The warning came like a slap.
China has openly demanded the United States free Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, just hours before his explosive New York court appearance.
At the same time, Donald Trump is taunting Colombia, calling its president a “sick man” and hinting his days are numbered.
In a single day, Washington found itself staring down two storms of its own making.
China’s blunt demand to release Nicolás Maduro was more than diplomatic theater; it was a public test of American power, sovereignty, and moral authority.
By tying its prestige to the fate of a controversial Latin American leader,
Beijing signaled it is ready to challenge the U.S. not just in the South China Sea or on trade, but in America’s own geopolitical backyard.
Then Donald Trump’s words detonated another crisis. By calling Colombia’s president a “sick man” and hinting he “won’t be in power for long,”
he turned routine rhetoric into something darker and more destabilizing. For Colombians, it sounded like a threat.
For the region, it echoed an old fear: that Washington still sees Latin America as a chessboard, not a community of fragile democracies caught between rival empires.