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Rick Sanchez

Rick Sanchez

Posted: March 21, 2011 05:25 PM

Why South of the Border Matters North of the Border


Mr. President, you were right to go to Latin America. And your critics on the right, and your supporters on the left, were both wrong for criticizing you and for supporting you for the wrong reasons.

Latin America is used to being short-shrifted by U.S. presidents. Your predecessors, Mr. Clinton and Mr. Bush, did little to change that. And you, Mr. President, bungled the 2009 Honduras coup d'état, which only further exemplified your lack of coherent leadership when it comes to the region. So it was time to give this important region the attention and respect it deserves, to go there and meet with their leaders, and to do right by Latin America.

Speaking of the "right," some Republicans say you should not have gone to Latin America in the first place because it's like taking your family on a vacation, a spring break. Some said you "bolted to Brazil."

Translation: there is nothing substantive in Latin America, just parties and Rio de Janeiro. And there's certainly nothing significant for an American president to do there.

It's an insulting insinuation, one that takes aim at one of the world's most important regions as well as this nation's fastest-growing minority: Hispanics. It's no wonder that Hispanic support for Republicans is fading faster than Arizona Governor Jan Brewer's make-up on a hot summer day.

Ostensibly, Republicans say their criticism is based on the fact that there's just so much other "stuff" right now, most notably Japan and Libya, and that having you travel means you're not focused on -- and can't be focused on -- what's going on elsewhere. But that's also a straw man because there's always other stuff going on.

Lest anyone forget, we live in the 21st century. This isn't the Kennedy White House with a big red phone on the desk, where we have to stand idly by waiting for it to ring. Today, you can get that 3 am phone call anywhere: we live in an age of remote offices, secure communications -- faxes, emails, phone calls, teleconferences -- satellites, computers, BlackBerries, iPhones, and Internet access and cable television 24/7.

In fact, Air Force One boasts a mobile Oval Office. The plane is capable of refueling mid-air, has hardened electronics capable of withstanding an electromagnetic pulse, and has advanced secure communications that allow it to serve as a mobile command center in the event of an attack against the U.S. I hear they even have pens and pencils on board.

And you know what? It works. This past weekend, with you in Latin America and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Paris, you coordinated and ordered military airstrikes against Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.

You and Secretary Clinton weren't the only ones working remotely. Joining Secretary Clinton in Paris was British Prime Minister David Cameron, whose country also took part in enforcing the no-fly zone in Libya.

The idea that a trip or other important presidential business needs to be put on hold, otherwise everything will come to a screeching halt, is ludicrous. You coordinated with Secretary Clinton in Paris, Ambassador Rice in New York, the Pentagon in Washington, military commanders on the ground in the region, and none of it -- not one bit of it -- would have been any different if you were sitting at your desk in the White House instead of your desk on Air Force One.

But before we pass judgment on Republicans alone, let us consider what the Democrats are saying -- which also minimizes the importance of this trip. Sure, they're defending your trip to Latin America. But they're doing so with simple arguments about how this is important "for American jobs."

Well, they're just as wrong as their counterparts.

Going to Latin America isn't a party, it doesn't interfere with your duties, and it's not about job creation. It's about far more than that. Going to Latin America is the work of the president, important and essential work, and it's in our national and strategic interest.

It's about treating Latin America as equal partners, something you, President Obama, promised at the Summit of the Americas in 2009. It's about cultivating a stronger relationship with this part of the world and sending a message to Latin America, as well as Latino-Americans here at home, about their importance in the global economy as well as national and international politics.

Even in the face of a Japan reeling from a series of incomprehensible natural disasters and a Libya in turmoil, our relationship with Latin America needs to be nurtured and strengthened for reasons often ignored by the U.S. news media.

Latin America's importance to the global economy is immense and growing. Capital investment into the region has increased 405% to $6.6 billion in the last year alone, and Brazil is leading the pack. The country has the fifth largest population in the world and the seventh largest economy in the world. It will host the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics in 2016, and more significantly, may be on the verge of tapping significant oil fields. It's in our national interest for the U.S. to be on the ground floor of Brazil's growth and to become an important and essential ally to them.

Investment opportunity in the Americas isn't just a one-way street. 3G Capital, a firm backed by Brazilian investors, recently purchased Burger King for $3.3 billion -- the largest restaurant acquisition in a decade. And in 2008, Belgian-Brazilian beer giant InBev acquired Anheuser-Busch for $52 billion. It doesn't get any more American than hamburgers and beer.

President Obama, you will always be needed both domestically and internationally. But by going to Latin America this past week, you showed the region -- and Latinos here at home -- that we matter. Thank you for doing the right thing.

 
Mr. President, you were right to go to Latin America. And your critics on the right, and your supporters on the left, were both wrong for criticizing you and for supporting you for the wrong reasons.
Mr. President, you were right to go to Latin America. And your critics on the right, and your supporters on the left, were both wrong for criticizing you and for supporting you for the wrong reasons.
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patches12
09:21 PM on 03/27/2011
Style over substance.. how many Hispanics did Obama appoint to key leadership positions..

