Colombia’s presidential runoff next Sunday is not a mere democratic exercise. It is a strategic inflection point in the hemisphere’s balance of power, with direct implications for UK national security. The contest pits Gustavo Petro, a former M-19 guerrilla turned leftist senator, against Rodolfo Hernández, a pro-Trump populist. London must treat this as a threat vector, not a distant electoral curiosity.
Petro’s policy platform includes renegotiating free trade agreements, suspending oil exploration, and embracing a “total peace” process with remaining guerrilla groups. For the UK, which has deepened trade and investment ties with Bogotá since the 2016 peace deal, a Petro victory would disrupt a key strategic partner. Colombia is the UK’s third-largest export market in Latin America. More critically, Petro has signalled closer alignment with Venezuela and Cuba, potentially creating a hostile corridor from the Caribbean to the Andean ridge.
Hernández, by contrast, campaigned on a law-and-order platform, promising to restore US-Colombia relations and maintain the current free-trade architecture. His victory would likely preserve the status quo: continued military cooperation with the US and NATO, and a reliable partner for UK defence exports. But Hernández’s unorthodox style and lack of a formal party structure raise questions about governance stability.
The UK’s interest is not altruistic. Colombia sits atop the Pacific Alliance, a trade bloc that offers a counterweight to Chinese influence. A Petro presidency could see Bogotá pivot towards Beijing, granting access to Colombia’s rare earth minerals and Pacific port infrastructure. Chinese state media has already praised Petro’s campaign. For UK intelligence, this mirrors the playbook seen in Sri Lanka and the Solomon Islands: economic dependency followed by strategic concessions.
Hardware and logistics matter here. Colombia’s oil fields represent 2% of global production. A halt in exploration would tighten global supply, precisely when the UK faces energy price shocks. Moreover, Colombia is a key source of coal for British steelmakers. Political instability could disrupt supply chains, amplifying cost-of-living pressures in the UK.
But the gravest risk is cyber and hybrid warfare. Both campaigns have reported hacking attempts. A compromised electoral outcome would provide a pretext for foreign interference claims, destabilising Colombia’s democratic institutions. UK cyber units should be on high alert: the Greyzone attacks that targeted Ukraine in 2014 could easily be adapted for Colombian critical infrastructure.
Military readiness is another factor. Colombia is a non-NATO ally, hosting US counter-narcotics bases and providing troops for UN missions. A Petro government could expel US advisors, creating a vacuum for illicit actors. The UK’s investment in Colombian maritime security to counter drug trafficking would be wasted. The flow of cocaine to European ports would increase, potentially funding terrorist cells in West Africa and the Balkans.
In the final analysis, the Colombian runoff is a strategic pivot. A Petro win would signal a shift from pro-Western alignment to a non-aligned or hostile posture. For the UK, the cost is not just diplomatic but material. The Foreign Office should be preparing contingency plans: freezing assets, diversifying supply chains, and strengthening cyber defences. The chess moves are being made. London must respond not with hope, but with hardened intelligence assessments.









