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Trump and Colombia's Petro make amends at White House after months of feuding
Summary
President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro held a private, roughly two-hour White House meeting on Feb. 3 and described it as cordial; neither announced detailed agreements, though they said they would work on counternarcotics measures.
Content
President Donald Trump and Colombia's Gustavo Petro met privately at the White House on Feb. 3 in their first face-to-face encounter. The meeting lasted roughly two hours and the press was not admitted. Both leaders described the encounter as cordial, but they did not announce detailed, concrete agreements afterward. The visit follows months of public criticism and tense exchanges between the two leaders.
Meeting details:
- The meeting was private and lasted about two hours, with no media allowed to attend.
- Both presidents described the encounter as cordial, though neither presented detailed agreements.
- Trump said the two were working on counter-narcotics measures after reporters asked about accords on drug flows from Colombia.
- Petro said he shared names and aliases of major drug traffickers living abroad and asked for help in capturing them.
- Petro posted a photograph on social media showing a handwritten note from Trump that read, "Gustavo - A great honor - I love Colombia."
- Petro remains subject to U.S. sanctions announced in October, which he has denied; Colombian officials also planned a presentation on recent anti-drug achievements during the visit.
Summary:
The meeting eased visible hostility between two previously feuding leaders and brought counter-narcotics cooperation to the forefront of talks, while questions about concrete outcomes remain. Undetermined at this time.
