Anonymous ID: 9daf1e Dec. 22, 2025, 11:15 a.m. No.24015827   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5833 >>6166 >>6289 >>6426 >>6465 >>6486

Canada #86

Gustavo Petro Challenges Trump and Demands “Returning” Texas to Mexico: Geopolitical and Strategic Risks over Oil and US Sovereignty

Rafa Gómez-Santos Martín Dec. 21, 2025

 

President Gustavo Petro caused an unexpected international stir by claiming that the United States should “return” Texas, a territory ceded by Mexico after the 1846–1848 war.

 

In his speech, Petro linked the idea of ​​returning the land with the symbolic recovery of oil resources, suggesting that Mexico could “take back” what it considers historically exploited without compensation.

 

These statements, made during an official event in Caracas , immediately sparked reactions in diplomatic circles and conservative media, which warn that reviving historical disputes lacks legal basis and constitutes a domestic political strategy.

 

Texas, with over 29 million inhabitants and a Gross Domestic Product exceeding $2 trillion, remains key in US energy production, a pillar of the country's self-sufficiency and national security.

 

The Donald Trump administration has not issued a formal response, but national security advisors emphasize that messages like Petro's can be interpreted as a direct challenge to US sovereignty.

 

Historically, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo resolved the cession of more than 2.3 million square kilometers from Mexico to the United States, with financial compensation and international recognition.

 

Modern attempts to reinterpret these agreements lack legal foundation, undermine regional stability, and divert attention from Venezuela's internal crisis, marked by inflation exceeding 300%, fuel shortages, and mass migration to neighboring countries.

 

Petro, with this type of provocation, demonstrates how he prioritizes ideological confrontation over responsibility and the well-being of the population.

 

The United States maintains its commitment to the family, social order , and legitimate authority. Diplomatic firmness, the protection of sovereignty, and respect for the law are the only shields against populist and revanchist policies that threaten historical and social stability.

 

https://gatewayhispanic.com/2025/12/gustavo-petro-challenges-trump-demands-returning-texas-mexico/

Anonymous ID: 9daf1e Dec. 22, 2025, 11:16 a.m. No.24015833   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5839 >>6087 >>6089 >>6166 >>6289 >>6426 >>6465 >>6486

>>24015827 (me)

 

BREAKING NEWS: Gustavo Petro, labeled “chief narco-terrorist,” threatens to overthrow Donald Trump, sparking international alert for Western security

Rafa Gómez-Santos Martin Oct. 21, 2025

 

Gustavo Petro, who prides himself as a reformer but acts as a revolutionary buffoon, has publicly threatened to “overthrow” President Donald Trump, triggering hemispheric alarm.

 

The statement, shared by Republican Congressman Carlos A. Giménez on X, warns that Petro's words “must be taken seriously” due to their potential impact on hemispheric security .

 

https://twitter.com/RepCarlos/status/1980436765694668947

This is not a minor outburst. While serious countries coordinate intelligence and strengthen security, Petro performs verbal acrobatics and claims revolutionary epicness.

 

His threat to overthrow Trump makes no strategic sense; it is a political theater act exposing his erratic temperament and obsession with media attention .

 

In this context, Petro's words are no joke; they are potential triggers of instability. Anyone who talks about “overthrowing” an elected president is playing with fire—not on a chessboard, but in the real lives of millions of citizens who depend on security and order .

 

Hispano-America knows well the dangers of mixing politics and radicalism: drug trafficking networks, guerrilla groups, and populism have left behind violence, economic crises, and institutional erosion.

 

https://twitter.com/Tourosenta14746/status/1980444289428779245

Petro no longer appears as a statesman but as a reckless buffoon. He confuses the podium with a chorus and democratic debate with a circus stage.

 

His statements are a reminder of what happens when the radical left confuses rhetoric with action and institutional solemnity with media spectacle.

 

This episode shows that the radical left does not seek reform: it seeks confrontation, disruption, and visibility. They confuse democracy with anarchy, respect for the law with improvisation, and hemispheric security with self-promotion in the media. In the face of this irresponsibility, conservative society must reaffirm the values ​​that uphold freedom, family, order, and legitimate authority.

 

While Petro struts in his media circus, the hemisphere remembers that democracy is not improvised nor threatened; it is defended.

 

https://gatewayhispanic.com/2025/10/breaking-gustavo-petro-labeled-chief-narco-terrorist-threatens/

Anonymous ID: 9daf1e Dec. 22, 2025, 11:17 a.m. No.24015839   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>24015833 (me)

A bit more about Gustavo Petro

 

Isolation of Gustavo Petro Due to Trump Sanctions and Massive Boycott by European and Hispanic Leaders

Joana Campos Joana Campos Nov. 14, 2025

 

Colombian President Gustavo Petro faced one of the most humiliating moments of his term. The IV Summit between the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) and the European Union (EU), scheduled for November 9 and 10, 2025, opened with empty chairs and an echo of absences that sounded like a slam of the door on the leftist leader's ambitions.

 

https://twitter.com/Impacto24_7/status/1987844938147778702?s=20

INTERNATIONAL FAILURE | The CELAC summit convened by Gustavo Petro ended up being a historic diplomatic setback. Of the 60 heads of state invited, only 9 attended, while 51 declined. It is more than evident that the leaders do not want to tarnish their image by attending events organized by a member of the Clinton List, friend of narcotrafficking and declared enemy of the United States.

