
Chile is the newest Latin America nation caught up in a U.S.-China power confrontation.
The nation, which recognizes Washington as its primary foreign investor and Beijing as its biggest trade partner, is under pressure from the U.S. regarding a subsea cable initiative that involves China.
In an unexpected announcement, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated late last week that the Trump administration would enforce visa restrictions on three Chilean officials associated with a digital cable venture proposed by Chinese companies, citing security concerns.
Chilean President Gabriel Boric, set to leave his position on March 11, denounced the visa restrictions and dismissed claims that the nation “endorses actions that endanger our security or that of the region.”
Chile’s departing left-wing administration later indicated that one of the targeted officials was Minister of Transport and Telecommunications Juan Carlos Muñoz, declining to identify the other two.
The U.S. envoy to Chile, Brandon Judd, defended the visa measures on Monday, telling reporters that it is Washington’s “sovereign right to act when we sense that the security of the region is at risk,” as reported by The Associated Press.
This conflict arises just before a summit of Latin American leaders in Miami, Florida — and two weeks ahead of the new right-wing government taking charge in Chile.
This also signifies a significant challenge for José Antonio Kast‘s forthcoming administration, succeeding the victory of the right-wing candidate in last year’s elections.
Experts suggest U.S. President Donald Trump, aiming to counteract China’s regional influence, is delivering a clear message to Latin American nations.
‘A measured alert’
The tensions between the U.S. and Chile were, primarily, “a measured alert” to the Kast administration that choices concerning strategic infrastructure will be regarded as geopolitical alignment decisions — not neutral bids, according to Mariano Machado, Americas principal analyst at risk intelligence firm Verisk Maplecroft.
Certainly, digital undersea cables constitute the foundation of the global internet and telecommunications framework, facilitating everything from international calls to financial operations. According to some estimates, around 95% of international communication traverses these mostly invisible data super-highways.
“The immediate external outcome is that Kast’s forthcoming diplomatic visits to Washington – particularly, in the Shield of the Americas summit – will serve as preliminary assessments of how Chile navigates partnerships under duress,” Machado stated.
“As competition between the U.S. and China escalates in the region, Chile’s goal of becoming a ‘digital hub’ will be viable only if geopolitical issues are addressed upfront, not rectified post-crisis,” he elaborated. “Successful arrangements will be those that establish transparent governance and reliable security assurances early enough to maintain financial viability.”
China’s diplomatic mission in Chile has allegedly accused the U.S. of “clear disregard for the sovereignty, dignity, and national interests of Chile” in light of the Trump administration’s visa restrictions against Chilean officials.
China’s economic and strategic sway in Latin America is firmly established, even though it is perceived to be the subject of Trump’s so-called “Donroe Doctrine” — a blend of Donald Trump and the Monroe Doctrine, which pertains to a 19th-century foreign policy stance asserting U.S. influence over the Western Hemisphere.
In recent weeks, for instance, Panama’s supreme court ruled against CK Hutchison, based in Hong Kong, declaring that a concession held by a subsidiary of the company to operate ports at either extremity of the Panama Canal was unconstitutional. This decision was widely perceived as a win for Trump’s regional security aspirations.
The U.S. has also intensified pressure on Cuba’s communist regime, threatening tariffs on any nation that supplies oil to Havana, and recently executed an extraordinary military operation to oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.










