they said, considers the Western Hemisphere part of America’s domain.

‘Our hemisphere'

Some call this new U.S. focus “the Donroe Doctrine,” Jack explained — a sort of Trumpian twist on a 19th-century idea. (The term appeared on a January cover of The New York Post.)

In 1823, President James Monroe wanted to stop European powers from meddling in the Americas. The idea had a corollary — that the U.S. would not interfere in Europe. This became known as the Monroe Doctrine.

In 2025, America’s main rival in the world is China, which has built up enormous political and economic power in Latin America over the past decades. China has invested in mining of strategic resources like lithium in Argentina, Chile and Bolivia. It is the largest buyer of Venezuelan oil. It is building factories for electric vehicles in Brazil. Russia also has a presence in Latin America, primarily in Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua.

U.S. officials have begun talking in Monroe-Doctrine-esque language recently, Jack points out.

“The Western Hemisphere is America’s neighborhood — and we will protect it,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wrote on X on Thursday.

U.S. interest in the region isn’t hard to understand. Ample natural resources, strategic security positions and lucrative markets are all in play.

What’s less clear is whether the Monroe-era corollary about spheres of influence still applies. If America is refocused on the Western Hemisphere, does that also imply that it’s willing to stay out of Russia’s and China’s neighborhoods? That would have significant implications for, among other places, Ukraine and Taiwan.

A group of five people in camouflage stand holding guns, positioned in a line. They are in a natural setting with dark green trees behind them.
A Venezuelan patrol near the border with Colombia in October.  Schneyder Mendoza/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The Venezuela question

The most imminent question mark is over Venezuela. Will the U.S. attack, and if so, to what end? (Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Trump said Venezuela “wants to talk.”)

It’s possible that Trump is relying on the arrival of so much firepower to force President Nicolás Maduro, who the U.S. and many other countries say is not Venezuela’s legitimate president, to simply step down. But for now there is no sign of that: Maduro has put his own forces on high alert, leaving the two countries ready for war.

The declared aim, as Hegseth put it, is to remove “narco-terrorists from our hemisphere.”

But as my colleagues explain, if drugs were really the main target, that would not explain why an aircraft carrier was rushed from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Caribbean to attack small boats that, until early September, had been intercepted by the Coast Guard. Nor would it explain why Colombia and Mexico — Mexico being the main conduit for fentanyl — are not in Trump’s sights.

A better explanation, Jack said, is Trump’s wish to control America’s neighbors.

“He believes this is the neighborhood we live in,” said Mauricio Claver-Carone, Trump’s special envoy to Latin America until June, who continues to advise the White House. “You can’t be the pre-eminent global power if you’re not the pre-eminent regional power.”

ASK A CORRESPONDENT

Immigration policy has been central to Trump’s agenda since he first ran for president. His second term, however, has been full of new approaches: Migrants to the U.S. have been deported to countries with harsh human rights records, like Iran, or in some cases to places they’re not from, like Eswatini or El Salvador. Many seeking to get into the U.S. have faced new hurdles — higher visa fees, for example — while some groups, like Afrikaners from South Africa, have been embraced.

My colleague Hamed Aleaziz has been writing about immigration since 2017, and he has been covering all of this. If you have questions for Hamed about the U.S. and its immigration and deportation policies, fill out this form.

We’ll pick a few questions for him to answer in The World.

MORE TOP NEWS

Two people in suits stand facing each other, smiling. One wears a red tie and holds a dark folder; the other wears glasses and has his hands clasped.
Michael Waltz, left, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., with the Israeli ambassador, Danny Danon, yesterday. Dave Sanders for The New York Times

The U.N. adopted the U.S. peace plan for Gaza

In a major breakthrough, the U.N. Security Council yesterday approved Trump’s peace plan for Gaza. The vote provides a legal U.N. mandate for the administration’s vision of how to move past the cease-fire and rebuild a Gaza Strip ravaged by two years of war.

The resolution, which is also a major diplomatic victory for the Trump administration, calls for an International Stabilization Force to enter, demilitarize and govern Gaza. The proposal also envisions a “Board of Peace” to oversee the peace plan, though it does not clarify the composition of the board.

The resolution passed with 13 votes in favor and zero vetoes. Russia and China, either of which could have vetoed the resolution, abstained, apparently swayed by the number of Arab and Muslim nations that supported it.

OTHER NEWS

SPORTS

Football: Here are the best players on their way to the 2026 World Cup.

Basketball: The N.B.A. is seeking cellphone records from multiple teams in a gambling investigation.

NUMBER OF THE DAY

38.1 billion tons

— The amount of planet-warming carbon dioxide that nations are projected to emit this year by burning oil, gas and coal, and by manufacturing cement. That would be a new record.

MORNING READ

An image of a butterfly on a stick.
Hannah Beier for The New York Times

For the first time, scientists are tracking the migration of individual monarch butterflies across much of North America. They’re using solar-powered radio tags, which weigh just a tiny fraction of a gram and have been attached to more than 400 monarchs this year.

The data could provide crucial insights into the poorly understood life cycles of hundreds of species of butterflies, bees and other flying insects, at a time when many are in steep decline. Read more.

AROUND THE WORLD

Images of fossils, a fossil hunter on a beach and a close-up of hands holding fossils.
Ilvy Njiokiktjien for The New York Times

What they’re digging up … in the Netherlands

The port of Rotterdam, the largest harbor in Europe, might not be the kind of place you’d expect to find clues to the Pleistocene era. But the human-made beaches that surround the harbor are prime spots for finding remains of woolly mammoths, woolly rhinos and other creatures that roamed there long ago.

Under Dutch law, beach combers who find fossils in the area aren’t required to report or surrender them. Since fossil hunters don’t have to worry about losing their finds, one paleontology student thinks they’re more likely to share their discoveries. “It allows us to practice citizen science,” he said. Read more.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Watch: In Ken Burns’s new documentary, the war for American independence was also a civil war. Its timing feels urgent, our critic writes.

Read: The Poems of Seamus Heaney” shows a master craftsman in full control of his powers.

Taste: You can retrain your palate to crave less salt.

Give: What do you get the person who hates gifts? We have suggestions.

RECIPE

Four chicken cutlets smothered in a creamy orange sauce with sun-dried tomatoes and fresh basil, cooked in a stainless steel skillet.
David Malosh for The New York Times

Can a comforting dish really move a partner to propose? This viral Tuscan-style chicken dish promises just that. Marry Me Chicken is one of our most popular recipes.

WHERE IS THIS?

A large seated bronze Buddha statue overlooks a courtyard framed by red and yellow fabric drapery, with a person in red robes walking across the foreground.
Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times

Where is this Buddha statue?

TIME TO PLAY

You’re done for today. See you tomorrow! — Katrin

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