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Donald Trump's Second Term And Latin America: Who Bends, Who Pushes Back
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Donald Trump's second term has turned Latin America into a live stress test for power politics. Every leader from Mexico to Argentina now faces the same uncomfortable question: do you confront Washington, quietly adapt, or try to play both sides while China waits in the wings?
For outsiders, it helps to think in three groups.
The first are the enthusiastic adapters. Argentina's Javier Milei has nailed his colours to Trump's mast, offering easier access for US manufacturers and a friendlier climate for investors in exchange for reopened beef markets and a multibillion-dollar financial lifeline.
El Salvador's Nayib Bukele, famous for his mass gang crackdowns, has accepted deported migrants and close security cooperation, securing time and money for a dollar-based economy that depends on Salvadorans working legally in the US.
A second group is bargaining hard for room to breathe. Ecuador's Daniel Noboa uses Trump 's naval build-up and anti-cartel rhetoric to justify deeper military and intelligence ties, betting that US backing can strengthen a fragile state.
In Panama, José Raúl Mulino has rolled back Chinese influence around the canal, walked away from Belt and Road and welcomed US-aligned capital into key ports, trading some diplomatic ambiguity for clearer security guarantees.
The third group is resisting – and paying a higher price. Colombia 's Gustavo Petro has condemned US strikes on suspected drug boats and drawn closer to Beijing, only to see sanctions tighten and anti-drug cooperation downgraded.
Brazil's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva rails against new US tariffs and speaks the language of multipolarity, but his stance reinforces the shift of Brazil's trade and diplomacy toward China just as investors look for long-term stability rather than grand speeches.
Mexico's president Claudia Sheinbaum sits in the most exposed position of all. With more than 80 percent of exports tied to the US market, she relies on quiet negotiations, tougher border control and targeted cartel arrests to avoid an economic shock while refusing open humiliation.
Behind the headlines, this is a story about who chooses predictability and jobs, and who gambles on protest politics in a region that can ill afford more turbulence.
For outsiders, it helps to think in three groups.
The first are the enthusiastic adapters. Argentina's Javier Milei has nailed his colours to Trump's mast, offering easier access for US manufacturers and a friendlier climate for investors in exchange for reopened beef markets and a multibillion-dollar financial lifeline.
El Salvador's Nayib Bukele, famous for his mass gang crackdowns, has accepted deported migrants and close security cooperation, securing time and money for a dollar-based economy that depends on Salvadorans working legally in the US.
A second group is bargaining hard for room to breathe. Ecuador's Daniel Noboa uses Trump 's naval build-up and anti-cartel rhetoric to justify deeper military and intelligence ties, betting that US backing can strengthen a fragile state.
In Panama, José Raúl Mulino has rolled back Chinese influence around the canal, walked away from Belt and Road and welcomed US-aligned capital into key ports, trading some diplomatic ambiguity for clearer security guarantees.
The third group is resisting – and paying a higher price. Colombia 's Gustavo Petro has condemned US strikes on suspected drug boats and drawn closer to Beijing, only to see sanctions tighten and anti-drug cooperation downgraded.
Brazil's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva rails against new US tariffs and speaks the language of multipolarity, but his stance reinforces the shift of Brazil's trade and diplomacy toward China just as investors look for long-term stability rather than grand speeches.
Mexico's president Claudia Sheinbaum sits in the most exposed position of all. With more than 80 percent of exports tied to the US market, she relies on quiet negotiations, tougher border control and targeted cartel arrests to avoid an economic shock while refusing open humiliation.
Behind the headlines, this is a story about who chooses predictability and jobs, and who gambles on protest politics in a region that can ill afford more turbulence.
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