History of the Panama Canal and reality of its control
President Donald Trump has made repeated claims that China “operates” the Panama Canal in recent weeks and has threatened to take back the waterway to block what he sees as Beijing’s increasing influence.
U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson has a front-row seat in Congress to all the changes accompanying the new White House resident down the street on Pennsylvania Avenue.
Trump's Panama Canal threats are the latest in a long history of US interest and involvement in Panama. America invaded a few decades back.
North Korea’s state media condemned Donald Trump’s proposal to take over the devastated Gaza Strip — and gain control of other territories including Greenland and the Panama Canal — as invasive, calling the US a “usurper” that violates the rights of other countries for its own interests.
President Donald Trump says an executive order will change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. He also outlined his desire for the U.S. to take over the Panama Canal. Google on Monday changed the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America in Google Maps.
Letter writers discuss Donald Trump’s promise to control the Panama Canal, DEI leveling the playing field and Trump’s response to the D.C. plane crash.
Fritz Sprandel attempted to make a canoe trip from Staten Island to Los Angles via the Panama Canal on a dare.
United States and Canadian flags flying side by side” Tristin Henson Connector Staff Trump has stated multiple times that he was willing to use military force to acquire the Panama Canal and Greenland,
On Thursday, the Center for Latin American Studies (CLAS) hosted a guest lecture titled "Interrogating the World of Caribbean Workers on the Panama Canal" with speaker Julie Greene, a professor in the University of Maryland's Department of History and author of "The Canal Builders: Making America's Empire at the Panama Canal.
Our opposition to gunboat diplomacy in 1956 enhanced our leadership on the world stage.
The number of vessels that passed through the Panama Canal, the world's second busiest waterway, fell to an average of 32.6 per day for a total of 1,011 ships in January, the first month-on-month decline in almost a year,
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