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An Air Transat Airbus A321 jet rolls down the runway on takeoff from Montreal's Trudeau Airport.

Air Transat and its pilots have announced the ratification of a new five-year contract that represents the groups’ first negotiated agreement in more than a decade.

In a

press release

, the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) said that, of the 98 per cent of eligible pilots who cast ballots, 91 per cent voted in favour of the agreement, “which now improves their competitive position within the Canadian airline industry and establishes a stronger foundation going forward.”

ALPA, founded in 1931, represents more than 80,000 pilots at 42 Canadian and U.S. airlines, including 725 Air Transat pilots.

“Our pilots came together with professionalism and purpose to secure an agreement that reflects who we are and the essential role we play in our airline’s success,” said Capt. Bradley Small, chair of ALPA’s Air Transat Master Executive Council. “While it was unfortunate that this level of pressure was required, it was our unity that ultimately delivered results.”

Over the past year, Air Transat pilots had engaged in informational picketing in Toronto and Montreal, opened a strike centre, and issued a 72-hour strike notice. The deal was reached less than 12 hours before a potential strike.

“For years, Air Transat pilots have gone above and beyond through industry uncertainty and other challenges no one could have predicted,” Small said. “Through dedication, professionalism, and an unwavering commitment to safety, our pilots helped carry this airline forward. This agreement recognizes that contribution and the value pilots bring every day.”

“We are pleased with the favourable vote, which ratifies the comprehensive overhaul of our pilots’ collective agreement,”

said Annick Guérard

, president and CEO of Transat. “This agreement, beneficial for both parties, acknowledges the progress needed to catch up to the industry and the contribution of our pilots. It also incorporates major improvements in efficiency and productivity, enabling us to continue our growth strategy.”

The new agreement is backdated to May 1, 2025, and will expire on April 30, 2030.

National Post has reached out to both parties for more information. Air Transat said it will not disclose the details of the conditions set out in the agreement.

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People wait in line to check in to American Airlines flights at Chicago O'Hare International Airport on Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025.

It might seem counterintuitive, but American Airlines is experimenting with making travel faster and more efficient by sometimes delaying its flights.

Last May,

the U.S. airline announced

 it would begin testing the new technology at its Dallas-Fort Worth hub. The idea was to identify departing flights with incoming connecting customers who might miss that flight.

“If the airline determines it can delay the flight without any impact to the airline’s schedule, we will propose a short hold to get those connecting customers onboard,” it said in a press release.

“The technology, developed in-house by the American team, helps automate and enhance existing processes to hold certain connecting flights so the airline can help even more customers make their connections and get to their final destinations.”

The airline has since expanded the program to additional locations, including international airports in Los Angeles, Charlotte, N.C., Miami, Chicago, Philadelphia and Phoenix, Arizona.

“I think it’s great that we have the ability to do it,” Michael Wanner, managing director for the American Airlines control centre at Charlotte Douglas International Airport,

told the Charlotte Observer

of the so-called “connection-saving technology.” The airport started using the system just before the busy Memorial Day weekend last year.

“Normally, we wouldn’t even look at one passenger,” Wanner said. “But that one passenger is just as important as the other 189 on there. If you can do a short hold to get them where they are tonight, to get them home, that’s a win for us and a win for the customer.”

The airline

told azcentral

(an Arizona news site affiliated with USA Today) in September when the system was rolled out in Phoenix that it uses artificial intelligence in the technology as well as in other aspects of operations.

The airline said it “handles large volumes of data from a range of sources” to improve its customer service and operations, and that AI “can be very helpful to this effort.”

American Airlines’ spokesperson Luisa Barrientos Flores told

travel site Afar.com

that the airline “considers a complex algorithm that takes dozens of inputs that the tool analyzes to ensure there is no downline impact to the overall schedule or customer itineraries.”

When flights are held, customers are informed via text, email or through the airlines’ own app, telling them how long their connecting flight will wait at the gate. The app has

recently been updated

to include turn-by-turn directions to connecting gates with estimated walk times and real-time flight status updates.

Flores said that, on average, “flights are held for 10 minutes to help customers reach their connecting flights.”

According to

Afar.com

, a Reddit user last month posted an image of a text she received from American Airlines indicating a 17-minute hold on her connecting flight and advising her to “head to gate B16 as soon as you arrive” in Charlotte.

