Panama has owned and administered the Panama Canal for nearly three decades. President Trump wants to change that to counter ...
They say they fought too hard to wrest it from the U.S. to now hand back the waterway, which is part of the nation’s identity.
UNT Dallas political science professor outlines the implications of Trump’s threat to the Panama Canal. Trump’s suggestion ...
A military operation against a tiny neighbor would destroy US credibility in Latin America and provide a boost for China and ...
The neutrality of the nearly 50-mile canal, through which nearly 15,000 ships transit each year, is enshrined in Panama’s Constitution and is enforced by the autonomous Panama Canal Authority.
Trump has suggested using military force to retake the Panama Canal, but such an action would involve complications.
Donald Trump has completed his remarkable return to the presidency and is preparing to issue a flurry of legally binding ...
Built and managed by the USA for several years and transferred back to Panama in 1999, the Panama Canal has recently hit the ...
In the 1970s, a conservative coalition came together to fight ceding control of the Panama Canal—proving the political ...
He views Mexico as a source of unwanted migration, drugs and Chinese goods, Canada as a liberal dystopia and Greenland as a ...
Yes, the president-elect really is serious about expanding the U.S. But what he mostly wants is to bully small countries that ...
Third, threatening to “take back our canal” ignores that the original Panama Canal has been superseded by a new, larger canal built by foreign engineers and capital, with Panama facing decades ...