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Doral, Florida — This weekend, President Trump convened a dozen friendly presidents from across the Western Hemisphere to formalize a new alliance committed to advancing our America First agenda. This coalition bypasses existing institutions such as the Organization of American States and the United Nations, which no longer serve America's interests in the region.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio addressed the leaders in Spanish, referring to them not only as allies but as friends. He invited them to partner with the United States in promoting both economic development and national security.
The attending presidents included:
Argentina’s Javier Milei, a global star of the libertarian movement.
Bolivia’s Rodrigo Paz, who ended two decades of socialist rule in his country.
Chile’s José Antonio Kast, who decisively defeated a communist candidate and takes office next week, replacing a socialist incumbent.
El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele, who has dramatically reduced street crime through strict law-and-order policies.
Costa Rica’s Laura Fernandez, a newly-elected conservative soon to replace the incumbent.
Dominican Republic’s Luis Abinader, who has restored law and order amid unregulated immigration from neighboring Haiti.
Ecuador’s Daniel Noboa, who is cooperating closely with the United States in operations against drug cartels.
Guyana’s Irfaan Ali, an English-speaker leading a newly prosperous nation thanks to offshore oil and gas discoveries.
Honduras’ Tito Asfura, elected late last year following delayed vote-counting that required U.S. intervention to ensure election integrity.
Panama’s José Raúl Mulino, who has swiftly aligned with the United States over China in matters concerning control of the Panama Canal.
Paraguay’s Santiago Peña, a strong ally in the Southern Cone.
Trinidad and Tobago’s Kamla Persad-Bissessar, an English-speaker who has strongly supported U.S. policy toward neighboring Venezuela.

Notably absent and uninvited were leaders from:
Brazil’s Lula da Silva, a longtime communist ally of the Castro regime in Cuba.
Colombia’s Gustavo Petro, a socialist and former narco-guerrilla.
Cuba’s Miguel Díaz-Canel, whom President Trump suggested does not have much time left in office.
Guatemala’s Bernardo Arévalo, an ally of the Obama-Biden administration's approach.
Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum, a narco-communist influenced by cartels.
Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, former Sandinista leader who now governs like a family fiefdom.
Peru’s current leadership, which hosts one of China’s largest infrastructure investments in the hemisphere at the Port of Chancay.
Uruguay’s Yamandú Orsi, a leftist who has cultivated ties with China.
Venezuela’s Delcy Rodríguez (serving in an interim capacity under U.S. oversight).
Haiti was not considered for invitation.
According to the U.S. Department of State, the alliance's objectives include:
Halting foreign interference in the hemisphere—especially from China—in line with the Monroe Doctrine.
Dismantling criminal and narco-terrorist gangs and cartels.
Preventing illegal mass migration.
The State Department emphasized that the United States seeks to promote freedom, security, and prosperity throughout the region.
President Trump urged the attending presidents to deploy their militaries in a “counter-cartel coalition” to eradicate drug cartels, declaring that lawlessness would no longer be tolerated in the hemisphere. He identified Mexico as the epicenter of cartel violence.
Other U.S. cabinet members in attendance included outgoing Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem (who will serve as Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas), Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.
President Trump departed the summit in the afternoon to attend the dignified transfer of fallen American service members at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.
A New World Order
This summit marks a bold initiative by the Trump administration to restore American leadership in the Western Hemisphere—excluding foreign powers such as China, Russia, and Iran; eliminating criminal cartels that threaten our homeland; and halting and reversing illegal mass migration. These priorities have been neglected by prior administrations, both Democratic and Republican, since the 1960s. Secretary Rubio provides the foreign-policy counterpart to domestic immigration enforcement efforts led by figures like Tom Homan.
The administration is wise to circumvent the Organization of American States, the United Nations, and similar institutions, which have been co-opted by leftist influences and should be defunded. Instead, it is building new structures aligned with America First principles—a restoration rather than a reinvention of focused foreign policy.
By solidifying a strong hemispheric base, America positions itself to confront adversaries in Europe (Russia) and the Middle East (Iran). China remains the primary threat—an expansionist empire seeking to reduce the United States to a vassal state. President Trump has disrupted China’s discounted petroleum supplies from Venezuela and Iran (previously accounting for nearly a third of its imports, paid in yuan rather than dollars). The broader BRICS project and its challenge to the U.S. dollar are collapsing.
We are entering a new era in history—a new world order led by America and joined by freedom-loving nations worldwide. As President Milei often declares: “Long live liberty, damn it!”




















Long live good reporting! Thank you Ed.