“Been on quite a few American flights, a lot w/ short layovers,” she wrote, adding that her first flight had been delayed 50 minutes and she worried she wouldn’t make the second. “It was last flight out of the night and there were a bunch of connecting passengers so it makes sense that they’d hold it,” she added.

The concept of holding one flight to connect to another is not new — United Airlines was trumpeting a similar

“ConnectionSaver”

tool back in 2019 — but the use of AI and additional communication with passengers has made it more effective.

National Post has reached out to American Airlines for more information.

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Police in Florida have charged a Canadian man, 47, with allegedly molesting a nine-year-old boy outside a Fort Lauderdale resort.

A Canadian man was arrested in Florida last week after allegedly molesting a nine-year-old boy at an oceanfront hotel while his mother sat nearby.

Officers from the Fort Lauderdale Police Department were called to the Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort Hotel & Suites on Dec. 29 to reports of the alleged crime, according to arrest documents obtained by National Post.

The accused, a 47-year-old from Stony Plain, Alta., just outside of Edmonton, was arrested the following day and has been charged with lewd or lascivious molestation of a victim under 12 years of age, a first-degree felony under Florida law.

If convicted, punishment can include life imprisonment or a split sentence involving at least 25 years in prison, followed by a lifetime of probation or community control, according to

Hanlon Law

in St. Petersburg.

In a probable cause statement, officer Patricia Cardoso De Camargo said the alleged victim was outside and seated next to his mother as she used her computer when he was approached by an unknown caucasian man.

He alleges the man “touched him on his chest and on his private parts in a sexual manner,” after which he attempted to tell his mother, but “she was busy on her computer and talking to another unknown subject.”

The boy said he was scared and tried to escape further touching by moving to an adjacent table where another family was seated. He said the man followed him, approached from behind and resumed the alleged groping.

“The victim stated he told the defendant to stop touching him,” De Camargo wrote.

The alleged interactions were confirmed by “several witnesses,” she wrote, all of whom provided the same accounts of the incident.

One of them was the father at the table where the boy sought refuge. He told police he saw the defendant and another man approach and initiate a conversation with the boy’s mother and that the initial touching occurred while she was distracted.

He said that after the boy asked to sit with them, the defendant returned and proceeded “to once again touch the victim in a sexual manner” before the boy asked him to stop, at which time he said the defendant left.

When he learned the boy didn’t know the man, he “became irate and confronted the defendant, who locked himself in his room.”

The accused was being held without bond at Broward County’s Main Jail in Fort Lauderdale as of Wednesday morning, according to a police spokesperson who said the matter remains under investigation.

Global Affairs Canada said it was aware of the reported arrest and that officials are in contact with local authorities to gather more information.

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A synagogue in Winnipeg was vandalized with red swastikas in the early hours of Jan. 2, 2026. Police are investigating.

Red swastikas were spray-painted on the windows and walls of a synagogue in Winnipeg on Friday, a move that its executive director says was a “a very cowardly act” that was “meant to intimidate us.”

“I was disappointed because I feel that our synagogue is part of the fabric of the community, and we just went through a two-year renovation process to to enhance our spiritual home, so somebody defacing it was was very upsetting,” Dr. Rena Secter Elbaze told National Post.

Police are investigating the hate-motivated crime, which occurred on Jan. 2 around 4:30 a.m. at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. Video cameras captured a “lone offender spray painting swastika graffiti on the front entrance of the building,” according to an update provided by the synagogue.

The maintenance team discovered the graffiti and reported it to police.

 Another angle shows a synagogue in Winnipeg that was vandalized after a suspect spray-painted swastikas on its windows and walls on Jan. 2, 2026.

“I’m happy that our congregants didn’t allow themselves to be intimidated. We had about 180 to 200 people show up for the service (on Saturday morning),” said Elbaze. “We were actually very prepared for something like this (with security protocols in place) to reassure the congregation, but it was just disappointing, because Winnipeg is supposed to be this lovely cultural mosaic where everybody supports each other.”

The Jewish community across the country has faced similar crimes that appeared to be motivated by hate.

A synagogue in Montreal was fire-bombed

, a

Jewish girls school was shot at in Toronto

, and the entrance of

a Vancouver synagogue was covered in fuel and set on fire

.

“We feel like it’s part of a bigger trend,” said Elbaze. “I want people to know that we should have zero tolerance, right? If they do it to us, they’ll do it to someone else. So we really need to support each other.”

