In normal times, a G7 and NATO leader accusing a U.S. president of craving annexation would be a headline-detonating, multi-megaton blast of news, leaving shock waves for months.
These aren’t normal times.
Donald Trump’s repeated talk of annexing Canada is almost universally treated as a joke in Washington. Or, maybe, as a negotiating ploy. If it’s neither, the U.S. president would face a Himalayan climb to make it a reality.
The consensus in Washington that he can’t be serious — right? right? — is reflected in the scant immediate coverage of eye-popping remarks made Friday by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was overheard telling business leaders that, yes, Trump really would like to take over Canada.
Apparently, the U.S. president made a cryptic comment in his Monday afternoon phone call with Trudeau about having read a 1908 treaty setting the Canada-U.S. boundary and finding it interesting. He did not elaborate.
The story was at the bottom of the home page of …