
The Jacob Shapiro Podcast The Return of Imperial Strategy
Dec 12, 2025
Van Jackson, a Professor of International Relations at Victoria University of Wellington, critiques the latest U.S. National Security Strategy's contradictions. He discusses how ideology mixes with military ambition and the implications for global relations. Jackson highlights the document's imperialistic undertones, especially regarding Latin America and Venezuela, and examines the challenges of military interventions in defeating cartels. The conversation reveals the complex dynamics of U.S. foreign policy amid rising tensions with China and shifting geopolitical landscapes.
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2002 NSS And The Iraq Precedent
- Van Jackson recalls the 2002 NSS as a radical document that justified Iraq and regime‑change wars.
- He notes that its failures made large‑scale invasions politically toxic afterward.
A New Roosevelt Corollary Blueprint
- The NSS revives a Roosevelt‑Corollary style posture toward Latin America that openly enables intervention and resource seizure.
- That posture serves extractive ends, not respect for regional sovereignty.
Prioritization Rhetoric vs. Mission Creep
- The NSS claims 'prioritization' but lists many missions, creating mission creep and overstretch.
- That mismatch signals new forever‑war risks across Latin America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.


