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Colombia's Ally Status On The Line As Washington Loses Patience With Petro
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Washington is quietly threatening to take something away from Colombia that most people have never heard of but that diplomats obsess over: its“major non-NATO ally” status with the United States. On paper it is just a label.
In reality, it signals who Washington trusts when it comes to security, weapons and long-term strategy. Colombia earned that badge in 2022 under then-president Iván Duque, after years of lining up closely with U.S. positions on drug policy, Venezuela, and regional security.
The status does not mean U.S. troops would automatically defend Colombia. But it does mean easier access to advanced U.S. equipment, priority for surplus hardware, a seat at the table in Pentagon programs and a general sense that“this is one of our people” inside Western defense circles.
In Latin America, only Argentina, Brazil and Colombia have it. Enter Gustavo Petro, Colombia's first hard-left president, and Donald Trump back in the White House.
The relationship has turned into a rolling online brawl. Trump has hit Petro with personal sanctions, cancelled his visa and threatened tariffs linked to deportation flights and anti-drug cooperation.
Petro has accused the U.S. of trampling Colombian sovereignty, suspended intelligence sharing after U.S. maritime strikes on suspected traffickers, and framed Washington's pressure as punishment for his peace talks with armed groups and his rhetoric on Gaza.
The threat to downgrade Colombia is the moment when that fight stops being noise and turns into structure. If the status is revoked, arms deals could slow, upgrades to helicopters and radars become more complicated, and future fighter-jet plans face an extra layer of uncertainty.
For a country trying to modernize its forces and keep armed groups in check, that matters. For expats and foreign investors, the bigger story is about predictability. Colombia used to be the dependable, business-friendly U.S. partner in a turbulent neighborhood.
If that reputation shifts toward unpredictability and ideological confrontation, the costs will show up not just in military hangars, but in boardrooms, risk reports and, eventually, in the jobs and opportunities that made the country attractive in the first place.
In reality, it signals who Washington trusts when it comes to security, weapons and long-term strategy. Colombia earned that badge in 2022 under then-president Iván Duque, after years of lining up closely with U.S. positions on drug policy, Venezuela, and regional security.
The status does not mean U.S. troops would automatically defend Colombia. But it does mean easier access to advanced U.S. equipment, priority for surplus hardware, a seat at the table in Pentagon programs and a general sense that“this is one of our people” inside Western defense circles.
In Latin America, only Argentina, Brazil and Colombia have it. Enter Gustavo Petro, Colombia's first hard-left president, and Donald Trump back in the White House.
The relationship has turned into a rolling online brawl. Trump has hit Petro with personal sanctions, cancelled his visa and threatened tariffs linked to deportation flights and anti-drug cooperation.
Petro has accused the U.S. of trampling Colombian sovereignty, suspended intelligence sharing after U.S. maritime strikes on suspected traffickers, and framed Washington's pressure as punishment for his peace talks with armed groups and his rhetoric on Gaza.
The threat to downgrade Colombia is the moment when that fight stops being noise and turns into structure. If the status is revoked, arms deals could slow, upgrades to helicopters and radars become more complicated, and future fighter-jet plans face an extra layer of uncertainty.
For a country trying to modernize its forces and keep armed groups in check, that matters. For expats and foreign investors, the bigger story is about predictability. Colombia used to be the dependable, business-friendly U.S. partner in a turbulent neighborhood.
If that reputation shifts toward unpredictability and ideological confrontation, the costs will show up not just in military hangars, but in boardrooms, risk reports and, eventually, in the jobs and opportunities that made the country attractive in the first place.
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