Answer = not nearly as many as Bush....

http://www.thelatinojournal.com/2008/12/latinos-ignored-for-top-spots-in-obama.html
lightnessandjoy
Is micro-bio a new disease?
06:34 PM on 03/27/2011
South America is currently home to some of the most dynamic, vibrant economies in the world. What a different world we would live in now if we had spent the last five decades truly promoting democracy and economic development in South America instead of funding and supporting brutal dictatorships and corporate interests intent on stealing their wealth. We've got a lot of catching up to do and Obama's visit was an important baby step in that direction. As to all of the (north) America firsters back home, as I sit in my apartment in Santiago, Chile and follow the news back home and think about returning my first question is always - to what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Quixote
The GOP is on my last nerve
12:37 PM on 03/27/2011
Forget that we're just one America of all The Americas in our hemisphere. Forget that just Mexico alone is our second trading partner. Forget that collectively Latin Americans are more populous than us. Forget that we have a shared common history of European colonization and successful independent struggles for independence, all of which resulted in very nearly an entire hemisphere of constitutional democratic republics. Forget the wealthiest U.S. territory that was once a part of Latin America. Forget that nearly a fifth of our own population are Latin American immigrants or their descendants, many of whose ancestors were either indigeneous or were here before the formation of the U.S. Forget that the most spoken language of Latin America was spoken here nearly a century before the English even arrived.

Forget...
10:45 AM on 03/27/2011
I am German American and I most certainly don't feel that whether or not Obama goes to Germany or not decides whether or not I matter in the US. Nor do I think that his going to Europe decides that either for European Americans. Of course, ALL of Latin America is populated by European immigrants too and they mostly ALL speak a European language.

It is absurd to regard ones own ethnicity as being "honored" or slighted by Presidential visits. You and I are AMERICANS first and foremost. It is about time to start looking at ourselves in that light. The civil rights movement was ALL about THAT!
01:08 PM on 03/27/2011
Irish American Individual Fanning.
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05:37 PM on 03/27/2011
Dude, as the US displaces agricultural land for housing and other construction, as it converts acreage from food production to biofuels, the US is increasingly importing fruits, vegetables, and other food stocks from South America. Brazil is no longer dependent on foreign oil. As it expands its own oil reserves development, the US can turn to Brazil instead of OPEC and Hugo Chavez in Venezuela. The US is increasingly using goods and services from South American businesses, solid alternatives to Asia. We are helping ourselves as we help, cooperate with, collaborate with, our hemispheric neighbors. BTW, in the civil right movement, equality was the key concept; American exclusivity was a big part of the problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
09:45 AM on 03/27/2011
its in our half of the world...why wouldn't we be engaged with Latin America?
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05:38 PM on 03/27/2011
Indeed, especially since we are already engaged anyway.
11:29 AM on 03/24/2011
Well said, Sanchez. How refreshing to read some plain-spoken truth about both Latin America and our President.
08:31 PM on 03/23/2011
WELL SAID RICK!!!! AND WELCOME BACK
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cowboylove
03:06 PM on 03/23/2011
Thanks for complimenting President Obama for his focus on Latin America. We have ignored it - or interfered covertly - too long. It is time to partner with the greatest region in the world of untapped resources and potential and stop looking at Latinos as them and start seeing them as us.

North and South America have one thing in common - we are all Americans in the truest sense. It is about time we started acting like family.
02:07 PM on 03/23/2011
GREAT article, Rick!!!!! Keep up the good work.
04:48 AM on 03/23/2011
The banks have taken a lot of money from the ignorant from Great Britain to the USA and Europe for over two hundred years. The no-fly zone is to quell immigration, to keep their systems from being over-run. Obama is in Brazil for his and his wealthy friends best interests, make no mistake. Nice guys and softies finish last and Obama learned faster than any president ever from whom to take his marching orders. Our leading leaders in South America know what I am saying and I wish them Godspeed. Brian Elwin Pomeroy
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
R.W. Sanders
Numerous questions, too little expertise
04:28 AM on 03/23/2011
When listing Brazil's resources and making their case as a significant economical power, Rick left out the most important resource. The Amazon rain forest cleans the world's atmosphere. It is more important than all but a few other resources in the world. Brazil has not managed it very well. Too much deforestation. Perhaps the presidents could talk about that problem.
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05:42 PM on 03/27/2011
Check out the drought that decimating Bolivia's Amazon forest. Global climate change may induce a deforestation that can't be mismanaged.
10:00 PM on 03/22/2011
Well said Rick
07:52 PM on 03/22/2011
we've ignored the latin american people since the monroe doctrine...but slept soundly with their dictators. now countries, like brazil and chile, are moving out of their third world status, becoming eco-strong and starting to trade with china. we don't like it. now that they gone from shabby to savvy, we want their business. the fact they live next door, sadly, has nothing to do with it. obama doesn't care about latin americans anymore that any of his predecessors... except to exploit them. unfortunately, potus has only gone south to sell them something...not to show the campesinos that he cares about them. wrong again, taserino. but thanks for playing.
06:54 PM on 03/22/2011
I agree Rick. I also think we should pull our troops out of those middle east countries and start to work hard forging a relationship with all the Americas. Just think if we worked together with Central and South America what an economic force we could be.
06:39 PM on 03/22/2011
Fifteen, twenty, twenty-five years ago, the focus of our political and economic sphere of influence should have come off of Europe, the Middle East and Israel ... and moved onto the economically useful metro areas of South America that were willing to cooperate, collaborate and interact with us in mutually beneficial ways. There might have even been O-I-L in it for us!

As it is now ... Chavez has been fomenting anti-Americanism wherever he goes ... and the Chinese have been making significant economic inroads throughout South America ,,, MUCH to our own diminishment therein throughout the continent!

It only seems to make sense that a "new" U.S. axis of power and/or sphere of influence should be focused on a building a solid, working political and economic partnership between "North America" and "South America". (Those countries in "Central America" that are causing us problems and not fully cooperating in eradicating those problems (e.g., Mexico, Columbia, et al) should NOT be included until they first straighten out their acts and clean out their own houses.)