Newly escalating tensions between Washington and Bogotá erupted this week after Colombian President Gustavo Petro issued a sharp warning to President Donald Trump.
He vowed Colombians would resist any foreign “invader” and suggested he might personally take up arms if the United States launched a military operation against his country.
The confrontation follows Trump’s dramatic U.S. operation that resulted in the arrest of Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro, a move that has reshaped regional power dynamics and signaled a tougher American posture on narcotics trafficking in Latin America.
During a press briefing, Trump indicated Colombia could be next, responding “sounds good to me” when asked whether military action against the country was under consideration.
Petro replied with a lengthy statement posted to X early Monday, portraying himself as Colombia’s constitutional “supreme commander” of the military and police.
He accused U.S. officials—particularly Secretary of State Marco Rubio—of being fed “false information” by Colombian political interests he alleged are tied to the mafia.
Petro wrote that he had ordered the removal of intelligence colonels accused of providing fabricated claims “against the state,” according to Newsmax.
The Colombian leader rejected Trump’s repeated allegations that his government enables cocaine production and trafficking to the United States.
Petro stressed that his administration has carried out record drug seizures and is attempting to reduce coca cultivation through crop substitution programs, though Trump publicly disputed these claims.
“Well, he has cocaine mills. He has factories where he makes cocaine, and yeah, I think I stick by my first statement,” Trump said. “He’s making cocaine. They’re sending it into the United States, so he does have to watch his a**.”
Petro’s rhetoric escalated as he invoked Colombia’s 1991 Constitution and referenced his past membership in the left-wing M-19 movement.
He warned that any U.S. effort to arrest Colombia’s elected president would “unleash the popular jaguar,” a phrase he uses to describe mass public resistance, the Daily Express reports.
“If you arrest the president whom a good part of my people want and respect, you will unleash the popular jaguar,” Petro wrote.
He further claimed that Colombia’s public forces must defend “popular sovereignty” and ordered commanders to withdraw if they placed allegiance to the U.S. above the Colombian flag.
In remarks reported by multiple outlets, Petro said he would be willing to take up arms again despite having renounced weapons decades ago following a peace pact.
He also warned that U.S. military strikes against cartel targets could risk civilian casualties, arguing that criminal groups often use children and “peasants” as human shields.
Petro claimed bombing rural areas would reignite guerrilla warfare and create a humanitarian crisis.
The clash comes as Washington faces mounting political strain, with lawmakers returning amid shutdown concerns, healthcare battles and fallout from the Venezuela operation.
Analysts argue that foreign leaders such as Petro may attempt to exploit U.S. political division to limit the country’s ability to respond to transnational threats like narcotrafficking.
Supporters of Trump’s hard-line approach say the administration’s posture reflects growing concern over cartel corruption, illegal immigration and overdose deaths destabilizing both the region and the United States.
The arrest of Maduro, they argue, demonstrates that Washington is prepared to act decisively.
As rhetoric intensifies, both governments appear braced for further escalation.
With Petro doubling down on defiance and Trump signaling little tolerance for cocaine-fueled instability, the standoff is shaping up as a major test of U.S. resolve in the Western Hemisphere.
