President Donald Trump sent shockwaves through the international press corps this week when he refused to rule out pursuing control of both Greenland and the Panama Canal, telling reporters point-blank that he doesn't want to reveal his full hand.
When pressed by a Spanish journalist about whether taking back the Panama Canal remained on his agenda after months of Greenland headlines, Trump delivered a characteristically coy response: "I don't want to tell you that. Sort of. I must say, sort of."
That's Trump-speak for: stay tuned, folks.
NATO Fears? Trump Isn't Buying It
The foreign press, predictably, tried to frame Trump's Greenland ambitions as a threat to the NATO alliance. One reporter asked directly whether the "ultimate breakup of NATO" was a price he'd be willing to pay for control of the strategic Arctic territory.
Trump's response was vintage America First diplomacy.
"It's very interesting. I think something's going to happen that's going to be very good for everybody. Nobody's done more for NATO than I have, as I said before, in every way."
Let that sink in, patriots. The same media establishment that spent years claiming Trump would destroy NATO now has to reconcile with the fact that this President dragged our so-called allies into actually paying their fair share for the first time in decades. He strengthened the alliance by demanding accountability – something the globalist class could never stomach.
Venezuela Blinks: Political Prisoners Released
Meanwhile, Trump confirmed that the Maduro regime in Venezuela has begun releasing political prisoners – a direct result of American pressure under this administration. When asked if the pace of releases was satisfactory, Trump noted it "depends on what they did" but confirmed that "a lot of political prisoners" have already walked free.
This is what real diplomacy looks like. No pallets of cash. No weakness. Just results.
The Art of Strategic Ambiguity
What the mainstream media refuses to understand is that Trump's refusal to definitively answer questions about Greenland and Panama isn't recklessness – it's leverage. Every foreign government watching that press conference now has to factor in the possibility that America under Trump is willing to pursue its strategic interests aggressively.
Denmark is nervous. Panama is paying attention. And China, which has been steadily increasing its influence over the Panama Canal, should be very concerned.
The globalist media wants you to believe that even discussing American control of strategically vital territories is somehow outrageous. But ask yourself: why is it acceptable for China to control ports across the world, but unthinkable for America to secure its own backyard?
President Trump understands something his predecessors forgot – America First isn't just a slogan, it's a doctrine. And under this administration, our national interests aren't negotiable.
The establishment press will continue hyperventilating about NATO and "international norms." Meanwhile, Trump will keep doing what he's always done: winning for the American people while his enemies scramble to keep up.
Stay tuned, folks. Something tells us the Greenland and Panama stories are far from over.
