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Caracas Tries To Pull Bogotá Into A Common Front As U.S.Colombia Rift Widens
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuela's defense minister, Vladimir Padrino López, used a military ceremony to tell Colombians they could“count on” Venezuela's armed forces-morally and physically-against any foreign threat along the border.
The message was less about troop movements and more about politics: Caracas is inviting Bogotá to stand with it after U.S. tariff and aid threats against President Gustavo Petro's government.
Why make the move now? Washington's public broadside put Colombia on the back foot and introduced market risk. Bogotá answered with fast diplomacy, meeting the U.S. chargé d'affaires and signaling it wants to keep cooperation on counternarcotics and trade.
Markets showed a preference for calm as Colombian bonds firmed and the peso steadied. Into that moment, Caracas offered solidarity, aiming to reduce its isolation, project regional leadership, and turn border cooperation into leverage with Colombia.
The backdrop matters. Colombia and Venezuela share a more than 2,200-kilometer frontier that underpins legal commerce but also smuggling and armed-group activity.
Caracas Tries To Pull Bogotá Into A Common Front As U.S.–Colombia Rift Widens
Roughly 2.8 million Venezuelans live in Colombia, making day-to-day stability on that corridor a basic interest in both capitals.
Since 2022, the neighbors have been rebuilding ties; any rupture with Washington could complicate that balancing act but also make Venezuelan cooperation more attractive to Bogotá on border management.
For outsiders, the stakes are practical. The United States is Colombia's largest market. Real tariffs would quickly hit oil, coal, coffee, flowers, and bananas, with knock-on effects for the currency and borrowing costs.
If U.S.–Colombia cooperation stalls, armed groups gain room, migration pressures rise, and cross-border commerce slows-regional risks with global ripple effects.
What to watch next: whether tariff talk becomes formal policy, whether Bogotá and Washington publish a joint anti-drug plan, and whether Caracas pairs rhetoric with sustained deployments and interdictions along the frontier.
The message was less about troop movements and more about politics: Caracas is inviting Bogotá to stand with it after U.S. tariff and aid threats against President Gustavo Petro's government.
Why make the move now? Washington's public broadside put Colombia on the back foot and introduced market risk. Bogotá answered with fast diplomacy, meeting the U.S. chargé d'affaires and signaling it wants to keep cooperation on counternarcotics and trade.
Markets showed a preference for calm as Colombian bonds firmed and the peso steadied. Into that moment, Caracas offered solidarity, aiming to reduce its isolation, project regional leadership, and turn border cooperation into leverage with Colombia.
The backdrop matters. Colombia and Venezuela share a more than 2,200-kilometer frontier that underpins legal commerce but also smuggling and armed-group activity.
Caracas Tries To Pull Bogotá Into A Common Front As U.S.–Colombia Rift Widens
Roughly 2.8 million Venezuelans live in Colombia, making day-to-day stability on that corridor a basic interest in both capitals.
Since 2022, the neighbors have been rebuilding ties; any rupture with Washington could complicate that balancing act but also make Venezuelan cooperation more attractive to Bogotá on border management.
For outsiders, the stakes are practical. The United States is Colombia's largest market. Real tariffs would quickly hit oil, coal, coffee, flowers, and bananas, with knock-on effects for the currency and borrowing costs.
If U.S.–Colombia cooperation stalls, armed groups gain room, migration pressures rise, and cross-border commerce slows-regional risks with global ripple effects.
What to watch next: whether tariff talk becomes formal policy, whether Bogotá and Washington publish a joint anti-drug plan, and whether Caracas pairs rhetoric with sustained deployments and interdictions along the frontier.
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