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HistoryExtra podcast

The United States and Latin America: a turbulent history

HistoryExtra podcast

HistoryExtra

History

4.34.7K Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2026

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Has the United States always seen Latin America as its ‘backyard’? And when did influence tip into intervention? In this episode, Danny Bird is joined by Yale University's Greg Grandin to explore the long, turbulent history of US–Latin American relations, from westward expansion and early regime change to gunboat diplomacy, corporate empires and the Cold War ---- GO BEYOND THE PODCAST Don't miss our new podcast series History Behind the Headlines: Briefing, in which we task expert historians with bringing you the history you need to make sense of the headlines – in five minutes or less: https://play.megaphone.fm/p6xgtqh2tfwkyptbmlp4vw Take back your personal data with Incogni! Use code hepod at the link below and get 60% off annual plans: hhttps://incogni.com/hepod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the History Extra podcast. The relationship between the United States and Latin America

0:10.1

has been back in the headlines recently, following the US's military operation to capture Venezuela's

0:15.5

president and President Trump's announcement that the US would run the nation until it deems

0:20.2

that there can be

0:20.8

what he termed a proper and judicious transition. But has the United States always had such

0:26.6

a contentious relationship with the wider region? And when did influence start tipping into

0:31.6

intervention? In this episode, Danny Bird speaks to Greg Grandin about the long, turbulent history

0:37.2

of US-Latin American relations from westward expansion to the Cold War. episode, Danny Bird speaks to Greg Grandin about the long, turbulent history of U.S. Latin American

0:38.4

relations, from Westwood expansion to the Cold War.

0:42.3

I'd like to begin with the word backyard, which comes up a lot when talking about U.S. Latin

0:47.0

American relations.

0:48.4

But has the U.S. always regarded Latin America in that way?

0:51.5

As an historian, we don't like to use the word always, because every historical

0:55.5

phenomenon is historical. It has a particular beginning.

0:58.9

When the United States came into being, what is Spanish America was part of the Spanish

1:02.6

empire, a Spanish colonial system.

1:05.1

And at the time, the founders of the United States looked at the Spanish Empire more in terms

1:10.2

of larger geopolitics,

1:11.7

like how it was going to negotiate with monarchies in Europe.

1:16.9

There was a sense that Spain was somehow kind of like the way the Ottoman Empire would look later,

1:23.4

about to come apart.

1:25.0

But Thomas Jefferson thought that Spain was in a position to come apart

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