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In a Sunday night missive, the White House Office of Communications shared big news: the South American country of Colombia has succumbed to America’s demands and will not be subject to crippling sanctions unless it “fails to honor this agreement.”
Sometimes, you have to cry uncle, and it appears that Colombian President Gustavo Petro did just that after acting defiant earlier Sunday by saying his country would refuse to take back its citizens who were in America illegally.
The current president of the United States, however, is not named Joe Biden.
After realizing who he was dealing with, Petro apparently even retweeted the White House’s statement:
Yashar Ali 🐘 @yashar
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The president of Colombia has retweeted White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s post.
Yashar Ali 🐘 @yashar
NEW
Statement from the White House on the situation in Colombia.
I do not believe we have heard from the Colombian side yet on this announcement.
10:37 PM · Jan 26, 2025
Leavitt said tariffs and financial sanctions will be paused, but visa sanctions against Colombian officials and stricter customs inspections of Colombian nationals and cargo ships ordered by Trump earlier Sunday will remain in effect “until the first planeload of Colombian deportees is successfully returned.” //
Cynical Publius @CynicalPublius
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To fully understand just how remarkable today’s exchange with Colombia was, you need to understand how Washington DC has traditionally worked through these sorts of issues, and the different way it works now under Trump.
I’ll illustrate.
Traditional Approach:
- Colombia announces it will not take our repatriation flights.
- On Monday, the State Department convenes an interagency task force with DoD, NSC, DEA, INS, ICE, Commerce, Treasury and Homeland Security.
- The task force meets for four days and develops a position paper.
- The position paper is rejected by the Secretary of State, who is unhappy that insufficient equity considerations are built into the process.
- The task force reconvenes a week later to redevelop three new, equity-centric courses of action and create a new position paper.
- The process is delayed a week because Washington DC gets three inches of snow.
- SecState approves the new position paper for interagency circulation, and considerable input is received from the heads of other departments so the task force must reconvene.
- The original three proposed responsive courses of action are scrapped in favor of a new, fourth course of action that achieves the worst aspects of the three prior courses of action but satisfies the interagency.
- Someone in State who disagrees leaks to the Washington Post, who writes a story about how ineffective the Presidential administration is.
- The White House Chief of Staff sets up a session three days later to brief the President, who approves the new fourth course of action.
- Over a month after the issue is first raised, the State Department Public Affairs Officer holds a press conference announcing that Colombia has agreed to try to send fewer criminals into the US and everyone declares victory.
Trump Approach:
- Colombia announces it will not take our repatriation flights.
- After a par-5 third hole where he goes one under par, Trump uses his iPhone to post on social media as to how the USA will destroy Colombia’s economy if they do not do what the USA demands.
- By the time Trump gets to the par-4 sixth hole, Colombia’s President has agreed to repatriate all the illegal Colombians in his own plane, which he will pay for.
- Trump finishes three under par and goes to the clubhouse for a Diet Coke where he posts a gangsta AI image of himself and the new FAFO Doctrine.
- Winning.
See the difference? It’s called LEADERSHIP.
6:09 PM · Jan 26, 2025
anon-d9in
19 hours ago
The President of Columbia did not think through his resistance. Trump wrote The Art Of The Deal. He already planned in advance what he would if countries deny entry of their own criminals. The Columbian President's knee jerk reaction only proved he is no match for Trump and he is not a true leader. Doing his chest-pounding on X proved to be oh so embarassing. //