Trump THREATENS St. Lawrence Seaway — Carney's NAVAL Response Just HUMILIATED The Pentagon

Donald Trump issued a formal directive threatening to seize operational control of the St. Lawrence Seaway — the 3,700 kilometer waterway moving 40 million tons of cargo annually connecting the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. Canada's response: HMCS Halifax, HMCS Ville de Québec, and HMCS Fredericton — three Halifax-class frigates — deployed simultaneously to four strategic Seaway access points. Alongside them: two Royal Navy vessels from the United Kingdom that had been pre-positioned weeks earlier. The Pentagon had no idea they were there until the deployment was already complete. The Pentagon had no idea they were there until the deployment was already complete. Carney's full statement was twenty two words. "Canada does not negotiate the sovereignty of its waterways under threat. The Canadian Navy is present. It will remain present." American grain and steel industries immediately warned that Seaway disruption affects their own export capacity. Republican senators from Great Lakes states demanded emergency briefings. Three serving American naval officers confirmed the directive was never coordinated with the Chief of Naval Operations. Trump threatened to seize a waterway. Carney had already defended every access point before the threat arrived. In this video we break down exactly what the directive demanded, why Royal Navy vessels were pre-positioned weeks ago, what $14 billion in American exports depend on Seaway access, and what Trump's three remaining paths cost — because every one involves naval assets already in position. 🔔 Subscribe for daily coverage of the US-Canada crisis as it develops. #TrumpCanada #StLawrenceSeaway #MarkCarney #CanadianNavy #RoyalNavy #TrumpBackfire #CanadaNews #USCanada #NavalDeployment #BreakingNews #Geopolitics #TrumpForeignPolicy #CarneysResponse #SeawayCrisis #CanadaSovereignty #TrumpVsCarney #MilitaryNews #GreatLakes #WorldNews #CanadaMilitary