Rio Times · usa-canada Intelligence
Key Facts
—Submarines Canada seeks 12 new submarines at a cost of up to 24 billion dollars.
—Brooklyn shooting Eight people, including four children, were wounded at a July 4 family barbecue.
—Alberta vote A referendum on Alberta’s future in Canada is set for October 19.
—Manitoba floods The Assiniboine River is forecast to peak at Brandon around July 12.
—Colorado fire The Aspen Acres fire has grown to about 89,000 acres and is only 14% contained.
—BC nurses A record 98.2% of about 51,000 nurses voted for job action.
North America starts the week caught between pride and worry, with big defence news in Canada and a painful holiday aftermath in the United States. Floods, fires and political tension run beneath a region leaning hard on local resilience.
Canada readies a decades-long submarine choice while Alberta debates its future in the country. America marks 250 years feeling both proud and deeply divided.
Canada – Submarine Decision in Halifax
A generational choice
Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to announce Monday in Halifax whether Germany’s TKMS or South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean will build Canada’s new submarines. The navy wants 12 boats to replace its ageing Victoria-class fleet.
The scale is enormous: the purchase could cost up to 24 billion dollars, and the full lifetime programme is expected to run over 100 billion dollars.
Why the urgency
Only one of Canada’s four current submarines can actually operate at sea, leaving the country thin on undersea defence. The announcement, set for 5:10 pm, was framed as making Canada ‘more secure, resilient and prosperous’.
The prime minister’s office gave unusually short notice, and Carney flies straight on to Ankara for the NATO summit afterwards.
USA – Coney Island Shooting
A holiday turned to horror
A masked gunman fired into a family Fourth of July barbecue in Brooklyn, wounding eight people, including four children aged 6, 7, 12 and 14. A 21-year-old woman shot in the chest remains in critical condition.
More than 24 hours later, no arrests have been made, and police are examining a possible link to a gang killing on the same block.
City on edge
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said officers recovered a rapid-fire pistol and ten spent shell casings at the scene. The gunman is still at large.
A 6-year-old child was among those shot in the abdomen, deepening the shock across the neighbourhood on what should have been a day of celebration.
Only one of Canada’s four current submarines can even go to sea — and the country is about to spend over 100 billion dollars fixing that.
Canada – Alberta and the Stampede
Politics under the pancakes
This year’s Calgary Stampede is dominated almost entirely by the October 19 referendum on Alberta’s place in Canada. Dozens of federal politicians joined Premier Danielle Smith, opposition leader Pierre Poilievre and others at pancake breakfasts and the parade.
‘Forever Canadian’ groups handed out lawn signs urging people to stay in the country, while separatist campaigners worked the crowds nearby.
Money on the table
The vote coincides with a proposed West Coast oil pipeline bid priced at 35 billion dollars or more, tying the province’s identity to its energy future. Ottawa is due to rule on the pipeline on October 1, just 18 days before the referendum.
Analysts warn separation could cost the province around 62 billion dollars, sharpening a debate that feels deeply personal to many Albertans.
Canada – Manitoba Flood Emergencies
Rivers over the banks
The city of Brandon declared a state of emergency as the Assiniboine River spilled its banks, with the peak forecast for July 12. Water is expected to rise about 2.5 metres above the normal limit, close to the levels of the severe 2014 flood.
More than 50 millimetres of rain fell in Brandon on Monday, adding to the strain on already stretched defences.
Help arrives
Ottawa approved federal aid and deployed Canadian Armed Forces members alongside the disaster charity Team Rubicon. Sioux Valley Dakota Nation and more than 30 Parkland communities also declared emergencies.
Around 150 people have been evacuated near Swan River, and up to 50 roads have been damaged by the rising water.
USA – Colorado Wildfires
A record fire
The human-caused Aspen Acres fire southwest of Pueblo has grown to about 89,000 acres and is only 14% contained, making it the seventh-largest in Colorado’s history. Mandatory evacuations have expanded across four surrounding areas.
