US-Colombia tensions escalate over disagreements on drugs, Venezuela and Palestine News
USAID, Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons
US-Colombia tensions escalate over disagreements on drugs, Venezuela and Palestine

The US on Friday accused Colombian President Gustav Petro of doing too little to reduce crime and drug trafficking. US Ambassador Mike Waltz told a UN Security Council meeting that Petro’s policies toward “narco-terrorist groups” are “irresponsible failures.”

“The violence and drug trafficking perpetrated by these arms groups…can spread and jeopardize the safety of Colombians, the safety of everyone in the region, and certainly of Americans,” Waltz said.

His complaints fit with a larger conflict between the US administration and Petro, and with growing US interest and difficulties in the region.

Petro has denied American extradition requests.  He has also been critical of recent American actions in neighboring Venezuela.  The US “decertified” Colombia for allegedly failing to meet its international anti-narcotics obligations last month.

Also on Friday, the US announced the sinking of a boat in the waters off neighboring Venezuela.  President Trump said, on his Truth Social account, that the boat “was loaded with enough drugs to kill 25 TO 50 THOUSAND PEOPLE.”  He also implied that it was “entering American Territory” while off the coast of Venezuela.  Petro responded by accusing the US of committing “murder,” saying that there were no “narco-terrorists,” just “poor Caribbean youth.”

Friday’s military action is the fourth such attack by the US.  The US State Department has also tried to terminate Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans in an ongoing series of court battles going back to April.

Petro joined a pro-Palestinian protest during the recent gathering of world leaders at the UN General Assembly.  The US State Department revoked his visa after the protest.