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Renee Parsons

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U.S. Hegemony in Latin America

Posted: 04/25/2012 5:45 pm

While the 'misconduct' of Secret Service agents with prostitutes in Colombia is a significant, if titillating scandal, most media reports have missed the tectonic political shift that surfaced at the recent Summit of the Americas meeting.

The Summit, an offshoot of the Organization of American States organized in 1948, consists of 35 western hemisphere nations that meet on a tri-annual basis with the U.S. historically setting the agenda since the summit's inception in 1994.

The president arrived, smooth and impeccable, with, no doubt, the expectation of encouraging new investment and trade initiatives at the first business seminar conducted since the Summits began. Attending were over three hundred U.S. business executives with Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue in attendance to push for a free trade deal with Brazil. Once China began out-hustling the U.S. for its share of the global pie in Latin America and as the U.S. bogged down in a decade of war with an enduring economic catastrophe on its hands, Summit countries took the opportunity to readjust their vision of Uncle Sam's once omnipotent authority. That readjusted vision has offered a measure of independence from U.S. trade markets as well as U.S. domination on policy decisions. While not known for its historical memory, the U.S. does not usually react kindly to previously compliant nations flexing their sovereign muscles, U.S. AID to Latin American and the Caribbean at $1.3 billion in 2010 will most likely provide the necessary tether for continued cooperation.

Out of left field, the president's usual razzle dazzle charm offensive so successful at his first summit in 2009 ran into a brick wall amid deep contentious divisions that had been brewing since the previous summit. In what may be karmic payback for one hundred and fifty years of U.S. policy imposed on Latin America, 32 nations supported a resolution that Cuba be allowed to attend the 2015 summit with only the U.S. and the reliable Canadians voting against. Cuba had been expelled from the OAS in 1962 with the beginning of 50 years of economic sanctions and was readmitted in 2009 but not invited to the summit.

In an amiable display of hubris, the president dug in his heels insisting that Cuba cannot attend since it has "not yet moved to democracy" and is still a "single party state" meaning no adversarial political parties. As Obama spoke of democracy, the irony of the U.S. undermining democratically elected Latin American heads of state and now requiring democracy as a condition for membership must have been subject for some sarcasm among current summit leaders. A summit rule adopted in 2001 required each participant to respect the rule of law as a 'democratic' country although Mexico, which had been a regular Summit participant since 1994, achieved real democracy only in 2000. How well each participant respects the rule of law and encourages robust political partisan debate may rest in the eye of the beholder.

It is curious that American leaders expect its citizens and other nations to not connect the dots when it comes to its own double standards. It would be educational to know how the U.S. would justify applying the summit's democracy rule to China, our third largest trading partner, or to Saudi Arabia, our favorite importer of petroleum, neither known as guiding lights for justice or equality. If the democratic standard is that a majority vote carries the day and since an overwhelming majority of summit nations adopted the Cuban resolution, how is democracy served when a minority of two have the power to challenge that resolution's implementation and how is it that one nation gets to decide who is invited? Therein lies the problem for U.S. foreign policy around the world -- that other nations and its people are capable of 'seeing' beyond the pretense.

As a backdrop for atmosphere at the summit, the experience of Bolivia is informative. In 2008, the Bush Administration suspended 'trade preferences' including duty free status for Bolivia alleging an insufficient effort to stop drug trafficking. The move came less than a month after Bolivian President Evo Morales accused the U.S. Ambassador of fomenting violence and upheaval with right wing opposition groups. In expelling the envoy, Morales accused the U.S. of an attack on a gas pipeline and initiating an assassination conspiracy. With the election of Barack Obama, diplomatic relations between the two countries were set back when the Bush suspension was made permanent, costing Bolivia 20,000 non-drug industry related jobs and $278 million in exports. The coca leaf is legal in Bolivia as a tea and for religious and cultural purposes.

If the discussion on Cuba was not a forewarning of a challenge to its authority, the U.S. response to decriminalizing drugs must have been especially irksome to nation who has lived with years of massive violence and corruption from the drug cartels. Fareed Zakaria reported Sunday on CNN that Mexico had suffered an unbelievable 50,000 drug related deaths in the last six years.

