US-Colombia relations remain strong and cooperative, with no recent military tensions or indications of US strikes, which would contradict longstanding bilateral security partnerships focused on counter-narcotics and migration. In the past 30 days, key developments include continued joint operations against drug cartels and diplomatic coordination on Venezuelan refugee flows, reinforcing alliance stability rather than conflict. No official statements from the White House, Pentagon, or Colombian government signal escalation risks. Structural barriers—such as NATO-like mutual interests, international law prohibiting unprovoked attacks on allies, and congressional oversight on military actions—anchor trader consensus at low probabilities for any strike. Upcoming events like bilateral summits could further affirm de-escalation, absent unforeseen diplomatic ruptures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$1,477,399 Vol.
March 31
1%
December 31
22%
$1,477,399 Vol.
March 31
1%
December 31
22%
For the purposes of this market, a qualifying "strike" is defined as the use of aerial bombs, drones, or missiles (including FPV and ATGM strikes as well as cruise or ballistic missiles) launched by any United States operatives, including military forces, intelligence agencies, or other U.S. government operatives, that physically impact ground territory within the listed country.
A strike on any area within the terrestrial territory (including rivers, lakes, ports, but excluding territorial sea) of the listed country counts.
Missiles or drones that are intercepted and surface-to-air missile strikes will not be sufficient for a "Yes" resolution, regardless of whether they land territory or cause damage.
Actions such as artillery fire, small arms fire, ground incursions, naval shelling, or cyberattacks will not qualify.
Any strike occurring during this market’s timeframe that is claimed by either Donald Trump or the U.S. government will qualify.
The primary resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
This market will remain open until the end of the second day after the resolution time. If the date/time of a qualifying strike cannot be confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting by that time, it will resolve to "No" regardless of whether a strike was later confirmed to have taken place.
Market Opened: Jan 4, 2026, 2:46 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...US-Colombia relations remain strong and cooperative, with no recent military tensions or indications of US strikes, which would contradict longstanding bilateral security partnerships focused on counter-narcotics and migration. In the past 30 days, key developments include continued joint operations against drug cartels and diplomatic coordination on Venezuelan refugee flows, reinforcing alliance stability rather than conflict. No official statements from the White House, Pentagon, or Colombian government signal escalation risks. Structural barriers—such as NATO-like mutual interests, international law prohibiting unprovoked attacks on allies, and congressional oversight on military actions—anchor trader consensus at low probabilities for any strike. Upcoming events like bilateral summits could further affirm de-escalation, absent unforeseen diplomatic ruptures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



Beware of external links.
Beware of external links.
Frequently Asked Questions