As part of the investigation, police were at the synagogue on Sunday. It was later noted, after reviewing the video footage again, that Friday night’s suspect discarded a bag “into the parking lot that appeared suspicious and caused great concern for the safety of the synagogue,” Winnipeg Police Service Insp. Jen McKinnon said at a press conference on Monday.

“What I can report is that discarded item did not pose any risk to the public whatsoever, and was dealt with accordingly,” she said.

Gustavo Zentner, who is the vice president for Manitoba and Saskatchewan at Jewish advocacy group, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, said in

a statement

that he was “deeply disturbed” to learn what happened at Congregation Shaarey Zedek.

He said the synagogue’s roots in Winnipeg date back nearly 140 years.

“Words are not enough. Leaders at all levels of government and authorities must back up their condemnations with concrete action to hold perpetrators accountable and address the sources of hatred,” he said.

Another Jewish advocacy group, Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center, also commented on the incident, saying in a post on X that it was the “predictable result of leaders failing to confront antisemitism with the seriousness and resolve it demands.”

“There is no room for apathy. Antisemitism must be confronted forcefully and consistently — before it leads to even more dangerous acts of violence against the Jewish community,” the statement said.

The incident “comes on the heels of a devastating year for global Jewry, one which ended in the unimaginable horror and heartbreak at Australia’s Bondi Beach,” according to a statement by B’nai Brith Canada on X. The organization is dedicated to combatting antisemitism.

“With 2026 having barely begun, this moment makes one truth painfully clear: a new year has not brought a new reality. Not for Canadian Jews, and certainly not for the congregation of Shaarey Zedek. This is not the first time the Jewish community of Manitoba has been targeted, reflecting a persistent and deeply troubling trend of escalating vandalism, violence, and threats against Jewish institutions across Canada,” the statement continued.

“Hate thrives in silence.”

Mayor of Winnipeg Scott Gillingham commented about the incident on X, including in his post that a Palestinian cafe, Habibiz Cafe, was also “hatefully targeted.” Police said around 5:20 a.m. on Sunday morning, the windows were smashed at the cafe, causing $5,000-worth of damage. A threatening note believed to be left behind by the suspect was found nearby.

“While the victims are from different backgrounds, the intent behind these acts is the same: to intimidate Jewish and Palestinian Winnipeggers and sow division,” he wrote. “We cannot let that happen.”

Jesse Pollock, a content creator at The Sports Network, commented about the incident at the synagogue on X, saying it was where he grew up attending and where he had his bar mitzvah.

“Our government has allowed us to get to this point. Antisemitism is not, and has not been a priority for the people in charge of leading our country. Too many slaps on the wrist, not enough action,” he wrote. “Why is it that so many people feel compelled to speak out about various issues in the world but when it comes to Jews facing hatred in OUR OWN COUNTRY, they choose to say NOTHING? If you’ve been silent, speak up.”

He urged politicians to “actually do something.”

“Jews are being attacked right before our eyes in Canada,” he said. “It’s time to wake up.”

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Team Canada captains Marie-Philip Poulin and Connor McDavid.

Marie-Philip Poulin prepared for the Beijing Olympics four years ago without a team.

The Team Canada captain, like most of the players on the Canadian and American women’s hockey teams, was holding out for the creation of what they called a viable, sustainable professional women’s league. As such, they weren’t playing anywhere, just training with their national teams and biding their time until the Olympics.

Things have certainly changed. That league they dreamed of sprang to life as the PWHL in 2023 and has been a booming success. Poulin spent her Sunday scoring twice, including the overtime winner, as her Montreal Victoire beat the Minnesota Frost in a sold-out arena. On Friday, the Canadian women’s hockey team for the Milan-Cortina Olympics will be officially named.

It is a hectic time.

“This whole Olympic year, it’s all new to us,” says Poulin. Even in the days of the CWHL, the semi-professional league that preceded the PWHL, Olympians left their club teams for six months to train in a centralized camp. The new league can’t allow its best players to leave for such a time.

“And so all of this is new, but we’ve been working for many years to create this professional league, and that’s what we want,” Poulin says. “It’s a lot of hockey, but it’s part of being a professional league, and it’s great.”

For the 34-year-old Poulin, who has scored a ridiculous seven goals in Olympic gold-medal finals, the creation of that league was on her mind as she donated a jersey to The Great Canadian Jersey, a Rogers campaign that invites Canadians to turn in old jerseys, which will then be turned into unique pieces by designer Cameron Lizotte.

Poulin donated a jersey from her first year with Montreal in the PWHL.

