Trump
Hits Colombia With Tariffs in Feud Over Military Deportation Flights
Gustavo
Petro said the United States should not treat Colombian migrants as criminals
and that he had already turned away U.S. military flights carrying deportees.
Genevieve
Glatsky Simon Romero Annie Correal
By Genevieve
GlatskySimon Romero and Annie Correal
Genevieve
Glatsky reported from Bogotá, Colombia, and Simon Romero and Annie Correal from
Mexico City.
Jan. 26,
2025
Updated 5:52
p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/26/world/americas/colombia-us-deportation-flights.html
Colombia
refused to accept U.S. military planes deporting immigrants, setting off a
furious reaction from President Trump, who on Sunday announced a barrage of
tariffs and sanctions targeting the country, which has long been a top U.S.
ally in Latin America.
The United
States will immediately impose a 25 percent tariff on all Colombian imports,
and will raise them to 50 percent in one week, Mr. Trump said on social media.
The Trump
administration will also “fully impose” banking and financial sanctions against
Colombia, and will apply a travel ban and revoke visas of Colombian government
officials, the president said.
Colombia’s
leftist president, Gustavo Petro, also hit back at Mr. Trump. In one social
media post, he announced retaliatory tariffs of 25 percent on U.S. imports to
Colombia and in another, longer post he said those tariffs would hit 50
percent.
Directly
addressing Mr. Trump, Mr. Petro also questioned whether the American president
was trying to topple him.
“You don’t
like our freedom, fine,” Mr. Petro said. “I do not shake hands with white
enslavers.”
The feud
reflects how Mr. Trump is making an example out of Colombia as countries around
the world grapple with how to prepare for the mass deportations of unauthorized
immigrants that he has promised.
“This looks
like a pretty bold and daring escalation on both sides,” said Will Freeman, a
fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, citing
Colombia’s economic reliance on the United States, which is still the South
American country’s largest trading partner even as China has been making
inroads.
“But
equally, for Trump to threaten Colombia this way is pretty bold itself,” Mr.
Freeman added. “That’s because Colombia remains historically the longest
standing, the deepest, strategic ally in the region.”
Mr. Trump
signed an executive order last week authorizing the U.S. military to assist in
securing the border, and the Department of Defense said it would use military
aircraft to deport people held in U.S. custody along the southern border.
Mr. Petro
said earlier Sunday in a series of social media posts that Colombia would not
accept military deportation flights from the United States until the Trump
administration provided a process to treat Colombian migrants with “dignity and
respect.”
Mr. Petro
also said Colombia had already turned away military planes carrying Colombian
deportees. While other countries in Latin America have raised concerns about
Mr. Trump’s sweeping deportation plans, Colombia appears to be among the first
to explicitly refuse to cooperate.
“I cannot
make migrants stay in a country that does not want them,” Mr. Petro wrote, “but
if that country sends them back, it should be with dignity and respect for them
and for our country.” He said he was still open to receiving deportees on
nonmilitary flights.
“Colombian
President Petro had authorized flights and provided all needed authorizations
and then canceled his authorization when the planes were in the air,” Secretary
of State Marco Rubio said in a statement.
Mr. Petro’s
office said in a statement that the presidential plane would be made available
to transport the migrants who had been scheduled to arrive on the military
planes. Representatives for Colombia’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
The
immediate snag with the deportation flights appeared to be that U.S. military
planes were transporting the undocumented migrants, a U.S. military official
said on Sunday.
The two U.S.
aircraft that were denied the ability to land in Colombia were Air Force C-17
transport planes. One turned around and returned to San Diego; the other flew
back to Texas.
If the
migrants were shifted to a commercial or charter flight, at least until
diplomatic clearances had been settled for the government planes, the issue
might resolve itself, said the military official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss operational matters.
President
Petro’s remarks came in response to a post about the treatment of Brazilian
deportees. Brazil’s foreign ministry complained of “degrading treatment” of its
citizens after 88 migrants arrived in the country handcuffed on Friday and some
complained of mistreatment after not being given water or allowed to use the
bathroom during the flight.