While U.S. strategy at the Summit may be viewed as a metaphor for American pursuit of obsolete Cold War objectives around the world, the president offered little more than platitudes and some confusion with his categorical statement that "For the sake of the health and safety of our citizens -- all our citizens -- the United States will not be going in this direction."

It remains a puzzle as to why Obama, greeted as a rock star at the 2009 summit, left no room for negotiation on an issue that isolates the U.S. from many of its south-of-the-border allies and causes great anguish for millions of American families. With over two million incarcerated and another five million on probation, the U.S. can claim to have the most citizens in jail for drug-related offenses than any other country in the world.

Latin American leaders have raised the issue with the U.S. in the past when the former presidents of Mexico, Colombia and Brazil called for decriminalization of marijuana in 2009. The U.S. drug policy, which has spent $25 billion on ineffectual crop eradication and border interdiction efforts as it has encouraged a militarization of the failed war on drugs, the president's 'new environment of cooperation' hit a serious ditch in the road as the U.S. and Canada objected to a consensus document preferring the 'reduce-demand' theory reminiscent of Nancy Reagan's Just Say No campaign.

In what has been deemed a setback for the U.S., the sixth Summit of the Americas faltered to an unhappy conclusion for all participants with President Morales and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff predicting no future summits without Cuba.

The president seriously misread the mood in the hemisphere, especially in an awkward moment when he said "Sometimes I feel as if... we're caught in a time warp, going back to the 1950s, gunboat diplomacy, and Yankees and the Cold War, and so forth, and not addressing the world we live in."
That was, Mr. President, exactly the problem at Cartagena. The Summit wants to move forward into the 21st Century but it is the United States that clings to the past as it resists the will of the majority.

 
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John McAuliff
08:50 PM on 04/26/2012
The US suffered a major strategic defeat at the Summit of the Americas. The President was ill served by the National Security Council and State Department which did not warn him of US isolation and provide a creative diplomatic alternative.

He should find an opportunity to undo the damage, now rather than waiting until after the election. Serious negotiation for Alan Gross's release instead of rhetoric is the place to start.

John McAuliff
Fund for Reconciliation and Development
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TRUTHHURTS500
04:13 PM on 04/26/2012
The Latin country are no longer willing to be under the foot of the imperialistic West and that includes the US. Argentina just privatized their oil industry to keep the greed Westerned investors out of their country because all they do is steal. They are already buying and trading with gold and the yen, bypassing the Euro and Dollar.

