Petro outlines peace, clean energy agenda for Trump White House meeting

Colombian President Gustavo Petro has previewed key discussion topics for his early February White House meeting with US President Donald Trump, including continental peace, sovereignty, and a clean energy pact leveraging South America's potential. The agenda follows Trump's confirmation of the summit—conditioned on anti-drug progress—after their January 7 phone call amid bilateral tensions.

In a post on X, Petro specified: "we will talk with Trump about the Peace of the Continent, sovereignty, a Pact for Life based on clean energies. The US energy matrix can be decarbonized if the clean energy potential of South America becomes real." This emphasizes regional alliances to support US decarbonization goals, building on environmental cooperation opportunities.

Trump's announcement on Truth Social, covered previously, followed the leaders' first direct phone contact in a year and preceded Colombia's January 7 national mobilization. While Trump stressed mutual benefits and the need to curb drug flows—citing Petro's reported seizures and extraditions—Petro is prioritizing broader geopolitical and sustainability issues.

No exact date has been set, but Colombia's diplomatic team is preparing a technical agenda. The meeting occurs against a backdrop of strains since January 2025, including deportation disputes, ambassador recalls, and US decertification on anti-drug efforts. Expectations are high for how the leaders' differing styles might shape US-Colombia relations.

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US President Trump in Oval Office plans February meeting with Colombia's Petro, conditioned on anti-drug efforts.
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Trump sets Petro White House meeting for early February, conditioned on anti-drug progress

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US President Donald Trump confirmed a White House meeting with Colombian President Gustavo Petro for the first week of February, building on their January 7 phone call. Trump conditioned the summit on advances in curbing drug flows to the US, amid ongoing bilateral tensions.

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Presidents Gustavo Petro of Colombia and Donald Trump of the United States met on March 2, 2026, at the White House to discuss key issues like bilateral trade, border security, and the war on drugs. The two-hour session in the Oval Office eased prior tensions between the ideologically opposed leaders. Petro highlighted Trump's mediation in trade relations with Ecuador and potential energy deals with Venezuela.

Building on heightened US-Colombia frictions after the January 3, 2026, US capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro—which prompted border troop deployments and drug trafficking accusations against President Gustavo Petro—Petro called for nationwide rallies on January 7 to defend sovereignty amid Donald Trump's suggestions of military intervention. Unions have endorsed the mobilizations, while Colombia pursues diplomatic protests.

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Following the US capture of Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, President Donald Trump accused Colombian President Gustavo Petro of ties to drug trafficking, prompting Colombia to deploy 11,000 troops along their shared border amid fears of refugee influxes and regional instability.

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President Donald Trump wants to speak directly with Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro as the United States continues lethal strikes on suspected drug-trafficking vessels off Venezuela’s coast. The outreach, reported by Axios, comes after the U.S. designated the so‑called Cartel de los Soles as a foreign terrorist organization and accused Maduro of leading it.

 

 

 

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