Los Angeles Times

Trump meets pair opposed to peace deal in Colombia

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Chris Kraul

WASHINGTON — President Trump has met secretly with two former Colombian presidents before holding any face-to-face talks with one of their political enemies: the sitting president, Juan Manuel Santos.

The unusual meeting with former Presidents Alvaro Uribe and Andres Pastrana has led to speculatio­n in Colombia that the pair were enlisting Trump’s support against a historic peace accord brokered by Santos with left-wing guerrillas.

Trump received Uribe and Pastrana on Good Friday at his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago. The meeting was widely reported in the Colombian press but never announced by the White House.

When White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer was asked about it at a briefing this week, he responded that he was unfamiliar with the event.

Trump has spoken to Santos twice by phone, but they have not met in person. Negotiatio­ns were underway for a possible White House visit next month, Colombian officials said.

In Bogota, the Colombian capital, the Santos government was said to be livid at news of the Mar-a-Lago session.

Uribe and Pastrana are vehemently opposed to the hard-fought peace accord that ended more than half a century of civil war.

Santos’ stewardshi­p of the accord, signed with Marxist guerrillas who long battled successive Colombian government­s, was enthusiast­ically championed by the Obama administra­tion.

And it earned Santos last year’s Nobel Peace Prize.

But critics like the rightwing Uribe and Pastrana oppose the deal because they say it grants too many concession­s to the guerrillas, and they have courted support in some U.S. conservati­ve circles.

The pair apparently hoped to bring the deal to Trump’s attention and enlist his backing against it. Reports in Colombia said the meeting was brokered by Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.); Rubio’s office would neither confirm nor deny that.

Uribe followed up with a letter to members of the U.S. Congress, claiming the peace agreement would lead to an increase in cocaine production.

In response, a group of 40 Colombian lawmakers wrote to Congress in a bid to counter Uribe’s claims, accusing him and Pastrana of waging a campaign against the peace accord for domestic political reasons.

Colombia holds presidenti­al and parliament­arian elections next year, and Uribe is hoping his political party can make a comeback.

“It is not standard diplomatic practice for a president to receive opposition politician­s before meeting with a legitimate­ly elected head of state,” Virginia Bouvier, senior advisor for peace processes at the Washington-based U.S. Institute of Peace, told The Times via email.

“The Trump administra­tion would be wise to steer clear of internal divides within a polarized Colombia and keep its eye on the prize — the opportunit­y for peace after half a century of war,” she wrote.

She said it was unclear the episode would have an effect on U.S. relations with Colombia, but was likely to deepen the political divide within Colombia.

tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com Times staff writer Wilkinson reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Kraul from Bogota, Colombia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States