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Tags: trump | colombia | gustavo petro | cocaine | drug trafficking | venezuela

Trump, Colombia's Petro Meeting Tuesday at WH

Tuesday, 03 February 2026 12:49 PM EST

President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro began their first meeting on Tuesday, a White House encounter testing whether they can reach a lasting detente despite clashing ideologies and reputations for unpredictability.

Trump has in recent months had an up-and-down relationship with Petro, a former anti-imperialist guerrilla who was elected Colombia's president in 2022.

In October, Trump called Petro an "illegal drug leader," and in January, he floated the idea of military action against Petro, whom he has said is failing to control the narcotics trade.

Petro, for his part, has been harshly critical of Trump. He has said the Trump administration's deadly strikes on alleged drug boats amount to war crimes, and he described the U.S. operation last month deposing Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro as a "kidnapping."

In January, the two leaders held a phone call that both described positively, a surprise thaw that resulted in Petro's invitation to Washington. Trump told reporters on Monday that Petro's tone had changed of late, implying that he had become more acquiescent after the Maduro raid.

"We're gonna have a good meeting," Trump said.

Still, if the two men have anything in common, it is that they behave unpredictably, speak elliptically, and change opinions quickly. One Colombian source acknowledged that the meeting could be "tense" given the sometimes stubborn personalities of the two presidents.

At the Tuesday meeting, which began shortly after 11 a.m. local time, Colombian officials plan to deliver a detailed presentation on their main antidrug achievements, including figures on cocaine seizures, according to three sources with knowledge of the matter.

Will Freeman, fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, said the meeting could go smoothly if Petro sticks to discussing counternarcotics matters rather than broader philosophical disagreements.

"But everything we know about both presidents' personalities suggests that's not going to happen," he said.

If the two leaders fail to reach a more lasting rapprochement, it could have profound implications for regional security, analysts said.

Colombia is the world's top producer of coca, the main ingredient in cocaine, and several U.S.-designated terrorist organizations are present in the country.

But it has also been one of Washington's staunchest allies in the region, working closely with successive administrations to suppress drug flows northward.

Under Petro, coca production in Colombia has climbed, though the exact figures are a matter of dispute. Bogota argues that while the government has shifted away from forced eradication — a policy that can harm subsistence farmers — it has ramped up seizures and more sophisticated interdiction efforts.

Last week, though, Petro urged Colombian migrants to return from Chile, Argentina, and the United States so as not to be treated like "slaves." He also said it is better to live in Havana than in Miami, which he described as traffic-clogged and cultureless.

Colombia requested the White House meeting be held in private, a Colombian official said. But Trump may ask reporters to enter the Oval Office at the last minute.

Petro himself struck an upbeat if lofty tone.

"I think we should fill ourselves with optimism," he told public television station RTVC before departing for Washington. "I'll be expecting you on Tuesday, when I am meeting with the president, to be in all the public squares, to build the chain of affection, the certainty of love."

© 2026 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


Politics
President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro began their first meeting on Tuesday, a White House encounter testing whether they can reach a lasting detente despite clashing ideologies and reputations for unpredictability.
trump, colombia, gustavo petro, cocaine, drug trafficking, venezuela
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2026-49-03
Tuesday, 03 February 2026 12:49 PM
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