Of the 60 invited heads of state and government—33 from CELAC and 27 from the EU—only nine confirmed their physical presence in the end, while 51 opted for lower-level delegations or declined altogether.

 

This low turnout was not merely a whim of overloaded schedules but a clear rejection of Petro's figure, whose anti-US rhetoric and controversial alliances have isolated Colombia on the international stage.

 

Petro, co-chair of the event in his role as pro tempore president of CELAC, took the podium hoping to position Hispanic America as a “beacon of democracy” against global “barbarism.” But instead of an auditorium packed with leaders, only a handful of loyal allies joined him: Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Pedro Sánchez of Spain, António Costa of the European Council, Yamandú Orsi of Uruguay—although his attendance was confirmed at the last minute and raised doubts—along with the prime ministers of Portugal, Guyana, Dominica, and Grenada.

 

Notable absences: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who canceled citing “commitments in Europe” but actually fleecing the shadow of US sanctions against Petro; German Chancellor Friedrich Merz; Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni; French President Emmanuel Macron; and from the Americas, Javier Milei of Argentina.

 

Even Uruguayan Orsi, part of the CELAC troika, ended up being represented by a deputy minister, according to last-minute reports. Petro did not remain silent. In his opening speech, he lashed out at “foreign forces to the peace of the Americas” that sought to “make the summit fail,” a direct allusion to pressure from Washington under Donald Trump.

 

Trump has publicly accused Petro of being a “narco-trafficking leader” and an ally of Nicolás Maduro, whom he labels a cartel boss. These words are not empty rhetoric: on October 29, Trump imposed economic sanctions on Colombia, revoking its certification as an ally in the fight against drugs and cutting aid worth millions.

 

Diplomatic sources agree that these measures triggered a domino effect: European leaders, fearful of irritating the US amid trade and military tensions in the Caribbean—where American aircraft have bombed boats suspected of drug trafficking—chose distance.

 

This fiasco comes as no surprise to those who have closely followed Petro's leftist drift . As a former M-19 guerrilla—a group with a history of kidnappings and attacks, including the murder of US citizens—the Colombian president has prioritized his socialist agenda over regional stability.

 

His unwavering defense of Maduro, despite fraudulent elections in Venezuela and drug-trafficking accusations against the Chavista regime, has poisoned his relations with the hemisphere.

 

Remember: in January 2025, Petro agreed to an extraordinary CELAC summit to counter Trump's announced mass deportations of immigrants, but Honduras canceled it due to lack of consensus, leaving the Colombian empty-handed.

 

Now, in Santa Marta, the pattern repeats: a fractured CELAC, where countries like Argentina and Mexico view Petro's maneuvers to sneak domestic issues such as popular consultations or reelections into the final declaration with suspicion, according to diplomatic leaks reported by El Colombiano.

 

The worst part is how this isolation weakens Colombia. While Petro dreams of a “triple transition”—energy, digital, and environmental—to unite Europe and Hispanic America against “imperialism,” the country suffers real consequences: runaway inflation, a devalued peso, and an exodus of foreign investment.

 

The EU, pragmatic as ever, pledged $1.15 billion for renewable energy in Central America but avoided firm commitments with Bogotá. Lula, his only lifeline, arrived demanding discussions on US warships in Hispanic American waters, but even that wasn't enough to fill the room.

 

Instead, the upcoming China-CELAC summit is already generating more enthusiasm in the region, as a Venezuelan tweeter ironically noted: "What is there to discuss with a bankrupt West? China offers jobs and technology."

 

We previously reported this in Gateway Hispanic: Petro's history as an M-19 member ties him to crimes the US has not forgotten, and his CELAC presidency only accelerates his international discredit.

 

This setback in Santa Marta is not an isolated stumble but the bill for a socialism that prioritizes ideology over pragmatism, driving away allies and strengthening adversaries like Trump.

 

Colombia deserves leaders who unite, not divide with anti-capitalist rants. Petro, with his inflammatory rhetoric, only hastens the decline of a nation that could be a regional powerhouse.

 

It is time for Congress and civil society to demand a turn: less SOCIALISM, more open markets and real alliances with the free world.

 

https://gatewayhispanic.com/2025/11/total-rejection-only-9-60-countries-attend-celac/

Anonymous ID: 9daf1e Dec. 22, 2025, 11:58 a.m. No.24016048   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6063

>>24016003

They only have one playbook

 

Eight Traits of Disinformation Agents:

Avoidance: Refraining from direct discussions, these agents imply authority without providing credible references.

Selectivity: Targeting opponents strategically, focusing on key figures or arguments.

Coincidental: Emerging suddenly on controversial topics and disappearing once the issue loses prominence.

Teamwork: Operating in coordinated packs, these agents complement each other's tactics.

Anti-conspiratorial: Expressing disdain for conspiracy theories while selectively defending specific topics.

Artificial Emotions: Displaying an odd mix of emotions, often seeming detached or inconsistent.

Inconsistent: Making mistakes or citing contradictory information that reveals their true motives.

Time Constant: Responding rapidly to truth proponents, but delaying responses when directly confronted.