Rubio, echoing
President Donald Trump’s complaints about Chinese influence over the waterway,
warned that the US would “take measures necessary to protect its rights” unless
Panama makes immediate changes, the State Department said after Rubio met
President Jose Raul Mulino.The
Panamanian leader played down the tensions but reiterated his country won’t
give up the canal, as his government offered other concessions to the US.
The canal
authority said late Sunday it will “optimize transit priority” of US
Navy ships through the waterway. Mulino assured Rubio that US Navy vessels
would enjoy free passage, a US official said. Panamanian officials didn’t
immediately respond to a request for comment on that assertion.Trump in
December complained about what he called “exorbitant” rates that he said Panama
charged the US Navy and companies for using the canal and threatened to retake
control.
Mulino also said his
country would not renew its participation in China’s Belt and Road Initiative,
making Panama the first Latin American country to do so. He added that his government will evaluate whether to pull out before
its current agreement ends in 2026.
US National Security
Adviser Mike Waltz called that move a “step in the right direction” in a post
on X. A US official said
that while positive, the move doesn’t fully resolve concerns about the
canal. Speaking to reporters after the meeting with Rubio Sunday, Mulino
called the session “respectful and cordial.” “I don’t sense any real threat against the treaty or its validity, and
much less of the use of military force to take over the canal,” he said in
Spanish. “I don’t sense that.”
Asked about the
situation Sunday evening, Trump told reporters that he doesn’t think troops
will be necessary to assure US interests in the canal.“China’s running the
Panama Canal,” Trump said. “We’re going to take it back or something very
powerful is going to happen.”
While Panama has
dismissed Trump’s allegations, China’s influence has been growing in the
region. In 2017, a previous Panamanian government severed diplomatic ties with
Taiwan and declared that there was “only one China” — a move that has occurred
in several Latin American nations in recent years.Panamacommited to joining the
Belt and Road program in late 2017, signing a three-year rolling pact. The
country’s membership will automatically renew again in late 2026 unless Panama
— or Beijing — decides to terminate the agreement.
China’s Foreign Ministry has said that it will
always respect Panama’s sovereignty over the canal, and recognizes it as a
permanently neutral international waterway. The Ministry didn’t reply to a request for comment on Panama’s vow to
leave the Belt and Road initiative during a public holiday.
The US built the canal at the start of the 20th
century and ceded it back to Panama in 1999 under a treaty signed by President
Jimmy Carter in 1977 — a move that Trump called foolish.The 51-mile
(82-kilometer) canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans is a major
strategic asset. It has also has been a choke point for global trade as Panama
has suffered a prolonged drought that has impeded crossings.