Qaddahfi was killed for other reasons beside humanitarian, it had nothing to do with that. It had everything to do with currency. He was helping African Nations become less dependent on the West, especially France with still have their foot on their neck. Everyone is knows how evil American investors are, how they still and ignore human rights. The US are the biggest hypcrites!
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TRUTHHURTS500
04:07 PM on 04/26/2012
That's why it's hard to support Obama, cheer for Colin Powell becoming the first minority Secretary of State and Condi Rice the first minority woman to become secretary of state. Obama, Powell and Rice know the history of the US, France and Britian. How they colonialized countries, used imperialism to oppress and have any unfair upperhand, and uses bullying tatics to force countries to vote along side them. They know how imperialism has been used against Africans and people of African decent. I have no respect for any of them. They are supporting the same mentality that oppressed Africans and people of African decent in the first place.
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ForeignFlier
11:52 AM on 04/26/2012
I wish that the same heads of state who were so insistent in having Cuba invited to the Summit in Cartagena would raise their voices with the same strenght denouncing the abuses and repression that cubans have to suffer on a daily basis by the Castro Gestapo called "Seguridad del Estado".
They violate with impunity and arbitrarily all the basic rights of the people through force and intimidation.... The complicity of all these heads of state with the Castro dictatorship is shameful and reprehensible.... Shame on all of them for remaining silent to so much abuse of power....
10:17 AM on 04/26/2012
Cuba is changing rapidly. Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez, the current paymaster for Cuba, won't be around much longer. Some raprochement with the United States is inevitable.
10:03 AM on 04/26/2012
The problem with the US government is too much corporate influence.  US policy towards Latin America is driven primarily by those corporate interests, which is why the war on drugs and free trade continue.  The war on drugs and free trade benefit only certain corporations, and hurt everyone else, both in the US and Latin America.  What we need in the US is separation of government and private corporations.   It should be as strictly enforced as separation of church and state.
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jwashmon
Usually, everyone is right to a certain degree....
09:43 AM on 04/26/2012
Having lived for 17 years in Latin America, and traveling the region, we are liked as a people, very much. The Government, not so much. They are all Catholic, to the extent that religion is not really a factor for regional problems there. What is a problem is simple, some countries are democratic, and some are Dictatorships, with most in the middle. Nowhere is there a problem that is not moving in the right direction. Judging from my experience they will do the right thing about Drug Legalization. However, what is a problem is the money we give governments to fight drug producers/trafficers in the Region. This has caused a war, that is fueled with mostly American Money. We the people of America are sending boat loads of money to both sides of this war. How stupid can we get! Millions to the governments with a lot more going to the Drug Cartels. The American Government needs to wake up and do something, and that something needs to be legalization. Latin America will lead the way in this. Republicans are like Castro, get control and keep it, at the expense of most of the "goverened." Venezuela went too far left, after being too far right. It is similar to what is happening in America now. The Right Wingnuts need to be allowed to exist out on the fring, but not allowed to move America in their direction any more. We need Balance, but not the FOX News kind!
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Jerry Bourbon
10:23 AM on 04/26/2012
*They are all Catholic*? Haven´t travelled in Brazil much, or southern Mexico, one supposes,,,
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
08:59 AM on 04/26/2012
Maybe with all the NAFTA/GAFTA bifta-bafta ad nauseam, we've finally ended up becoming the authors of our own misery, here. I think the 21st century focus should be on making the US an independent country, again. These other countries have their own Con Me's, are generally able to support themselves and tie their own shoes, and if we hold with the general concept of independence, then why all the apparent empire-building? 21st century, nothing stopping these countries from having thriving, prosperous trade relations with each other and other countries NOT the United States, except fear and good sense, and maybe it's time they did just that. Whatever happened with BRIC, did that ever grow legs?
11:46 PM on 04/25/2012
Once again, reports of weakening U.S. influence and cooperation in Latin America are greatly exaggerated:

Aside from the Cuba declaration, the U.S. came out of the summit with real trade deals.

Cuba isn't going to be a game-changer, ever, as much as the leftists wish it to be so. Basically, a buck is a buck...a peso is a peso...and no country is going to cut its economic throat to support Castro(s).

For God's sake--Hugo still sells his oil to the U.S., doesn't he?
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
12:17 PM on 04/26/2012
I think things are always changing. Central/latin American countries still look to the US to be their primary source of economic support, whether it's a bag of dope or a sack of coffee beans, they know where the market is, ultimately. Hopefully, in the future, they will diversify, and get into that global market-stuff themselves, buy things like cargo boats and airplanes and participate in commerce like they mean business. It's high time that some of these countries really dug into it, and became less reliant on the US. We can grow our own coffee beans.
02:51 PM on 04/26/2012
Your avatar explains the situation:

Anyone with money in Latin America wants to marry themselves with U.S. interests, because it's all about business and investing your money wisely. And most of this money still goes to the U.S., and of course, deals with China.

But let's face it--the "manana" attitude of Latin America, plus its deep-rooted history of corruption and sheer laziness, hasn't changed at all. It's simply a cultural thing.

And when you ask people in ALL of Latin America where they would most like to emigrate, it's overwhelmingly the U.S.--never their Latin neighbors.

Reality DOES always trump bull, as your avatar says, but I don't think you're opening your eyes to what that reality actually is. And growing coffee beans ain't really gonna cut it when it comes to substantial economic development.