Zürcher Nachrichten - Trump's threats to Colombia

EUR -
AED 4.322727
AFN 75.331116
ALL 95.78288
AMD 435.50965
ANG 2.106788
AOA 1080.533638
ARS 1633.433715
AUD 1.621742
AWG 2.120166
AZN 2.019903
BAM 1.953306
BBD 2.378942
BDT 144.734616
BGN 1.963443
BHD 0.446352
BIF 3518.71836
BMD 1.177052
BND 1.495355
BOB 8.13558
BRL 5.796518
BSD 1.181155
BTN 111.399314
BWP 15.805177
BYN 3.324941
BYR 23070.22645
BZD 2.375536
CAD 1.603763
CDF 2726.052992
CHF 0.915341
CLF 0.026817
CLP 1055.45124
CNY 8.017198
CNH 8.004886
COP 4386.650543
CRC 538.928988
CUC 1.177052
CUP 31.191888
CVE 110.584386
CZK 24.307485
DJF 210.33159
DKK 7.472823
DOP 70.374367
DZD 155.67707
EGP 62.057028
ERN 17.655786
ETB 184.428617
FJD 2.567271
FKP 0.865689
GBP 0.864151
GEL 3.154276
GGP 0.865689
GHS 13.242187
GIP 0.865689
GMD 86.515046
GNF 10366.793528
GTQ 8.987488
GYD 246.284546
HKD 9.219398
HNL 31.401088
HRK 7.534898
HTG 154.585153
HUF 356.531523
IDR 20387.370983
ILS 3.417569
IMP 0.865689
INR 110.777579
IQD 1541.938605
IRR 1545469.76174
ISK 143.800494
JEP 0.865689
JMD 186.105335
JOD 0.834493
JPY 184.049206
KES 152.016068
KGS 102.898504
KHR 4734.038796
KMF 493.184423
KPW 1059.359971
KRW 1708.444611
KWD 0.362215
KYD 0.981143
KZT 545.211664
LAK 25859.840498
LBP 105379.132476
LKR 376.917225
LRD 216.077381
LSL 19.462535
LTL 3.47553
LVL 0.711987
LYD 7.476275
MAD 10.827117
MDL 20.239077
MGA 4921.396522
MKD 61.684429
MMK 2471.623351
MNT 4214.371577
MOP 9.502529
MRU 47.142009
MUR 54.99241
MVR 18.191306
MWK 2048.110499
MXN 20.26012
MYR 4.601686
MZN 75.225274
NAD 19.462535
NGN 1602.380285
NIO 43.462985
NOK 10.86984
NPR 178.809164
NZD 1.970338
OMR 0.452583
PAB 1.177392
PEN 4.07554
PGK 5.135828
PHP 71.059853
PKR 329.114764
PLN 4.228472
PYG 7228.802098
QAR 4.289172
RON 5.266716
RSD 117.380426
RUB 87.982793
RWF 1727.197774
SAR 4.423625
SBD 9.439291
SCR 16.21817
SDG 706.820017
SEK 10.852129
SGD 1.490166
SHP 0.878788
SLE 29.014623
SLL 24682.195157
SOS 674.98877
SRD 44.03474
STD 24362.607597
STN 24.546972
SVC 10.301805
SYP 130.121144
SZL 19.248651
THB 37.837542
TJS 11.002707
TMT 4.125569
TND 3.381081
TOP 2.83406
TRY 53.257384
TTD 7.97878
TWD 36.950616
TZS 3055.549101
UAH 51.786176
UGX 4427.329246
USD 1.177052
UYU 47.309604
UZS 14212.90688
VES 580.871148
VND 30967.659325
VUV 139.00247
WST 3.191592
XAF 657.211828
XAG 0.01477
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.181043
XCG 2.121982
XDR 0.817361
XOF 657.211828
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.874131
ZAR 19.179715
ZMK 10594.877244
ZMW 22.35368
ZWL 379.010383
  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.17

    +0.99%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.01

    +0.56%

  • CMSD

    0.1300

    23.42

    +0.56%

  • BCC

    2.1100

    74.24

    +2.84%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    24.23

    +0.54%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    87.85

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    50.53

    +0.3%

  • AZN

    3.6800

    184.92

    +1.99%

  • BTI

    0.1600

    59.56

    +0.27%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.8000

    17.3

    +4.62%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    35.75

    -1.15%

  • BP

    -1.8700

    44.63

    -4.19%

  • VOD

    0.3900

    16.13

    +2.42%

  • RIO

    5.0100

    105.51

    +4.75%


Trump's threats to Colombia




The relationship between Washington and Bogotá is being tested by an escalating dispute that has the potential to destabilise the wider region. During a White House cabinet meeting in early December 2025, the United States president declared that any country shipping illegal drugs into the U.S. “is subject to attack.” He singled out Colombia, saying he had heard the South American nation “makes cocaine” and warned that its leader would “be next” if he did not “wise up.” Those remarks, delivered with television cameras rolling, came after months of spiralling tensions and signalled a significant departure from decades of cooperation between the two countries on counter‑narcotics policy.

