Rejection of US attacks and threats highlights in Colombia

The People’s Confederation of the Western Caribbean (CPCW) has issued a forceful condemnation of recent military operations in Caribbean waters, denouncing both the lethal bombings and a direct threat made by former US President Donald Trump against Colombian leader Gustavo Petro. The statement emerged from the Second Summit of the Peoples of the Western Caribbean, hosted on San Andres Island, which established the CPCW as a regional diplomatic body.

The Confederation’s declaration highlighted that the aerial bombardments have resulted in approximately 100 extrajudicial fatalities, primarily affecting civilian fishermen whose livelihoods are now jeopardized by ongoing military actions. The CPCW demanded an immediate cessation of all threatening operations and called for comprehensive investigations into the events, accompanied by appropriate sanctions and reparations for victims and affected communities.

A significant portion of the statement addressed what it termed ‘unacceptable threats’ against Colombia’s democratically elected president. The Confederation called for absolute respect for President Petro’s physical and moral integrity, referencing direct statements from Donald Trump suggesting Petro would be ‘next’ in line for aggression similar to that directed against Venezuela and its leader Nicolas Maduro.

In response to these developments, President Petro attributed Trump’s comments to a fundamental misunderstanding of South American realities. The Colombian leader articulated substantive policy disagreements with US approaches toward Palestine, Caribbean relations, Venezuela, and strategies for combating organized crime. Petro particularly challenged the effectiveness of missile strikes against small boat operators, arguing that such tactics primarily impact impoverished fishermen rather than actual drug traffickers who operate luxury vessels near global hubs like Dubai and Madrid.