Panama, familiar with US intervention, bristles at Trump's remarks on canal

American ships are being severely overcharged and not treated fairly in any way, shape or form, and that includes the United States Navy

Donald Trump
US President Donald Trump walks past supporters as he arrives inside Capital One Arena on the inauguration day of his second presidential term, in Washington, US January 20, 2025. | Photo: Reuters
AP Panama City
4 min read Last Updated : Jan 21 2025 | 12:09 PM IST

US President Donald Trump's insistence Monday that he wants to have the Panama Canal back under US control fed nationalist sentiment and worry in Panama, home to the critical trade route and a country familiar with US military intervention.

American ships are being severely overcharged and not treated fairly in any way, shape or form, and that includes the United States Navy. And above all, China is operating the Panama Canal, Trump said Monday.

In the streets of the capital, some Panamanians saw Trump's remarks as a way of applying pressure on Panama for something else he wants: better control of migration through the Darien Gap. Others recalled the 1989 US invasion of Panama with concern.

Panama President Jos Ral Mulino responded forcefully Monday, as he did after Trump's initial statement last month that the US should consider repossessing the canal, saying the canal belongs to his country of 4 million and will remain Panama's territory.

Luis Barrera, a 52-year-old cab driver, said Panama had fought hard to get the canal back and has expanded it since taking control.

I really feel uncomfortable because it's like when you're big and you take a candy from a little kid, Barrera said.

At a rally in Phoenix in December, Trump said he might try to get the canal back after it was foolishly ceded to Panama. He complained that shippers were overcharged and that China had taken control of the key shortcut between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

Earlier this month, Trump wouldn't rule out using military force to take it back.

The United States built the canal in the early 1900s as it looked for ways to facilitate the transit of commercial and military vessels between its coasts. Washington relinquished control of the waterway to Panama on Dec. 31, 1999, under a treaty signed in 1977 by President Jimmy Carter.

The canal is a point of pride for Panamanians. On Dec. 31, they celebrated the 25th anniversary of the handover, and days later they commemorated the deaths of 21 Panamanians who died at the hands of the US military decades earlier.

On Jan. 9, 1964, students protested in the then-US controlled canal zone over not being allowed to fly Panama's flag at a secondary school there. The protests expanded to general opposition to the US presence in Panama and US. troops got involved. A group of protesters this year burned an effigy of Trump.

The canal's administrator, Ricaurte Vsquez, said this month that China is not in control of the canal and that all nations are treated equally under a neutrality treaty.

He said Chinese companies operating in the ports on either end of the canal were part of a Hong Kong consortium that won a bidding process in 1997. He added that US and Taiwanese companies operate other ports along the canal as well.

Omayra Avendao, who works in real estate, said Trump's threat should be taken seriously.

We should be worried, she said. We don't have an army and he's said he would use force.

On Dec. 20, 1989, the US military invaded Panama to remove dictator Manuel Noriega. Some 27,000 troops were tasked by then-President George H.W. Bush with capturing Noriega, protecting the lives of Americans living in Panama and restoring democracy to the country that a decade later would take over control of the Panama Canal.

Avendao said she was 11 years old the last time the US invaded her country and hoped Panama's current government would seek international support to head off Trump's designs on the canal.

I remember the disaster that it was, she said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :United StatesPanamaChinaDonald Trump

First Published: Jan 21 2025 | 12:09 PM IST

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