“To me, it does mean a lot,” she says. “It’s just the realization of many years of progress to create this league.” It was also important to represent the women who never had a chance to play in a league like the PWHL. “So, it’s very special,” she says.

Connor McDavid, the Edmonton Oilers superstar, also went back to his roots, donating a jersey from the York-Simcoe Lions, the triple-A team from his early playing days in the Toronto suburbs.

“This one obviously has a special place in my heart,” McDavid says. “Some of the best memories I have playing hockey are still from wearing that jersey as kid, right?”

But if Poulin and her teammates are dealing with a different pre-Olympic experience, McDavid’s is that much more unusual because he has never been to one before. NHL players are returning to the Olympics for the first time since 2014.

“I couldn’t be more excited to go and be a part of the Olympics and be a part of the biggest sporting event in the world,” McDavid says.

“In 2018, when they announced that the NHLers weren’t going, I remember being initially disappointed, but not understanding the magnitude of it.”

McDavid, 28, was then just a kid at the start of his pro career, but the long NHL absence meant a lot of his contemporaries never got the chance to play in an Olympics.

“You know now how disappointing it is for those guys,” he says. “But it’s exciting that we’re able to go now. It’s going to be great for us guys that haven’t had that opportunity before in our careers.”

For Poulin, who has been on the Olympic stage four times already, she knows what the tournament will bring.

“It’s about who’s going to be ready, and who’s going to elevate,” she says. “Obviously, we all go through the same thing, and it’s whoever’s going to be ready, come February.”

Jersey

donations

can be dropped off at participating Rogers stores until Jan. 15.


MP for Vernon-Lake Country-Monashee Scott Anderson says it will be a

A Conservative member of Parliament in British Columbia says the Liberals have courted him to cross the floor, but it will be a “cold day in Hell” before he betrays his party and the people who voted him into office.


In

a chilly rebuke shared on Facebook

, Vernon—Lake Country—Monashee MP Scott Anderson says the Liberals are “pulling out all the stops” to attract more Conservatives to their ranks.

Two have already done so — Chris d’Entremont (Acadie—Annapolis, N.S) in November and Michael Ma (Markham—Unionville, Ont.) in December — leaving Prime Minister Mark Carney within one seat of the 172 needed for a majority in the House of Commons. Their departures drew sharp criticism from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and other members of his caucus.

While Ma never explicitly criticized Poilievre in his departure, d’Entremont did,

telling reporters

he didn’t feel “aligned” with the leader’s “ideals” and wanted to move away from a “negative” style of politics. He also hinted there were other members of Poilievre’s caucus “in the same boat” who might also jump ship.

Anderson, however, said dissent within the Tory ranks is a myth perpetuated by the Liberals because “they are afraid of Pierre Poilievre.”

“They’d prefer a milquetoast Conservative leader and not a fighter who stands up to their lies and omissions,” he wrote.

 Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during question period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.

In his statement, Anderson went on to criticize the governing Liberals, calling out a tendency to deliver headline-making announcements about “great nation building projects” and then failing to deliver results.

“Simply put, you’ve done nothing but make empty promises, increase taxation, and throw billions away trying to entrench your power,” he wrote.

He also took the Liberals to task on their alleged behaviour in the House of Commons, where he accused them of not taking matters important to Canadians seriously.

“I watch you boast about your handouts, your rental housing that never seems to materialize, your leader who shows up a few minutes a month for part of (Question Period) before jetting off in search of more pointless headlines,” Anderson stated.

“And you have the gall to say that our pleading for the little guy is ‘carping.’ I’m frankly disgusted.”

(Carping means to continually complain or find fault in trivial matters.)

Anderson ended his missive by reaffirming that he has no intention of ever breaking ranks with the Conservatives, regardless of what is promised in return. To do so, he said, “would be a betrayal of my constituents, a betrayal of the office to which I have been elected, and a betrayal of my own personal core beliefs.”

“It’ll be a cold day in Hell before I even consider betraying my constituents, and you should probably stop asking because I will certainly advertise it every time you try.”

Anderson, newly elected in April 2025, is a former member of the Canadian Armed Forces and a former city councillor in Vernon, B.C. From 2017 to 2019, he served as interim leader of the province’s Conservative Party.

The Liberal Party, in an emailed response to National Post’s request for comment, didn’t mention Anderson and said there were no caucus updates to report.

We’re ready to work collaboratively with Parliamentarians from all parties to build a stronger Canada, and we welcome all support for the serious solutions we are bringing forward,” the Liberals wrote.

