Hemispheres of influence
When Marco Rubio tells the 62nd Munich Security Conference: "our home may be in the Western Hemisphere, but we will always be a child of Europe", he is being uncharacteristically gracious but also disingenuous. In using 'Western Hemisphere' as a synonym for The Americas he betrays a narrowly skewed US perspective. No great surprise, I suppose, coming from the US Secretary of State, especially under the current 'America First' administration, but drawing arbitrary lines on maps is, and always has been, extremely problematic. To pull it off convincingly requires hegemonic power such as that exercised by the British Empire at its height or by the United States and Soviet Union after World War Two. That world no longer exists and the US - along with the rest of the world - knows it. What follows, though, is quite literally up for grabs. Hence Rubio trying, somewhat desperately, to pitch the Trump White House's Monroe Doctrine-inspired outlook to its European ...