At the heart of the confrontation is the war on drugs. Colombia remains the world’s largest producer of coca, the shrub used to produce cocaine, with more than 250,000 hectares under cultivation according to recent United Nations estimates. The U.S. government has long provided billions of dollars in aid to support eradication campaigns, but the current administration argues that those efforts are failing. In September it took the unprecedented step of “decertifying” Colombia’s anti‑narcotics programme for the first time since the late 1990s, effectively declaring Bogotá an unreliable partner and threatening hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance. Officials in Washington also imposed personal sanctions on Colombia’s president, his family members and senior advisers, revoked his visa, froze any assets under U.S. jurisdiction and hinted at broader economic penalties.

Military muscle has accompanied the diplomatic pressure. Over the past several months, the United States has deployed its largest aircraft carrier and nearly 15,000 troops to the Caribbean Sea while launching more than twenty missile strikes on small vessels it claims were transporting drugs. The bombardments have killed dozens of people, including at least two Colombian citizens. Human rights organisations and some U.S. lawmakers have condemned the attacks as extrajudicial killings, noting that the government has not provided public evidence to justify them. Even so, the president has suggested that the campaign may soon expand to land targets; during the same cabinet meeting he asserted that “the land is much easier” and that “anybody” who sells drugs into the United States could be bombed. He later seized a Venezuelan oil tanker to punish Caracas for alleged sanctions violations, hinting that Colombia could be the next target if it did not fall into line.

These actions are closely linked to a personal and ideological clash with Colombia’s head of state. The Colombian leader, a former guerrilla who became the country’s first left‑wing president in 2022, has used his platform to call for a new approach to drug policy and to criticise the U.S. military’s bombing of small boats in the Caribbean. He also condemned the president’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza and refused to accept deportation flights when Colombian migrants were shackled, leading to an early diplomatic spat. In response, Washington slapped tariffs on Colombian exports of up to 50 percent, revoked the president’s U.S. visa after he joined a pro‑Palestinian demonstration in New York and labelled him a “drug lord”. The animosity escalated when the Colombian president suggested U.S. soldiers should disobey any order they consider unlawful; soon after, the U.S. placed financial sanctions on him and his family and removed Colombia from its list of trusted counter‑narcotics partners.

Colombia has not taken these provocations lying down. In a series of social‑media messages and public statements, its president warned that threatening the country’s sovereignty “is to declare war” and cautioned the U.S. leader not to “awake the jaguar”. He invited his counterpart to visit Colombia to witness the destruction of drug‑processing laboratories, noting that his government dismantles a laboratory every forty minutes and has destroyed more than eighteen thousand facilities. He also emphasised that Colombian security forces have carried out more than a thousand ground operations against criminal networks, seized more than 2,700 tonnes of cocaine and conducted thirteen aerial bombings during his administration. “If any country has helped stop thousands of tons of cocaine from being consumed by Americans, it is Colombia,” he said, adding that missile strikes on fishermen “are not fighting narco‑terrorists” and serve only to punish the poor. His administration argues that crop substitution, peace talks with armed groups and attacking criminal financial networks offer a more humane and effective path than mass eradication.

The confrontation has reverberated across Colombia and the wider region. The National Liberation Army (ELN), the country’s largest remaining rebel group, announced in mid‑December that it would conduct military drills and ordered civilians to stay off roads and rivers for several days in preparation for a possible U.S. intervention. The Colombian defence minister dismissed the directive as “criminal coercion” but pledged to keep troops in place. Human rights experts at the United Nations and regional organisations have warned that any U.S. attack on Colombian soil would violate international law and risk reigniting an internal conflict that the country has spent years trying to end. Analysts also caution that decertification and aid cuts could weaken Colombia’s security forces, undermining efforts to combat armed groups and increasing violence. Critics see the U.S. president’s tough talk as part of a strategy to project strength, rally domestic supporters and reassert U.S. dominance in Latin America under a rebranded “Monroe Doctrine,” while potentially paving the way for regime change in neighbouring Venezuela.

There is also a broader strategic dimension. Some observers believe Washington’s focus on drugs masks a desire to control Venezuela’s vast oil reserves and punish left‑leaning governments across the region. Others point to the timing of the threats, noting that Colombia will hold elections in 2026 and that the U.S. president has a history of intervening in other countries’ political processes. By revoking visas, imposing sanctions and threatening tariffs, Washington could influence voter sentiment and weaken the incumbent’s reform agenda. Meanwhile, Colombia has sought closer ties with China and the European Union to offset the potential loss of U.S. aid, signalling a shift in geopolitical alliances.

The stakes are high. Colombia has been a crucial partner in U.S. intelligence operations, and cooperation has disrupted many criminal networks. If relations continue to deteriorate, both countries risk losing valuable intelligence, weakening counter‑drug efforts and allowing armed groups to expand. In the short term, the rhetoric has already caused anger and fear among ordinary Colombians and has emboldened rebel groups. In the long term, a U.S. strike on Colombian territory could plunge the region into a wider conflict and unravel years of progress toward peace.