Since taking
office last Monday, Mr. Trump has issued a series of executive orders and made
other moves aimed at laying the groundwork to deport an enormous number of
migrants.
In his
missive on social media, Mr. Trump called Mr. Petro, a former left-wing
guerrilla, a “socialist,” a term that Mr. Petro has no problem in using to
describe himself, and contended that Mr. Petro was “very unpopular.” Mr.
Petro’s approval ratings stand at around 34 percent, as he has been weighed
down by corruption scandals and a resurgence in fighting among armed groups.
To justify
his measures targeting Colombia, Mr. Trump also claimed that the military
deportation flights refused landing by Mr. Petro included a “large number of
Illegal Criminals” and that the United States was seeking the “return of the
Criminals they forced into the United States.”
The U.S.
tariffs could deal a significant blow to Colombia’s economy. The United States
is Colombia’s largest trading partner, with top Colombian exports to the
American market including crude oil, coffee and cut flowers.
Trade
between the two countries totaled $53.5 billion in 2022, with the United States
having a trade surplus of $3.9 billion that year. Colombia is the largest South
American market for U.S. agricultural products, absorbing imports of American
pork, dairy products, alcoholic beverages and dog and cat food.
Mr. Petro
also cast attention on Americans living in Colombia, saying more than 15,000
Americans were living in the country without authorization, and calling upon
them to “regularize” their immigration status.
Colombia has
traditionally been a close U.S. ally, though differences have recently emerged
regarding counternarcotics policies. While Mr. Petro has criticized the United
States more than past presidents, he continued to collaborate with the United
States and regularly accepted deportation flights, said Sergio Guzmán, a
Colombian political analyst.
This is what
“makes this new approach so surprising,” he added.
Mr. Petro,
who took office in 2022, is Colombian’s first leftist president, and a longtime
leader in Colombian politics known for his bullish, combative stances,
particularly when it comes to defending human rights.
A former
rebel who later demobilized and became a senator, his critics say he sometimes
acts rashly and refuses to listen to advisers.
He has long
been critical of the outsize power the United States holds in the world,
particularly of the economic imbalance between the U.S. and other nations.
The acting
secretary of defense, Robert G. Salesses, said in a statement last week that
the military would provide airplanes to support with deportation flights sent
by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE.
The Trump
administration is sending the military planes in addition to the usual flights
operated by ICE, meaning that they do not replace the typical flights that land
several times a week in countries throughout the region, and which Mr. Petro
referred to in his online posts on Sunday as “civilian flights.”
The new
planes sent by the military can only depart from the United States if the
receiving nation has approved them.
It is
unclear which countries may have agreed to receive military planes carrying
deportees.
Early on
Friday, Guatemala received two U.S. Air Force jets carrying around 160
deportees in total, making it one of the first countries to publicly receive
such flights.
Officials in
Mexico, the source of the largest number of unauthorized immigrants in the
United States, have said they remained open to receiving deported citizens and
routine deportations have taken place to Mexican cities along the U.S. border
in recent days.
Still,
Mexican authorities have not disclosed whether they plan to accept military
flights or whether they will receive deported migrants from other countries, as
Mexico has sometimes done in the past.
On Friday,
NBC reported that Mexico had refused to authorize a military plane carrying
deportees from the U.S., an account that could not be independently confirmed.
Honduras,
which like Colombia has pushed back against the Trump administration’s plans
for mass deportations, has said it is open to receiving military flights.
Eric Schmitt
contributed reporting from Washington,
Jack Nicas from Rio de Janeiro, Julie Turkewitz from Bogotá, and Jody
García from Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Simon Romero
is a Times correspondent covering Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean. He
is based in Mexico City. More about Simon Romero
Annie
Correal reports from the U.S. and Latin America for The Times. More about Annie
Correal
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