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Rubio lays down ultimatum to Panama over canal

‘But they violated the agreement and we’re going to take it back, or something very powerful is going to happen’
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (4th-L) talks to Panama Canal Authority Administrator Ricaurte Vasquez (L) during a tour at the Miraflores locks of the Panama Canal in Panama City on February 2, 2025.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (4th-L) talks to Panama Canal Authority Administrator Ricaurte Vasquez (L) during a tour at the Miraflores locks of the Panama Canal in Panama City on February 2, 2025. Mark Schiefelbein / POOL / AFP
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Panama City — United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday threatened action against Panama without immediate changes to reduce Chinese influence on the canal, but the country’s leader insisted he was not afraid of a US invasion and offered talks.

On his first trip overseas as the top US diplomat, Rubio took a guided tour of the canal accompanied by its Panamanian administrator as a South Korean-affiliated oil tanker and Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship passed through the vital link between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

But Rubio was said to have had a firmer message in private, telling Panama that President Donald Trump had determined that the country had violated terms of the treaty that handed over the canal in 1999.

He pointed to the “influence and control” of China over the canal, through which some 40 percent of US container traffic passes.

Meeting President Jose Raul Mulino, Rubio “made clear that this status quo is unacceptable and that absent immediate changes, it would require the United States to take measures necessary to protect its rights under the treaty,” State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce said.

She did not spell out the consequences. But Trump has repeatedly refused to rule out military force. On Saturday, he imposed punishing tariffs on the top US trading partners — Canada, China and Mexico.

Nearly 75 percent of cargo that went through the Panama Canal in the 2024 fiscal year came from the United States, with 21 percent from China, followed by Japan and South Korea, according to official statistics.

Rubio and Trump say China has gained so much power through surrounding infrastructure that it could shut the canal down in a potential conflict and spell catastrophe for the United States.

“China’s running the Panama Canal,” Trump insisted Sunday.

“It was not given to China, it was given to Panama foolishly,” he told reporters as he returned to Washington from a weekend in Florida.

“But they violated the agreement and we’re going to take it back, or something very powerful is going to happen.”

He later added that he did not think US troops would be “necessary” in Panama.

Mulino painted a rosier portrait of his meeting with Rubio, whom he welcomed Rubio at his official residence in the tropical capital’s old quarter.

He also announced that Panama would not be renewing an agreement to participate in China’s Belt and Road project — a massive infrastructure initiative spearheaded by Beijing — which the country had signed onto under a previous administration.

“I don’t feel that there is any real threat at this time against the treaty, its validity, or much less of the use of military force to seize the canal,” Mulino told reporters.

“Sovereignty over the canal is not in question,” he said, proposing technical-level talks with Washington to clear up concerns.

He previously ordered an audit of a Hong Kong-based company that controls ports on both sides of the canal but Trump said the step was not enough.

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