National Post has contacted Anderson for comment.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our politics newsletter, First Reading, here.


An Israel supporter holds the Canadian and Israeli flags outside of Roy Thomson Hall on September 10, 2025.

Some Canadian Jews refuse to refer to themselves as Zionists, but it’s not because they don’t support the right of self-determination for Jews and the existence of a Jewish state, according to a newly published study. It’s largely due to a perceived negative connotation associated with the term, notably since the Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attacks in Israel by Hamas.

“It’s become a pejorative word in the mass media and on the street and in places of work, in the university system, in public schools and so on,” the study’s author Robert Brym told National Post. He is also a professor of sociology and S.D. Clark Chair in Sociology at the University of Toronto.

“This does not mean that Canadian Jews who refuse to say they are Zionists are unconditionally opposed to Zionism as English-language dictionaries and general encyclopedias define the term (support for Jews having self-determination in a country of their own),” Brym writes in the study’s conclusion.

“Even among Canadian Jews who refuse to say they are Zionists, 88 per cent agree that Israel has the right to exist as a Jewish state.”

“I think this is a way of informing the general public that Jews are hurting,” he told National Post, about surveying the Canadian Jewish community.

“They’re scared, not all — but many, if not most — are scared about what might transpire. Some awful things happened this year in Manchester, U.K. and in Sydney, Australia. They can happen here.”

The

study

, published in last month’s issue of the academic journal Canadian Jewish Studies, is a follow-up on a previous study commissioned by three Jewish groups in 2024 with Brym as a consultant, which found that 49 per cent of Canadian Jews polled did not identify as Zionists. However, 94 per cent of them said they supported the existence of a Jewish state in Israel.

He wanted to find out why there was such a discrepancy.

What he determined was that the term has undergone what linguists call a pejorative “semantic drift” — when a word’s established meaning changes over time, in this case, from positive to negative.

Given the constant and consistent negative messaging, such as “Zionism is racism,” since October 7 — the phrase has appeared on signs at protests, in the form of graffiti, banners, t-shirt inscriptions, and adhesive stickers, Brym wrote — he hypothesized that Canadian Jews were shifting away from the term for three reasons: negative sentiment associated with the term in some settings, or because they feel “uncertain and unstable” of their views on Israel after October 7, or as a response to the semantic drift.

“The only question is whether (Canadian Jews) want to label themselves as such,” he said. “And apparently, a large number of them, close to half, are either ambivalent or refuse to label themselves as such, because it’s become a pejorative word.”

In Canada, there have been ongoing

anti-Israel protests in Jewish neighbourhoods

.

Five people were arrested

in November after an anti-Israel protest at an off-campus event hosted by Jewish Toronto Metropolitan University students.

Two people were arrested

at an anti-Israel protest outside of a Munk debate event featuring former politicians from Israel in December.

Also in December, mezuzahs (Hebrew prayer scrolls) were

ripped from the doorways

of homes belonging to seniors in the Jewish community and an

alleged hate-motivated extremism

plot that targeted Jewish women led to three arrests.

Brym said that study’s like his are crucial in order to get a “better sense of what’s going on and how the Jewish community is reacting to it,” especially because data about Canadian Jews are scant.

For the follow-up study published last month, Leger polled 332 out of the 588 Canadian Jews who took part in the first study between Jan. 3 and Jan. 25, 2025.

The results indicate that factors such as “mass media, social media, and colleges and universities seem to have undermined the willingness of many Canadian Jews to refer to themselves as Zionists, although they remain highly likely to say they are emotionally attached to Israel and are almost certain to support the existence of a Jewish state in Israel.”

Writer and pro-Israel advocate

Aviva Klompas

told National Post that the term has been “deliberately distorted and weaponized to the point where identifying with the word now carries social, professional, and even physical risk.”

“In that environment, it’s not surprising that people distance themselves from the label, even as they continue to support Israel and affirm its right to exist,” she said.


That’s why the finding that 88 per cent of Jews who avoid calling themselves Zionists still believe Israel has the right to exist as a Jewish state is so telling. This isn’t a rejection of Jewish self-determination. It’s a response to stigma.”

Brym also said that in a 2018 study, he found that 84 per cent of Jews in Canada considered their support of Israel to be an essential part of Jewish identity. Klompas pointed out that Jews are being told, in order to be accepted, they have to hide or disavow a core part of that identity.

