
-
Scientists sound alarm as Trump reshapes US research landscape
-
Trump's return boosts Israel's pro-settlement right: experts
-
Trump solo: first lady, children out of frame in new term
-
Climate watchers fret over Trump's cut to sciences
-
Moving fast and breaking everything: Musk's rampage through US govt
-
'Everyday attack' - Trans youth coming of age in Trump's America
-
A stadium and a jersey for Argentina's 'Captain' Francis
-
New Trump task force vows to root out 'anti-Christian bias'
-
Auto Shanghai showcases new EV era despite tariff speedbumps
-
Trump's administration moves to scrap artificial food dyes
-
Musk to reduce White House role as Tesla profits plunge
-
US official backs off promise to solve cause of autism by September
-
Guardiola joy as Man City go third after dramatic win over Villa
-
Trump says has 'no intention' of firing Fed chief
-
Jury finds New York Times did not libel Sarah Palin
-
UN appoints envoy to assess aid for Palestinians
-
Celtics star Tatum 'doubtful' for game two against Magic
-
Former England star Flintoff reveals mental battle after car crash
-
Defending champion Korda chases first win of season at Chevron Championship
-
Olmo fires Liga leaders Barca past Mallorca
-
Nunes strikes at the death as Man City sink Villa to boost top-five bid
-
Tesla says profits plunge 71%, warns of 'changing political sentiment'
-
WHO announces 'significant' layoffs amid US funding cuts
-
PSG draw with Nantes to stay unbeaten in Ligue 1
-
Trump's administration moves to ban artificial food dyes
-
Gunmen kill dozens of civilians in Kashmir tourist hotspot
-
US Treasury chief expects China tariff impasse to de-escalate
-
I.Coast opposition leader Thiam barred from presidential election
-
Top US court leans toward parents in case on LGBTQ books in schools
-
At least 24 killed in Kashmir attack on tourists
-
Rahul powers Delhi to big win over Lucknow in IPL
-
Colombian cycling star 'Lucho' Herrera denies murder conspiracy
-
Trump, Zelensky to attend Pope Francis's funeral Saturday
-
US State Department to cut positions, rights offices
-
Ukraine ready for direct talks with Russia only after ceasefire: Zelensky
-
Myanmar Catholics mourn pope who remembered their plight
-
Pope's Vatican 'family' pay tearful respects
-
The world leaders set to attend Pope Francis's funeral
-
'Like a storm': Witnesses describe deadly Kashmir attack
-
Volkswagen unveils its electric counter-offensive in China
-
Landmark Nepal survey estimates nearly 400 elusive snow leopards
-
Napoleon letter auction recalls French pope detention
-
Saka injury 'nothing serious' as Arteta weighs Arsenal options
-
Rubio to cut positions, rights offices at US State Department
-
Trump says 'on the same side of every issue' with Netanyahu after call
-
ECB's Lagarde hopes Trump won't fire US Fed chief Powell
-
Gold hits record as Trump fuels Fed fears, Wall Street rebounds
-
The world leaders set to attend Francis's funeral
-
East Timor mourns Pope Francis months after emotional visit
-
US envoy to visit Moscow as US pushes for ceasefire

Trump's Canada fixation: an expansionist dream
A savvy negotiating tactic? A wild fantasy? A greed for natural resources?
US President Donald Trump's fixation with annexing Canada is so singular as to defy any easy explanation.
"I think it's one of those things where Trump thinks it would be nice to pull it off, but he understands that it is less than a remote possibility," said Todd Belt, a political science professor at George Washington University.
"His rhetoric is mostly to take a tough and unpredictable bargaining stance."
On Tuesday, the 78-year-old Republican who in recent weeks all but launched a global trade war made his expansionist desire known, once again, on his Truth Social network.
"The only thing that makes sense is for Canada to become our cherished Fifty First State," Trump wrote, painting a bright future of lower taxes, no tariffs and security for Canadians.
- 33 percent support -
Citizens of Canada are appalled by Trump's annexation talk.
"What he wants to see is a total collapse of the Canadian economy," outgoing prime minister Justin Trudeau said last week shortly before leaving office, after Washington announced 25 percent tariffs on all products from Canada, before backtracking.
Trump's statements have fueled strong anti-US hostility north of the border, where the American anthem now gets regularly booed at sports competitions.
According to an opinion poll conducted by the Leger Institute this month, only 33 percent of Canadians have a positive opinion of the United States, compared to 52 percent in June 2024.
In the same poll, 77 percent of respondents said they have a positive view of the European Union.
In his Truth Social post Tuesday, Trump called the US-Canada border an "artificial line of separation drawn many years ago."
Addressing Canadians, he said that when the border disappears, "we will have the safest and most beautiful Nation anywhere in the World — And your brilliant anthem, 'O Canada,' will continue to play, but now representing a GREAT and POWERFUL STATE within the greatest Nation that the World has ever seen!"
Trump seems to have a fondness for cartography, as manifested by his order, issued shortly after his inauguration, that the Gulf of Mexico be renamed the Gulf of America.
He has also publicly threatened to lay claim to Greenland and said he wants to take back control of the Panama Canal.
"A lot of this territorial aggrandizement (Greenland, Panama, Canada) came after the election, and I think someone put it in his head that great presidents acquire territory as a legacy," said Belt, the political scientist.
In his speech last week, Trudeau vowed that Canada would not be annexed.
"That is never going to happen," he said. "We will never be the 51st state."
- Water ways -
According to a New York Times report, Trump used the opportunity of talks with Trudeau last month to question the validity of a 1908 treaty that established the border between the two countries.
The US president, who is known to take a keen interest in water resources, also reportedly criticized the agreements regulating access to water between the two countries.
To the east, the US-Canada border runs through the Great Lakes. Westward toward the Pacific coast, the border crosses the Columbia River, whose waters are regulated by a detailed international treaty.
A trade war between the United States and Canada, which are closely linked economically, would represent "an existential threat" to Canadians, Ian Lee, an economics professor at Carleton University in Ottawa, told AFP.
"But no matter how much we scream or yell or express our anger, it doesn't change the reality," said Lee. "We are the mouse and they are the five-ton elephant. We must develop a compromise and deal with the demands of the United States."
Canada's Prime Minister-designate Mark Carney does not share that fatalism.
"Let the Americans make no mistake: in trade, as in hockey, Canada will win," he said Sunday.
Ottawa on Wednesday announced new tariffs on certain American products, in response to what it called "unjustified and unreasonable" taxes on steel and aluminum imposed by Trump.
J.Oliveira--AMWN