Cathie from Canada: Wars and rumours of war, plus some Canada news, and predictions of a sad World Cup


It seems like its been a while since I’ve updated on today’s wars, so here are a few recent posts and comments that I found illuminating: 

Iran War update 

Tonight the New York Times is reporting that the US and Israel thought back in February that they could end the war in a few days by replacing Iran’s leadership with a cooperative stooge, easy peasy.
What were they smoking?

…It turns out that the United States and Israel [gift link] went into the conflict with a particular and very surprising someone in mind: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the former Iranian president known for his hard-line, anti-Israel and anti-American views.
But the audacious plan, developed by the Israelis and which Mr. Ahmadinejad had been consulted about, quickly went awry, according to the U.S. officials who were briefed on it.
Mr. Ahmadinejad was injured on the war’s first day by an Israeli strike at his home in Tehran that had been designed to free him from house arrest, the American officials and an associate of Mr. Ahmadinejad said. He survived the strike, they said, but after the near miss he became disillusioned with the regime change plan.
He has not been seen publicly since then and his current whereabouts and condition are unknown….
… Israel envisioned the war unfolding in several phases, starting with air assaults by the United States and Israel plus the killing of Iran’s supreme leaders and the mobilization of Kurds to fight Iranian forces, according to two Israeli defense officials familiar with the operational planning.
Then, the Israeli plan foresaw a combination of influence campaigns carried out by Israel and the Kurdish invasion creating political instability in Iran and a sense that the regime was losing control. In a third stage, the regime, under intense political pressure and the weight of damage to key infrastructure like electricity, would collapse, allowing for what the Israelis referred to as an “alternative government” to be established.
Other than the air campaign and the killing of the supreme leader, little of the plan played out as the Israelis had hoped, and much of it appears in retrospect to have profoundly misjudged Iran’s resilience and the capacity of the United States and Israel to exert their will…

In his Rest of the World Report, Rudy Martinez writes:

…Trump planned a major military strike on Iran for Tuesday and called it off Monday evening without having previously disclosed it was planned. The Gulf allies who intervened say they are close to a deal. The Pakistani mediator says both sides keep changing the goalposts. Brent crude is at $111.00. The next two to three days will determine whether this was a turning point or another delay.

And this happened on Tuesday:

BREAKING: It took eight tries, but the Senate has finally voted to advance a resolution to limit Donald Trump’s war on Iran.
The measure passed 50-47 after Senator Bill Cassidy flipped and joined Democrats just days after losing his primary.

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— Jerry Whitney (@theharpoonman.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 10:53 PM

I think Trump wants to get out of Iran but he doesn’t know how to just declare victory and leave.

“If Trump really wants to destroy Iran, he should just be their president for a few months.”

—Internet Meme

– Don Knight

Read on Substack

Ukraine War update 

In his weekend newsletter about Ukraine, Phillips O’Brien writes about recent war events:

…I still argue as I have for a while that the Ukrainian attacks will be more important in shaping the course of the war. Russian civilian crime attacks do not seem to be cracking Ukrainian resistance, indeed they might be strengthening it. However, Ukrainian attacks on Russian strategic industries continue to reduce Russian fuel exports—which is doubly important now as the US has made sure oil prices are abnormally high.
I am sure there are those in Ukraine who feel so angry with the Russians deliberately killing civilians that they would believe it justified if Ukraine struck back similarly. And at this point, if the Ukrainians did, they might receive little condemnation. However, the Ukrainians are still refusing to make criminal attacks in favor of effective strategic ones.
This contrast helps explain why the war has developed as it has and why Ukraine is starting to take the initiative.
Fighting smart is usually better than fighting brutally.

There’s nothing to do against these drones when they have you and it’s extra dark bc of just how deep Russia has gone into their aging male population to keep fighting this thing

https://en.zona.media/article/2026/05/09/casualties_eng-trl

– Cameron Russell Armstrong

Read on Substack

After treating Ukraine as expendable, Trump wants access to the crown jewels of its defense industry.

According to Bloomberg, the United States is seeking technology transfers and potentially intellectual property rights to Ukraine’s battle-tested drone and electronic warfare systems.

Let that sink in.

After cutting military aid to Ukraine, curtailing intelligence sharing, parroting Kremlin talking points from the Oval Office, and praising Putin while blaming Ukraine for defending itself, Trump now appears ready to demand access to the very technologies Ukrainians developed while fighting for their survival.