“That is a loyalty test no other people are asked to pass. It demands that Jews renounce their national identity, history, and collective rights simply to be welcomed in public and social spaces,” she said.

For Brym, he said it was crucial to note “there’s almost unanimity in the Jewish community behind support for Israel as a Jewish state” and that “many Jews do have an aversion to calling themselves Zionist (but) that’s only because it’s become a pejorative term.”

“I think that’s a very important distinction to make. It doesn’t mean they’re anti-Zionist. It doesn’t mean that they don’t hear extreme statements against Israel as being OK. They don’t,” he said.

“You know,

shots have been fired

,

fires have been lit

(at Jewish schools and synagogues). Terrible things have been said. People march into into Jewish neighbourhoods in this city — the way the (Ku Klux) Klan used to, in the States, march into Black neighbourhoods — just to intimidate and frighten people. That’s something that never occurred before and should not be occurring now, because it’s harassment based on religion, based on ethnicity, and it’s appalling. People have to understand that.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Iranian protestors attack a government building in Fasa, in southern Iran on Dec. 31, 2025.

In the last two weeks, protests in Iran have grown to such a scale that they are rivalling some of the great uprisings that have characterized the modern history of the revolutionary dictatorship, whose ruling regime appears to be running out of options to restore economic and social stability. So far, this one has not been contained and put down like the others, with state violence and mass prosecution of dissenters. Now, Iran’s rulers are on notice that the United States stands ready to intervene if protesters are killed, a threat made all the more pressing by this weekend’s military action in Venezuela. The National Post takes stock of the current tensions.

Why are people protesting in Iran?

There are many reasons to march against a theocratic dictatorship. Longstanding human rights violations on Iranian citizens play a part, but the proximate cause here seems to be economic. The Iranian currency, the rial, has been falling in value for years against the American dollar, more steeply lately. In 2015, when Iran joined a nuclear accord, rials were trading at 32,000 to the dollar. The currency has basically fallen ever since, reaching a record low in December of almost 1.5 million to the dollar. This depreciation worsens the effects of inflation, which in recent months has run at nearly 50 per cent, and has caused the price of consumer goods to rise.

The rial’s collapse prompted the resignation of the governor of the central bank on Dec. 29. Protesters, who had gathered the day before, marched in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar that day, backed by striking merchants. The protests spread quickly to other major cities in the more densely populated west of the country. Dec. 30 saw widespread closures of shops and schools and intense security operations to control protesters, some of whom were openly denouncing the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.

With daily protests now in 26 of 31 provinces, the latest reports this week are that 19 protesters and one security official have been killed. A U.S.-based group, Human Rights Activists in Iran, reported nearly 1,000 people have been arrested.

What do foreign leaders think?

“We’re watching it very closely. If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they’re going to get hit very hard by the United States,” U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. Earlier, he posted on social media: “We are locked and loaded and ready to go.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government expresses “solidarity with the struggle of the Iranian people.”

An Iranian foreign ministry statement described this as seeking to undermine Iran’s national unity.

In June, Israel fought a 12-day war with Iran backed by the United States, which attacked and severely damaged Iran’s nuclear facilities at Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz.

Hasn’t this happened before?

Yes, and it has typically been put down with great force. Three years ago, for example, the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, who had been arrested for not wearing a hijab, was the spark for the greatest nationwide protest to date in Iran.

Before that, in 2009, the so-called Persian Spring protests followed contested elections. This was regarded as a major threat to the regime and was put down forcefully, with many protesters jailed.

What are Iranian security officials doing now?

On Monday, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, the chief justice of Iran and a former prosecutor, said authorities would listen to legitimate criticism about social and economic welfare, but that they would “deal firmly with those who seek to exploit the situation,” and would show rioters “no leniency or appeasement.”

However, several reports describe the regime as on the brink of collapse, and desperate to contain the uprising, fearful that security services could be overwhelmed and abandon the government.

On Sunday, The Times of London cited an intelligence report to report a claim that Iran’s ruler Ayatollah Khamenei has a plan in place to flee for Moscow in the event of regime collapse, modelled on the escape of Syria’s deposed leader Bashar al-Assad.

 Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks in Tehran, Jan. 3, 2026.

Even before they grew to the present scale, however, there was evidence of efforts to suppress these protests and those people who might inspire them.

On Dec. 12, Iranian authorities arrested 2023 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, 53, a feminist activist against mandatory hijab laws.

