Rising tensions between the United States and Venezuela under Nicolás Maduro could complicate the 2026 T-MEC review negotiations, impacting trade relations with Mexico. President Claudia Sheinbaum's non-intervention stance clashes with Donald Trump's maximum pressure strategy. Analysts warn of a potential diplomatic clash that could contaminate the trade agreement.
The 2026 review negotiations of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (T-MEC) are threatened by the crisis between Washington and Caracas. Enrique Quintana, in El Financiero, describes this as a 'perfect storm' blending geopolitics and trade. The United States has escalated pressure on Nicolás Maduro's regime, including intercepting a Venezuelan oil tanker in international waters and accusing ties to the Cártel de los Soles. Council on Foreign Relations experts see this as the start of a more aggressive phase, with possible direct operations in weeks if Maduro does not weaken.
Mexico, under Sheinbaum, rejects these actions, upholding its non-intervention doctrine and alignment with left-leaning governments. A key gesture was not congratulating opposition leader María Corina Machado on her Nobel Peace Prize, facilitated by the US for her trip to Oslo. Quintana raises questions: How would Mexico respond to greater US military intervention? And the US if Mexico distances itself on a national security issue?
This dissonance could 'contaminate' the T-MEC. A letter from 500 US business organizations highlights that the agreement supports 13 million jobs in the US but fears Trump's political agenda will taint negotiations. Trade representative Jamieson Greer has left open substantial modifications, withdrawal from the treaty, or bilateral talks. In Washington, trading partners are viewed as geopolitical allies, and Trump may use Venezuela tensions as leverage.
The Baker Institute warns that the Trump administration will use trade tools like tariffs for political pressure. Mexico is caught between defending its foreign policy, which indirectly backs Maduro, and preserving access to the world's largest market. The coming weeks will be critical to avoid a major dispute.