US President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro narrowly avoided a potential trade war after the White House announced a deal in which Colombia agreed to a key US immigration demand.
The Government of Colombia, under the direction of President Gustavo Petro, has arranged the presidential plane to facilitate ...
Europe won't be immune either. Trump's 10 percent tariff threat has EU legislators worried, with Germany staring down $187 ...
A looming trade war between the US and Colombia appears to have been averted after the Colombian government agreed to allow US military flights carrying deported migrants to land in the Andean country ...
Deportation flights between the U.S. and Colombia have resumed following a dispute between the two countries that nearly led to a trade war.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump’s tariff orders and sanctions would be “held in reserve and not signed” on Jan. 26, as long as Colombian migrants returned to their country ...
Gustavo Petro is calling on his compatriots working without legal status in the United States to leave their jobs and return ...
In truth, tariffs against Colombia would have been barely felt in the United States, which has a much larger economy. But it ...
China, Russia and even U.S. allies have developed retaliatory options that could deeply hurt America’s economy and standard ...
Trump wanted the deportees taken on U.S. military planes, shackled. Colombia refused to receive deportees in this manner.
Round one of Donald Trump’s trade war has come to an inglorious end ... Days earlier, Trump had issued a flurry of threats against Colombia, which also has a trade agreement with the United ...