The geopolitical pulse of the century, coca version
It seems that the relationship between Colombia and the United States entered into toxic relationship mode, and President Gustavo Petro has just uploaded the tweet of discord. This Monday, the president, with the elegance of someone launching a geopolitical shadenfreude, said on network Basically, the “it’s not me, it’s you” of international relations. The statement comes amid tension that would make any reality show season pale, with personal sanctions included for Petro and his family over accusations of, you guessed it, drug trafficking.
In a thread that mixes wounded dignity and geopolitical warning, Petro stated: “An effective anti-drug policy cannot be achieved without us. Either we are listened to or they fall into absolute ineffectiveness.” Translation: Without Colombia on the table, the US drug war has as much chance of success as a TikTok filter fixing the economy.
The cast of this bilateral drama
But our protagonist is not alone in this mess. The Minister of the Interior, Armando Benedetti, who also received what he deserved (or undeserved, depending on who you ask) in the sanctions package, came out in an interview with Blu Radio. Benedetti, who must feel as if he had been kicked out of the global financial WhatsApp group, denied any connection with drug trafficking and assured that everything is political retaliation for defending the president. His most memorable statement: he feels “beaten” by the restrictions. An understandable mood when the US Treasury Department puts you on its blacklist.
Meanwhile, north of the border, the US government is not holding its tongue. They openly criticize the results of Petro’s security strategy, which basically changed the “glock and fumigation” for “dialogue with the communities” that grow the coca leaf. Yes, that innocent little plant that later becomes the white powder that finances half of the armed conflict in the region. The current Colombian administration prefers persuasion over persecution, an approach that to Washington sounds like reggaeton without autotune: interesting in theory, but questionable in practice.
Measurements do not stop at pretty words. In addition to personal sanctions, the United States decertified Colombia in drug control compliance for the first time in three decades. Basically, they removed the “verified” label from the anti-drug profile. The main claim: coca crops are at record levels, with 253,000 hectares counted in 2023 by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Although, to be fair, the Colombian government counterattacks with its own record: the seizure of 884 tons of cocaine in 2024. Something is something.
And Don Trump arrived at the party
To make the soap opera more interesting, former President Donald Trump enters the scene, who seems determined to star in his own spin-off of American foreign policy. Petro, with a calm that any mindfulness guru would envy, declared: “I feel calm, Trump has decided to criminalize, as a foreigner, an internal public policy of Colombia. We say no to the expletive.” In other words, the “don’t wrinkle me, chickens” of diplomacy.
But here comes the plot twist: far from sinking him, Petro interprets that this whole scandal has given him a political boost. After a left-wing coalition vote where almost three million people participated in the presidential primaries, the Colombian president felt the love (and probably a few supportive memes). “Almost three million people left their homes yesterday to go to the polls to express their love and solidarity in the face of arbitrariness,” he tweeted, adding the jewel in the crown: “Trump, instead of isolating us from power, brought us closer to him.” The perfect rebound in the era of viral news.
The exchange of compliments between Petro and Trump is already the stuff of anthology: while the Colombian criticizes the military deployment in the Caribbean and calls the lethal attacks “murders”, the American responds by calling Petro a “drug kingpin” and suspending financial aid to Colombia. Someone please organize a debate for them on a podcast, because this rivalry has more engagement than most influencers.
The result? A diplomatic crisis with the flavor of a 9 o’clock soap opera, where accusations fly faster than DEA planes, economic sanctions are the new network blockade and geopolitics is decided between tweets and statements for the gallery. The million dollar question: who blink first?
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