From Honduras to Cuba and Venezuela, leaders are taking a more transactional view of what relations with Beijing really bring
3-MIN READ3-MIN ListenJuan Fernando Herrera RamosJuan Fernando Herrera Ramos is a Honduras-born journalist based in Taiwan covering Asia–Latin America relations, geopolitics, and supply-chain issues. Published: 8:30pm, 11 May 2026China’s position in Latin America is far from collapsing, looking at the number of countries in the region that have switched diplomatic ties from Taipei to Beijing. But in parts of the continent, governments are increasingly reassessing what their relationships with Beijing are delivering economically and politically.
The shift is becoming visible in countries such as Honduras, Venezuela and Cuba, where economic strain, energy instability and geopolitical pressure are exposing the limits of partnerships that only a few years ago appeared strategically transformative.
For Beijing, Latin America remains an important arena for diplomacy, trade and long-term geopolitical influence. Chinese investment, infrastructure financing and commodity demand has helped expand its presence across the region during the past two decades. But recent developments suggest that diplomatic gains alone may no longer guarantee durable political or economic influence.
Honduras has emerged as one of the clearest examples.
But expectations surrounding the relationship have increasingly come under pressure.