A foundation in her name said in a statement that she was arrested “violently” along with other prominent human rights campaigners in Mashhad, an industrial city and pilgrimage destination in the far northeast of Iran, near the Afghanistan and Turkmenistan borders.

They were reportedly taken at a memorial service for Khosrow Alikordi, 46, a human rights lawyer who represented political prisoners, campaigned against the death penalty, and had previously been jailed on propaganda charges.

He was found dead in his office in early December, reportedly by a heart attack but suspected by his family and supporters as murder.

The foundation said Mohammadi is being held in solitary confinement under conditions she herself has suffered and campaigned against, known as “white torture,” a technique of sleep and sensory deprivation in which a person is held indefinitely by themselves in a constantly illuminated all white room.

What does the deposing of Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces in Venezuela do to the equation?

The conflict in Venezuela could deflect global public attention from Iran, if not actually ease diplomatic pressure. But it also serves as a warning that sometimes bluster and belligerence in foreign affairs is actually followed by action.

Iranian officials have recently been making conciliatory gestures to the West. Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi gave a rare interview to The Economist magazine in November, for example, saying Iran is ready to make a “fair and balanced deal…. We are ready for negotiation, but not for dictation.”

Now, Trump has warned Iran that he is ready to strike again, and Venezuela adds a certain credibility to the idea.

 Protesters in the Malekshahi district of Iran’s western Ilam province, on Jan. 4, 2026.

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U.S. President Donald Trump and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen gather for a group photo before a plenary session of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Heads of State and Government summit in The Hague, on June 25, 2025.

The war of words between U.S. President Donald Trump and the autonomous territory of Greenland continued into the new year, heated up by the recent American incursion into Venezuela to capture its president.

A day after the raid, Katie Miller, wife of Stephen Miller, one of Trump’s top aides, posted on social media a map of Greenland overlaid with the colours of the American flag and the word “SOON.”

Stephen Miller

added Monday

that it was “the formal position of the U.S. government that Greenland should be part of the U.S.”

Asked whether the U.S. would rule out using force to annex it, he replied: “Nobody’s going to fight the U.S. over the future of Greenland.”

Meanwhile, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen warned that the long-standing NATO alliance would end if Trump

ordered an attack

on Greenland.

“If the U.S. chooses to attack another NATO country militarily, then everything stops, including NATO and thus the security that has been established since the end of the Second World War,” she said.

Here’s what to know.

When did Trump first set his sights on Greenland?

Trump’s aspirations to obtain Greenland date back to his first presidency. In 2019, he offered (unsuccessfully) to buy the world’s largest island from Denmark. The Danish government responded by pledging to

upgrade military spending

in Greenland to the tune of 1.5 billion Danish crowns (roughly $320 million) for surveillance.

More recently, he has been more bellicose in his musings. In May, Trump said he

could not “rule out”

using military force to annex Greenland, even as he added he was not considering a military attack on Canada to force it to join the Union.

Last month, he reasserted that the U.S. needs Greenland for its national security, and named Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry as

a special envoy

who would “lead the charge.”

“They have a very small population, and … Denmark has spent no money,” Trump said last month of the island, which has a population of 57,000. “They have no military protection,” he added. “They say that Denmark was there 300 years ago or something, with a boat. Well, we were there with boats too, I’m sure. So we’ll have to work it all out.”

What do the Greenlanders and others say?

Greenland’s youngest-ever prime minister, Múte Bourup Egede, said before leaving office last year: “Greenland is ours. We are not for sale and will never be for sale.”

More recently, after the attack on Venezuela, Frederiksen said in a statement: “It is absolutely absurd to say that the United States should take control of Greenland.”

In addition,

a poll a year ago

by Axios found that 85 per cent of the islanders did not want to join the U.S.

European leaders have also sided with Denmark and Greenland in recent days, with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer saying of Frederiksen: “I stand with her, and she’s right about the future of Greenland.” Germany and France have also confirmed their support.

 The Pituffik Space Base (formerly Thule Air Base) is pictured in northern Greenland on Oct. 4, 2023.

What does Greenland have that the U.S. wants?

In addition to its mineral wealth, the vast island — three times the size of Texas — occupies a strategic location in the North Atlantic between North America and Europe.

After the Second World War, the U.S. set up and continues to operate Pituffik Space Base, also known as Thule Air Base. A 1951 defence agreement also gives it the right to build and maintain military bases.

“If Russia were to send missiles towards the U.S., the shortest route for nuclear weapons would be via the North Pole and Greenland,” Marc Jacobsen, an associate professor at the Royal Danish Defence College,

told the BBC

last year. “That’s why the Pituffik Space Base is immensely important in defending the U.S.”

