US-Colombia Deportation Dispute Resolved

GEAR CHECK: Our readers don't just follow the news - they stay ready. Featured gear from this story is below.

Staff Writer

The US and Colombia have resolved a dispute over deportation flights, with Colombia agreeing to accept unrestricted returns of its citizens.

The White House has claimed victory in a showdown with Colombia over accepting flights of deported migrants from the US. The dispute began when Colombian President Gustavo Petro rejected two US military aircraft carrying migrants, citing concerns over the dignity of the deportees.

In response, US President Donald Trump threatened steep tariffs on Colombian imports and other sanctions. Trump ordered visa restrictions, 25% tariffs on all Colombian incoming goods, and other retaliatory measures. Petro retaliated by announcing a 25% increase in Colombian tariffs on US goods.

However, in a late Sunday statement, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that the Colombian government had agreed to all of Trump's terms, including the unrestricted acceptance of all illegal aliens from Colombia returned from the US. The tariff orders will be held in reserve, and not signed, but Trump will maintain visa restrictions on Colombian officials and enhanced customs inspections of goods from the country.

The dispute highlights the strained relationship between the US and Colombia, which has been a key ally in anti-narcotics efforts. Colombia has accepted 475 deportation flights from the US from 2020 to 2024, but Petro's government has sought to distance itself from the US.

The standoff also underscores the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration. The US government has begun using active-duty military to help secure the border and carry out deportations. Two US Air Force C-17 cargo planes carrying migrants removed from the US touched down in Guatemala on Friday, while Honduras received two deportation flights carrying a total of 193 people.

Colombia is the US's fourth-largest overseas supplier of crude oil and its largest supplier of fresh-cut flowers. The country has traditionally been the US's top ally in Latin America, but the relationship has been strained since Petro, a former guerrilla, became Colombia's first leftist president in 2022.

You may also like

Blog

New reporting suggests Iranian-linked actors exploited weaknesses in global mobile networks and smartphone advertising data to track the locations of U.S. military personnel in the Middle East during the recent conflict. While officials have not publicly confirmed the full extent of the operation, cybersecurity experts say the allegations expose a serious vulnerability with implications for force protection.
A growing trade dispute between Canada and the United States is beginning to reshape how public contracts are awarded north of the border. Several Canadian provinces have introduced procurement restrictions that limit or exclude some U.S. businesses from bidding on government work, raising concerns about the future of cross-border trade.
While fans from around the world packed Kansas City for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, federal agents were carrying out another mission away from the stadiums. A multi-agency Homeland Security operation has now rescued eight missing children, identified trafficking victims, arrested dangerous offenders, and disrupted criminal activity linked to the global event.
What one Ottawa man thought was a safe way to dispose of an old military explosive quickly turned into a bomb scare. Police were forced to secure an undetonated Second World War grenade outside a detachment before military explosives experts safely removed it.
For decades, many women serving in military and peacekeeping roles wore body armor designed primarily for men, often sacrificing comfort, mobility, and even protection. Today, that is beginning to change. Through the deployment of Aspetto's MACH-V Female Body Armor, women serving in United Nations peacekeeping missions are receiving equipment designed specifically for their anatomy, improving both safety and operational effectiveness in some of the world's most dangerous environments.

Like This Story? Check Out What Our Community Is Buying

Our best sellers are designed for real-world use - not hype.

View Best Sellers