❓WHAT HAPPENED: Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced the suspension of intelligence sharing with the United States, raging about the U.S. military’s lethal strikes on cartel boats carrying illegal drugs.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Colombian President Gustavo Petro and U.S. President Donald J. Trump.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The announcement was made earlier this week in Bogotá, Colombia, amid escalating tensions over U.S. military actions in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific.
💬KEY QUOTE: “Intelligence is not for killing.” – Gustavo Petro
🎯IMPACT: The comments mark a continued escalation in the Marxist leader’s feud with Trump over his use of military airstrikes to stop cartel drug smuggling operations in the Caribbean.
Colombia’s far-left President Gustavo Petro has announced that his government will no longer share intelligence with the United States, opposing lethal strikes on cartel boats carrying illegal drugs. In an interview with NBC News, Petro emphasized that “intelligence is not for killing,” and described the U.S. military buildup in the Caribbean as “undoubtedly an aggression against Latin America.”
Petro’s decision follows a series of U.S. military strikes targeting boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, which President J. Donald Trump has justified as part of an “armed conflict” with drug cartels. Trump contends that Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) are using these boats to flood American cities with deadly narcotics.
Petro labeled the attacks as “murder,” accusing Trump of being a “barbarian” and “lost on the issue of the real analysis of what is going on with cocaine in Colombia.”
In response to Petro’s criticism, Trump has accused the Colombian president of being directly involved in the drug trade, referring to him as an “illegal drug leader” on his Truth Social platform. Petro strongly denied these allegations, claiming that the people killed in the strikes are often impoverished boatmen hired by criminal organizations, rather than the traffickers themselves.
France has also expressed concerns over the legality of U.S. strikes, with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot alleging that the actions “violate international law.” Despite the growing tensions, Petro did not express support for Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro, who has been a secondary target of the Trump administration’s military actions. “No, I believe that there has been no legitimate leadership [in Venezuela] for some time,” the Colombian leader said.
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