He promised to end the war in 24 hours. Instead, he handed the Kremlin a blank check.

Since Trump’s return, russian missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities have intensified dramatically. Ukraine has been left critically short of air defense systems. Civilians who once had some protection are now exposed to nightly barrages.

More missiles. More drones. More murdered children.

Trump did not stop the war. He made it easier for Putin to wage it. He weakened Ukraine’s defenses. He reduced intelligence sharing.

He eased pressure on the russian economy, allowing billions of dollars to flow back into the Kremlin’s war machine. That money is being turned into ballistic missiles, Shahed drones, tanks, and bombs.

And now, after helping russia continue its war of terror, Trump wants access to Ukraine’s most valuable wartime innovation.

Ukraine built this technology with blood.

It was forged in trenches, tested under bombardment, and refined while defending cities that russia tried to erase from the map.

Thousands of Ukrainian engineers and soldiers risked their lives to create some of the most advanced drone warfare capabilities in the world.

These are not just inventions. They are the product of sacrifice, ingenuity, and national survival.

Giving away these technologies without ironclad protections would be an extraordinary mistake.

Almost as catastrophic as surrendering the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal in 1994 in exchange for security assurances that proved worthless when russia invaded.

Trump promised peace.

What he delivered was a lifeline to Putin.

And now he appears ready to demand the intellectual property that Ukrainians developed with their own ingenuity, sacrifice, and blood.

– Roman Sheremeta

Read on Substack

I thought this remark from Carney is also worthwhile to note, that Ukraine will win and that Canada will be on the right side of history. 

Canada should always be grateful to Chrystia Freeland for leading Canada’s (and the West’s) patriotic and vigorous sanctions response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, when she was Finance minister.

PM Carney: “There’s lots of cooperation [with the US]. But we will also be cooperating with other partners and diversifying our defence cooperation as a member of NATO and in critical areas such as Ukraine … Ukraine is going to triumph and we’re going to be on the right side of history for that.”

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— Scott Robertson (@sarobertson.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 11:16 AM

Rumours of War
Here are some more updates on the disputes Trump is having here and there and everywhere

With Canada
About that “Board of Defense”

PM Carney on the last time the Permanent Joint Board on Defence met: “The last time, to my knowledge, is the end of 2024. It’s supposed to meet biannually, but it hasn’t met since then. It has a long heritage, but I wouldn’t overplay the importance of this.”

– Scott Robertson

Read on Substack

With Greenland
About that “special envoy”

With Cuba
This story may or may not be true, and it may or may not matter.

🇨🇺🇺🇸 Axios: Cuba has acquired 300+ military drones from Russia and Iran and has discussed using them to attack Guantanamo Bay, US naval vessels, and Key West.

CIA Director Ratcliffe flew to Havana to personally warn Cuba against hostilities.

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— Savchenko Volodymyr (@savchenkoua.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 9:07 AM

HMMMMMMMM

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— bryptid (cryptid evolving) (@bradicality.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 9:16 PM

Genuinely fascinated by latest phenomenon of Marc Caputo being the outlet for INTELLIGENCE leaks, as with his Cuba drone story. Note it is effectively single-sourced–to a senior US official sharing classified intel.

www.axios.com/2026/05/17/u…

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— emptywheel (@emptywheel.bsky.social) May 18, 2026 at 6:38 AM

Since there is news about a possible drone threat from Cuba, with Havana allegedly acquiring 300 military drones from Russia and Iran, re-upping my post from a Russian Telegram blogger from 4 months ago outlining such a scenario. t.me/rybar/77101

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— Samuel Bendett (@sambendett.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 10:19 AM

With South America
Bolivia isn’t working out so well

Bolivia Is Boiling Over and the U.S. is Trying to Keep the Lid On: Fuel crisis, land‑rights backlash, and a collapsing economy collide as Washington scrambles to protect its “democratic partner”

Bolivia is in meltdown. A general strike, mass protests, and nationwide blockades have choked off major cities, leaving food, fuel, and medicine in short supply. President Rodrigo Paz is still in the capital, but protesters want him out… and the U.S. is backing him hard, calling the unrest an attack on democratic order.

The crisis didn’t come out of nowhere. Paz cut decades‑old fuel subsidies during an economic freefall, sending prices soaring. Then he pushed land‑rights legislation that Indigenous and peasant groups say threatens their territories. Add inflation, a diesel shortage, and demands for a 20% wage hike, and the streets erupted.