More than 190,000 acres are now burning across Colorado and Utah as a summer heat wave grips the West.
Remembering the fallen
Three firefighters killed on the separate Snyder fire were honoured at a memorial in Grand Junction. Their deaths cast a heavy shadow over crews still battling the flames.
Air quality has worsened across the region, adding health worries for families already forced from their homes.
USA – A Divided 250th Birthday
A partisan celebration
Marking America’s 250th anniversary, President Donald Trump veered into partisan attacks, branding Democrats communists and calling communism a ‘mortal threat’. He honoured Second World War and Vietnam veterans before storms forced an evacuation of the National Mall.
New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani and former President Bill Clinton issued veiled rebukes, urging Americans to reject division.
A muted mood
Only about four in ten American adults say they feel ‘proud’ about the anniversary, and roughly three in ten feel ‘excited’. The numbers point to a nation celebrating a milestone while feeling unsure of itself.
The mix of storms, a mass shooting and sharp political words left many marking the day quietly rather than joyfully.
USA – Markets and Microsoft
Shares steady up
US shares drifted higher on Monday, with the technology-heavy Nasdaq index climbing about 1% as computer-chip companies recovered. The Dow slipped slightly after closing at a record high the prior week.
Weaker June jobs figures actually cheered investors, raising hopes the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates steady rather than lifting them.
Microsoft trims staff
Microsoft is cutting about 4,800 jobs, roughly 2.1% of its workforce, in its latest round of cost savings. The Xbox video-game division is losing about a fifth of its staff as the company shifts toward artificial intelligence.
The company’s shares slipped about 1.7% following the reports, a reminder that the AI boom is reshaping who stays employed.
Canada – World Cup Pride and Nurses
A proud goodbye
Co-host Canada lost 3-0 to sixth-ranked Morocco in the Round of 16 in Houston, ending the run as the first host nation eliminated. It was still Canada’s best-ever men’s World Cup showing, following the team’s first-ever tournament wins.
Fans and broadcaster CBC framed the exit as pride mixed with disappointment, with Morocco moving on to face France in Boston on July 9.
Nurses walk out
British Columbia nurses will set up a picket line at Vancouver General Hospital on Tuesday at 5:30 am, escalating their job action. A record 98.2% of about 51,000 nurses had voted to take action.
Members earlier rejected a tentative deal by 67%, pointing to working conditions and short staffing, with fresh talks resuming Monday afternoon.
The Bigger Picture
North America begins the week feeling stretched between pride and unease. Canada is about to spend generations’ worth of money on new submarines, while Alberta openly debates whether to stay in the country at all.
In the United States, a proud 250th birthday was overshadowed by a Brooklyn shooting that wounded four children, a partisan presidential speech and wildfires burning across the West. Only about four in ten adults say they feel proud of the milestone.
Yet resilience runs through both nations, from Manitoba flood crews and Colorado firefighters to Canadian football fans savouring a historic World Cup run. Local community, more than national politics, is where people seem to be drawing their strength.
What We Are Watching
Today – Carney names Canada’s submarine supplier in Halifax at 5:10 pm, then departs for the NATO summit.
Today – Hunt continues for the Coney Island gunman as police probe a gang link.
Tuesday – BC nurses picket Vancouver General Hospital at 5:30 am.
Wednesday – Morocco meets France in a World Cup quarterfinal in Boston.
This week – The Assiniboine River is forecast to peak at Brandon around July 12.
This week – The Calgary Stampede wraps up on July 12 after referendum-charged politicking.
This week – Watch Colorado fire containment and expanding evacuations amid the heat.
Ahead – Michigan’s Democratic Senate primary on August 4 narrows to a two-way race.
Go Deeper
The full usa-canada Intelligence Dossier — the interactive risk dashboard, the six people who matter and the downloadable PDF — is updated daily by the Rio Times Intelligence Desk.
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