Canada has typically not been seen as a leader in the Americas. But the Venezuela crisis is changing that, as Ottawa tries to lead a multilateral response instead of taking Washington鈥檚 guidance.
Sometimes nations standing together can change history.
That happened in 1987, when the US and its NATO allies won a treaty eliminating an entire class of nuclear weapons via their collective will to confront the Soviet Union. Here鈥檚 a story of mine from the time, describing how the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty came together.
Today the US announced it will withdraw from the INF pact, saying Russia is cheating. It鈥檚 another blow to NATO鈥檚 teetering solidarity, and a test of how the White House handles Vladimir Putin鈥檚 pushing of geopolitical limits.
Those old cold war divisions are appearing in today鈥檚 Latin America, too. The US, aligned with regional powers from Canada to Brazil, wants Venezuela鈥檚 embattled leftist President Nicol谩s Maduro to go. Russia and China want him to stay. The longer he hangs on, the better his chances, writes the Monitor鈥檚 Howard LaFranchi.
Meanwhile, the divisions in Washington are symbolic as much as physical. When is a 鈥渨all鈥 a real wall? Another government shutdown may hinge on the answer, as Democratic and Republican lawmakers try to strike an agreement on border security that satisfies President Trump. (He has called wall talks )
Finally, the聽US released employment numbers on Friday, and they were good. 鈥淭he job train,鈥 said one expert, 鈥渏ust keeps rolling.鈥
Now to our five stories for your Friday.