Which loose-lipped diplomat leaked Colombia’s alleged plot to topple Maduro?

Francisco Santos, Colombia's ambassador to Washington DC, said La Folha's story was "fake news."

Colombia’s foreign minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo wants the top diplomat who suggested a military intervention to Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo to resign. He just doesn’t know who it is.

During a press conference in Bogota, Trujillo rejected the claims that Colombia would be willing to overthrow the neighboring government that was reportedly made by an anonymous diplomat to the Brazilian newspaper’s correspondent in the United States.


Colombia suggests alliance with Brazil’s Bolsonaro to overthrow Venezuela’s Maduro: report


Carlos Holmes Trujillo

Trujillo reminded the newly appointed diplomats that “no member of Colombia’s diplomatic corps may transmit positions that do not correspond with those determined by the president.”

The foreign minister said he would investigate who leaked the alleged plot and warned that the diplomat who suggested a military alliance to overthrow the neighboring government could be asked to “resign from his duties.”

Brazil’s far-right president-elect almost immediately rejected the suggestion, but Folha’s correspondent, Sylvia Colombo, insisted that there have been talks between Duque administration officials and Bolsonaro’s team.


Bolsonaro rejects Colombia’s suggestion to intervene in Venezuela


“I have heard this from Colombian and Brazilian officials,” the US-based journalist told Colombian media, adding that she received a “pretty insulting” phone call from Colombia’s ambassador in Brazil, Alejandro Borda, demanding she reveal her source.

The usual suspect

Colombia’s ambassador to the United States and notorious loose cannon Francisco Santos reacted almost immediately and told far-right news website “Los Irreverentes” that the story published by one of Latin America’s most renowned journalists was “fake news.”

Francisco Santos

Santos, the far-right Alejandro Ordoñez (Organization of American States) and career diplomat Guillermo Fernandez (United Nations) are the only diplomats appointed to positions in the United States where the journalist is a correspondent.

Former president Juan Manuel Santos’ cousin was scolded by Duque shortly after his appointment in September for publicly mentioning possible military intervention in Venezuela in public.

Ordoñez and Fernandez did not make public statements about the unfolding diplomatic intrigue.

Trujillo’s tough job

With war drums sounding louder on both sides of the border, Trujillo tried to dispel the alleged plotting of Duque and his political patron Alvaro Uribe with Bolsonaro.

But that didn’t go very well; the Duque administration is facing strong opposition from the left at home, has failed to gain credibility and has lost public support in their first 10 weeks in office.

Opposition politician and political scientist Gabriel Becerra

The journalist asked her Twitter followers to decide for themselves “who is telling the truth?”

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