
Colombia’s President-Elect to Restore Israel Ties, Open Jerusalem Embassy
Incoming hard-right government also plans to withdraw from ICJ genocide case and deepen US security cooperation, marking a sharp foreign policy reversal.
Colombia’s incoming government will fully restore diplomatic and economic relations with Israel and open an embassy in Jerusalem, president-elect Abelardo de la Espriella’s office confirmed on Thursday. The decision, announced after a Washington meeting between designated foreign minister Omar Bula Escobar and Israeli foreign minister Gideon Sa’ar, includes an immediate exchange of ambassadors, reciprocal visa elimination, and Colombian withdrawal from South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice. The moves reverse the May 2024 rupture ordered by outgoing president Gustavo Petro in protest at Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.
Hamas condemned the agreement as “an irresponsible decision and an assault on the rights of the Palestinian people,” while Sa’ar wrote that “Colombia was one of Israel’s greatest friends, and that friendship will soon be stronger than ever.” Viewed from Washington, the shift aligns with the Trump administration’s own Jerusalem embassy policy and its broader effort to isolate the ICJ proceedings. US secretary of state Marco Rubio, who met vice president-elect José Manuel Restrepo the same week, said the administration “looks forward to working closely” with the new government to strengthen economic and security ties.
The diplomatic realignment is part of a wider foreign and security policy overhaul. De la Espriella’s team has signalled it will seek membership in the US-led “Shield of the Americas” alliance and is discussing the establishment of US logistical support centres on Colombian territory to bolster anti-narcotics operations, though officials in Washington stressed these would operate under Colombian command and not constitute permanent military bases. Domestically, the president-elect has adopted a confrontational posture toward the 2016 peace accord, calling for the imprisonment of former FARC commander Rodrigo Londoño and ordering the dismantling of the Office of the High Commissioner for Peace. The director of the peace implementation unit has filed a criminal complaint against De la Espriella for alleged incitement, and the UN verification mission has urged all sides to “de-escalate confrontational rhetoric.”
The transition, which concludes with the 7 August inauguration, remains fraught. The incoming government has asked the inspector general to intervene preventively in several National Protection Unit contracts, including a $78 billion peso security detail for the new president, arguing the outgoing administration is rushing procurement. With four ministerial posts still unfilled and a communication strategy that centralises all official messaging through two spokespersons, the president-elect is assembling a governance model that, according to analysts in Bogotá, concentrates political capital in the presidency while delegating institutional friction to the cabinet.
| Latin American press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Russian & CIS press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Israeli press | +1.00 | aligned |
Colombian civil society and progressive voices warn that the new government's moves endanger the hard-won peace accord.
By framing the peace agreement as a non-negotiable moral commitment, the critical outlets make any deviation appear as a betrayal, thus delegitimizing the embassy move without directly opposing it.
The positive economic and security benefits of the alliance with Israel, as highlighted by the incoming government, are downplayed or omitted.
Russia observes the realignment in Latin America with detached pragmatism, treating it as a normal diplomatic shift.
By reporting the event without any evaluative language, the Russian press normalizes the move and avoids taking sides, implicitly suggesting that such alignments are routine and unremarkable.
The internal Colombian criticism of the embassy move and the potential geopolitical implications for Russia's influence in the region are left out.
Israel celebrates the restoration of ties with Colombia as a diplomatic triumph that reverses the previous government's hostility and opens new avenues for cooperation.
By highlighting concrete mutual benefits (ambassador exchange, visa abolition, development aid) and framing the move as a return to a 'historical alliance', the Israeli narrative makes the embassy relocation appear natural and beneficial for both sides.
The internal Colombian opposition to the embassy move, particularly concerns about the peace process and alignment with US interests, is entirely absent.
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