When the Panama Canal was unveiled by the United States in 1914, the roughly 50-mile-long waterway symbolized American power ...
In the complex and often perilous world of international relations, the actions of world leaders reverberate far beyond their borders.
The neutrality of the nearly 50-mile canal, through which nearly 15,000 ships transit each year, is enshrined in Panama’s ...
Often called one of the seven modern wonders of the world, the Panama Canal splits the continents of North and South America ...
Donald Trump would have no recourse under international law if he decided to make a play for the passage, and Panama's president has rejected the US president's words, saying no nation "interferes ...
Constructed by the United States mainly with Afro-Caribbean labor and opened in 1914, the canal was administered by America ...
In his inaugural speech, President Donald Trump repeated his plan to regain control of the Panama Canal. Can he?
Trump began his second presidential term with a series of promises, including the vow to gain control of the Panama Canal.
From taxes to territory to the border, Trump will get some easy wins. What comes after is much harder, Eric Garcia writes ...
Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino--a center-right politician who wants to work with the U.S. on migration and security ...
Allies and adversaries alike are bracing for a US that no longer plays by the old rules - with threats of tariffs, trade wars ...
Roughly 5% of all global trade flows through the canal every year, and the most cargo is hauled between the East Coast of the ...