Trump鈥檚 Colombia warning is China鈥檚 window of opportunity

COLOMBIA鈥檚 run-in with Donald Trump is a warning to other countries trying to decipher the US president鈥檚 haphazard decision-making process. As Asian nations realize that Trump鈥檚 second term could be even more erratic than his first, China is ready to take advantage of the chaos.
Trump鈥檚 latest to impose 25% tariffs on an for not complying with his deportation demands should serve as a wake-up call. Even though the levies were reversed, he achieved what he presumably set out to do: Show the world who鈥檚 boss.
鈥淭his reminds governments that this is a president that behaves on a whim,鈥 , head of trade policy at the Hinrich Foundation in Singapore, told me. 鈥淵ou never would have imagined before that the US would impose immediate harsh penalties on a really important ally, in a really important region. If you can do it to Colombia, you can do that to anyone.鈥
China will take every opportunity to step in. Beijing was already up to Bogot谩 before the spat with Washington, but has been of exploiting the situation further. , China鈥檚 ambassador to Colombia, the local newspaper El Tiempo that relations between the Asian and Latin American countries were 鈥渁t the best moment鈥 since establishing diplomatic ties 45 years ago, adding they 鈥渁re global cultural powers.鈥 He went even further, saying that their differences, 鈥渇ar from creating obstacles, bring us closer and enrich us.鈥
Losing a key US ally to China鈥檚 influence is a reckless move at best, foolish at worst. Historical ties to Washington have meant that Colombia has in the past Beijing with a greater degree of caution than many of its neighbors. South American, North American, and European companies have typically won contracts and gained market access over Chinese ones, with exceptions.
So when Colombian President Gustavo Petro Beijing in 2023, elevating ties to a strategic partnership, observers saw it as a notable win for China, and part of the nation鈥檚 greater economic engagement with the region. China鈥檚 with Latin America 鈥 including imports of raw materials and food supplies, and exports of manufactured goods 鈥 grew to over $450 billion in 2022 from around $18 billion in 2002. The closer ties with Beijing coincided with a between Bogot谩 and Washington over issues critical to the relationship, such as counter-narcotics, peace, and security.
For Asian nations, Colombia鈥檚 experience is a chilling reminder that they better get their Trump 2.0 plans in order. It鈥檚 hard to predict which countries are most at risk, but one good gauge might be to look at who has a with the US.
is the most high-profile country at risk. Trump began his of Beijing for unfair-trade-related issues in his first term, and slapped tariffs on the world鈥檚 second-largest economy. The stance is a central plank of his engagement with trade partners, and he that he鈥檚 mulling a 10% tariff on Chinese imports, potentially set to take effect Feb. 1. Recently though the US president talked about them as a last resort, a move that suggests yet again, anything can be traded to make a bargain.
Still, a 10% tariff carries heavy consequences for Beijing. Bloomberg Economics that it could knock out 40% of China鈥檚 goods exports to the US, putting 0.9% of gross domestic product at risk. Beijing would likely retaliate with duties of its own, ensuring that the world鈥檚 two superpowers end up in a protracted trade battle.
Outside of China, tariff risks are highest for , Japan, and South Korea. Priyanka Kishore in her Asia Decoded Substack that each reported more than a $40-billion trade surplus with the US in 2023. The entire region could be in the firing line, except perhaps tiny Singapore, which has an overall trade deficit with the US. Even so, certain sectors could be at risk 鈥 the city-state recorded a close to $9-billion trade surplus with the US in pharmaceutical products in 2023, Kishore writes.
Southeast Asian nations, in particular, have long resisted the narrative of having to choose between the US and China, as the former Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong told me in an in 2021. 鈥淚 hope the time does not come,鈥 he said.
Governments in the region should think about what they can offer Trump if they end up attracting his attention. the way that Colombia did may not be an option. But Washington should also be wary that in the strategic competition between China and the US, the superpower that isn鈥檛 pointing a gun at a partner鈥檚 head may be more appealing as an ally in the future.
The US鈥 allure over China is that it has always been able to offer a stable, reliable business and policymaking environment, one that could be depended on to follow the rule of law. Under Trump, that鈥檚 not so certain anymore.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