Miners, farmers, and unions have barricaded highways into La Paz, Cochabamba, and El Alto. Clashes with police and the military are constant. The economic damage is already in the hundreds of millions.

From a geopolitical angle, the U.S. sees Paz as a crucial centrist ally after years of tense relations under the MAS party. Washington wants to keep Bolivia from drifting back toward authoritarian partners like Venezuela, Cuba, and Iran… especially with Bolivia sitting on some of the world’s largest lithium reserves. A collapse could hand China even more control over the global green‑tech supply chain.

Critics argue the U.S. is propping up a government cracking down on protesters, arresting blockade leaders, and escalating tensions. Latin America is split: some countries back Paz, others call for mediation.

Bolivia’s crisis isn’t just domestic turmoil… it’s a regional fault line with global consequences. And the pressure is only rising.

– Caffeine Fueled Confessions

Read on Substack

With Everyone Else
This is the least surprising thing I read about Trump’s visit to China:

You know all those times Trump compared himself to Al Capone and tweeted images of himself as a fedora-wearing gangster? He was, in his twisted way, being honest about who he is and what he desires for the world.

– Dan Gardner

Read on Substack

And some Canada news

BC is rightly concerned about Carney making deals with Alberta, without prior consultation with BC.
It seems to me this is how a separatist movement gets born – when a group of people feel ignored, unappreciated, unrewarded. British Columbia makes an extraordinary contribution to Canada, but it seems to be too easy for central and eastern Canada to take them for granted.
I remember when I was visiting Toronto and I realized that when I talked about “the coast” people always thought I meant the Atlantic provinces. That I was talking about BC never occurred to them at all, I guess because everything after Lake Superior is just “out west”.
Anyway, Carney is set to meet with Eby on Wednesday, so we’ll see what happens, keeping the following comments in mind:

David Eby: “This country cannot work if separatists, separatist premiers, others get all of the attention of the federal government. And those provinces where we’re standing squarely behind Canada, where we’re fighting for Canada — we’re left out of the discussion.”

– Scott Robertson

Read on Substack

Nathan Cullen: “For those that have somehow this equation that a single project is a determination of whether our country is functioning or not, that’s insane. And you can’t negotiate with someone who puts a gun to your head and expect good outcomes.”

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— Scott Robertson (@sarobertson.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 6:17 PM

Some investment good news

Here’s a good one – the Mayor of Montreal gave a Habs jersey to Macron

Its sad news for Saskatchewan that the Snowbirds will be grounded at the end of this year:

Canada’s Snowbirds jets grounded until 2030s as replacement aircraft identified – CTV News

Canada’s Snowbirds jets grounded until 2030s as replacement aircraft identified – CTV News

Canada’s Snowbirds jets grounded until 2030s as replacement aircraft identified  CTV NewsHere is where you can see the final…

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— newsbeep.bsky.social (@newsbeep.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 5:05 PM

One of the great things about going to Riders games was that the jets from Moose Jaw would do a flyover of the stadium.
Here’s an airshow the Snowbirds did in 2016:


And here is their 2026 schedule.

Finally, just three weeks until the World Cup starts, and Toronto Star Europe reporter Allan Woods is reporting on its “ugly face” now:

Iran wants guarantees of beefed-up protection [gift link] behind enemy lines and no political questions from prying journalists.
Senegal wants visas for a handful of officials from its national sporting federation who have been denied entry to the U.S.
Ghana wants fans of its national squad, the Black Stars, to promise they’ll return home, keeping the country in Donald Trump’s good graces.
And a vast number of Canadians want nothing at all to do with their southern neighbours — not their travel hot spots, not their bourbon and wine, and certainly not their World Cup matches, even if they will feature the best soccer players on the planet.
Welcome to the ugly face of the beautiful game’s marquee event — World Cup 2026 — set to open in Canada, Mexico and the United States on June 11.
It’s a far cry from what the co-hosts, under the banner of United 2026 and the slogan of “Unity. Certainty. Opportunity,” promised when their bid was picked by FIFA, soccer’s governing body, in 2018.
The anticipated kumbaya ambience has turned into something of a dark cloud.
“I think it’s going to be a fairly sad World Cup,” said Ronan Evain, the French head of Football Supporters Europe….

Maybe it will turn out to be a good thing that people in Toronto can drink in the bars until 4 am from June 11 to July 19, while the World Cup is on.





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