Panama Says It Will Not Renew ‘Belt and Road’ Agreement With China After Rubio Visit

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The announcement followed President Jose Mulino’s meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Panama City on Sunday.
Panama President José Raúl Mulino said on Sunday that his country will not renew its memorandum of understanding with China to be a part of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
Speaking to reporters, Mulino said the agreement is due for renewal in two years and his government is looking into the possibility of terminating it earlier, according to local media reports.
“We are going to study the possibility of whether it can be finished earlier or not. I think it is due for renewal in one or two years,” he said in Spanish.
“I do not feel that there is any real threat at this time against the [neutrality] treaty, its validity,” the Panamanian leader said.
Panama signed the agreement to join China’s global infrastructure project in 2017 under the former administration of President Juan Carlos Varela after it severed diplomatic ties with Taiwan.
U.S. officials have warned that the BRI project is “debt-trap diplomacy” by the CCP. Around the world, the CCP has offered loans through BRI agreements to developing nations for infrastructure projects that have ultimately led to unsustainable debt levels for participating nations, leaving their strategic infrastructure vulnerable to control by China.
During their talks on Feb. 2, Rubio told Mulino that U.S. President Donald Trump is concerned about the CCP’s “current position of influence and control” over the Panama Canal area, citing the neutrality treaty.
“I understand that this is a concern of President Donald Trump, given the time when these treaties were signed and the current situation” of Hong Kong-based Hutchison Ports operating the ports at both ends of the canal, Mulino said.
Panama also pledged to form a technical team to “clarify any doubts” that U.S. officials may have about the operations of the waterway, his office stated.
Mulino added that Panama would expand its July 2024 memorandum of understanding with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to assist U.S. authorities on illegal immigration issues.
Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-MI) praised Rubio for his efforts in countering the CCP’s influence in Panama.
The United States spent a decade building the Panama Canal, which connects the Caribbean Sea with the Pacific Ocean. In 1999, under the 1977 treaty, Panama took control of the 51-mile-long waterway.
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Eva Fu contributed to this report.
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