‘A great honor’: Key takeaways from Trump’s meeting with Colombia’s Petro
“He didn’t change his way of his thinking.
But how do you do an agreement, a pact?
It’s not as between twin brothers.
It’s between opponents,” Petro said.
Separately, Trump told reporters from the Oval Office that he felt good about the meeting.
“I thought it was terrific,” he said.
Here are five takeaways from Tuesday’s meeting.
The meeting between Trump and Petro lasted nearly two hours, all of it behind closed doors.
But the two leaders emerged with largely positive things to say about one another.
I love Colombia,” it read, followed by Trump’s signature.
In another post, Petro showed off a signed copy of Trump’s book, The Art of the Deal.
On its title page, Trump had scrawled another note to Petro: “You are great.
“I don’t understand much English.
” A turning point in a tense relationship?
Petro’s joke appeared to be a cheeky nod to his notoriously rocky relationship with Trump.
Petro objected to the reported human rights violations facing the deportees.
Petro ultimately backed down after Trump threatened steep sanctions on imported Colombian goods.
They continued to trade barbs in the months since.
That attack, Petro said, was tantamount to “kidnapping”.
The statement was widely interpreted to be a threat of military action against Colombia.
But Trump and Petro appeared to have reached a turning point last month.
On January 7, the two leaders held their first call together.
Tuesday’s in-person meeting marked another first in their relationship.
He added that Tuesday’s meeting was nevertheless pleasant.
“I didn’t know him at all, and we got along very well.
Trump, in the past, has called the so-called green energy programmes a “scam”.
Petro himself cannot run for consecutive terms under Colombian law.
Straining those ties could therefore be seen as an election liability.
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On social media, he shared an adjustment he made to the cap’s slogan.
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