How would America actually take control of Greenland?

That’s not clear. An

analysis by Bloomberg

quotes adjunct Professor Rasmus Leander Nielsen of Greenland University, who told local media that Denmark can’t sell the island because its home-rule law of 2009 “clearly states that Greenlanders are their own people.”

The analysis suggests that, shy of military force, the best bet would be for America to wait for the territory to gain independence from Denmark and then approach it directly about annexation.

That is unlikely to happen quickly. There has long been discussion about breaking from Denmark, but in the island’s last election in March, a majority of voters chose parties that backed only a slow move to independence.

How likely is the idea of buying an entire chunk of territory?

There’s much precedent, albeit not recently. America purchased Alaska from the Russian Empire in 1867, and before that, it bought Louisiana from France in 1803.

In the last century, Denmark sold what were then called the Danish West Indies to the U.S., which renamed them the U.S. Virgin Islands. That was in 1917.

How much would it cost?

The U.S.

International Trade Administration

notes that the island’s GDP was about US$3.2 billion in 2021, with some 20 per cent of that coming in the form of an annual grant from Denmark that covers more than half the public budget.

The ITA also notes that “the Greenlandic government seeks to increase revenues by promoting economic diversification and greater development of the fisheries value chain, natural resources, tourism and clean energy.”

For comparison, Alaska cost just US$7.2 million in 1867, worth about US$150 million today. The Virgin Islands were purchased for US$25 million in 1917, or about US$600 million today.

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A sign marking the international border between the United States and Canada at Peace Arch Historical State Park in Blaine, Washington. A Canadian woman faces U.S. charges after allegedly crossing the border between B.C. and Washington through the park and injuring a border agent during her arrest.

A Canadian woman is facing charges in the U.S. after allegedly illegally crossing the border into Washington state and becoming aggressive and violent during her arrest in late December, injuring a U.S. border agent in the process.

In custody at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) facility, the woman allegedly told investigators she was on her way to retrieve her dog from her Washington-based fiancé.

In an FBI affidavit filed in the U.S District Court for the state’s western district and obtained by Seattle ABC affiliate

KIRO 7

, prosecutors say the woman had first attempted to enter the U.S. through the Peace Arch port of entry between Surrey, B.C., and Blaine, Wash., on Dec. 30. She was denied after revealing to CBP officials that she had a marijuana vape pen on her person.

It’s against U.S. law to bring cannabis products in any form across the border, even from Canada, where it is legal, and into Washington, where it’s also legal.

Several hours later, the woman allegedly went to the nearby Peace Arch State Park and crossed the border into a grassy area on the park’s north side.

In the affidavit, investigators noted the park has a deep culvert marking the border, concrete barriers and signs warning that people who cross the international boundary will be arrested and charged.

CBP agents allegedly stopped the woman in the park and called their supervisor for assistance when she became uncooperative, ignoring their repeated commands to stop and shouting obscenities.

According to the affidavit, the supervisor described the woman as “hysterical.”

 Vehicles lined up to enter the U.S. from Canada at the Peace Arch port of entry between Surrey, B.C., and Blaine, Wash.

Investigators allege she resisted when the supervisor tried to place her under arrest for the border violation, refusing commands, tensing up her body and falling to the ground as responding agents attempted to restrain her.

They allege she continued to insult the female supervising agent with gender-based slurs and told other agents she hoped they would “die a painful death.”

Once restrained, the woman allegedly balked at the idea of being placed in a CBP vehicle, forcing the agents to carry her. While doing so, the supervising agent said the woman “went limp,” leading to the agents losing balance and falling.

While still handcuffed on the ground, investigators allege she began kicking her legs, with one kick striking the supervising agent in the face.

According to the affidavit, surveillance video reviewed by the FBI allegedly supports the agents’ version of events.

The woman, whom the supervising agent noted had urinated and defecated on herself during the struggle, was eventually placed in the vehicle.

She allegedly denied intentionally kicking the agent, but acknowledged it may have happened during her arrest. She also allegedly admitted to shouting obscenities.

According to KIRO 7, a U.S. judge found probable cause for charges of assault on a federal officer and improper entry into the U.S. on Jan. 1

According to

The Canadian Press

, she is due back in court later this month.

When contacted for comment, CBP referred National Post to the FBI’s Seattle office. National Post is awaiting a response.

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