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Trump demands free passage for US ships through Panama, Suez canals

Trump demands free passage for US ships through Panama, Suez canals

Trump's focus has been on Chinese commercial shipping and shipbuilding, with the ultimate goal of promoting a revival of US shipbuilding
Bloomberg
President Donald Trump called for 'free of charge' passage of American ships through the Panama and Suez canals, renewing his focus of expanding US influence over critical commercial and naval waterways.
While Trump began pushing for an exit of Chinese port operators around the Panama Canal soon after returning to the White House in January, the post on his Truth Social network on Saturday also turned attention to the Suez Canal, which cuts through Egypt to link the Mediterranean and the Red Sea.
'Those Canals would not exist without the United States of America,' Trump said, adding that he's asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio to 'immediately take care of' the situation.
Trump's focus — with tariffs and other measures, such as proposed fees at US ports — has been on Chinese commercial shipping and shipbuilding, with the ultimate goal of promoting a revival of US shipbuilding. The US government argues that China's dominance in ship construction was achieved unfairly and harms US interests.
US commercial shipbuilding, once a global leader, has shriveled since the 1980s due to subsidy cuts and foreign competition.
Panama in February promised free passage for US warships through the canal, used mostly by the US and China, after Trump criticised Chinese influence over the waterway and threatened to 'take it back.' A plan by CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd to sell its Panamanian port assets to a consortium led by Blackrock Inc. has run into opposition from China and a financial dispute with Panama.

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First mass transport to Auschwitz concentration camp On this day in 1940, the first group of Polish political prisoners arrived at Auschwitz, which later became Nazi Germany's largest concentration and extermination camp. Auschwitz was made up of three parts: a prison camp, a death camp, and a forced labour camp. It is estimated that between 1.1 and 1.5 million people died there, with about 90 per cent being Jewish. The first camp, known as Auschwitz I, was set up on April 27, 1940, after an order from Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS. On June 14, the first transport of Polish political prisoners arrived. Auschwitz I remained mainly for political detainees throughout the war, most of them Poles and Germans. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Image: The National WWII Museum Another section, Auschwitz III, was turned into a forced labour camp in May 1942. It provided workers for the nearby chemical and synthetic rubber plants run by IG Farben. Notably, German companies put major investments into these industries using forced labour near Auschwitz. IG Farben alone put over 700 million Reichsmarks into its site at Auschwitz III in 1942. Albert II became the first monkey in space Before humans went into space, there were doubts about whether people could survive weightlessness for long periods. To study this, scientists in the US and the Soviet Union sent animals, mostly monkeys, chimpanzees, and dogs, into space to observe the effects. On this day in 1949, Albert II became the first monkey to reach space, hitting an altitude of 83 miles (134 km) aboard a V-2 rocket. He was part of the US 'Albert' Programme, which launched monkeys from New Mexico to gather information on how space travel might affect living beings. Scientists sent animals, mostly monkeys, chimpanzees, and dogs, into space to observe the effects. Image: X Albert II did not survive the return trip, as the parachute on the capsule failed. 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