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OPINION:
How the U.S. Went Wrong in Latin
America
By Alexandra Starr
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice's visit to
South America earlier this week
came at a pivotal moment. The
standing of the United States in
the region is at a low ebb. Six
Latin American countries -
including regional behemoths
Mexico and Brazil - are electing
presidents this year, and recent
electoral showdowns in Bolivia
and Costa Rica showed that
pro-US candidates face a steep
climb in winning support from
voters.
Why have relations with Latin
America disintegrated to this
point?
A big part of the problem is
that the Bush administration has
been treating the region as if
it is our backyard. All too
often, both in the substance of
our policy and in our
ambassadors' rhetoric, we seem
to expect that once the US
stipulates its position, Latin
Americans should fall in line.
The long history of US
intervention in the hemisphere
has engendered a lasting
sensitivity there to imperious
diplomacy. And the Bush
administration approach is
raising hackles at a time when
the stakes are very high.
Oftentimes, the US isn't
engaging Latin Americans on the
issues they find most pressing.
There is widespread disgust with
the US-sanctioned neoliberal
reforms of the 1980s and '90s,
which failed to improve the
lives of most of the continent's
poor - about 40 percent of the
population. Job creation and
economic development are top
priorities in the region, but
after the failure of
market-oriented economic reforms
sanctioned by the US, known as
the "Washington consensus," the
Bush administration hasn't had
much to offer on either topic.
Instead, the administration has
pushed its own concerns to the
forefront of the agenda, and
bullied countries in the region
into adopting its positions.
Bush administration officials
made a strong push for Latin
American countries to support
the war in
Iraq, and they were livid when
Chile and Mexico, Latin
America's representatives on the
Security Council in 2003,
opposed a resolution endorsing
the invasion. Another Washington
priority that has become a point
of contention is the
International Criminal Court
inThe Hague.
Twelve Latin American countries
have bucked pressure from the
Bush administration to sign
immunity agreements with the
United States that would shield
US citizens from being tried at
the court. As a result,
Washington has cut the funding
it supplies to those nations for
military training. While
Secretary Rice declared on a
recent trip to Chile that she'd
like to revisit the policy, she
made no promises that changes
would be forthcoming.
This note of condescension has
also surfaced in the behavior of
our diplomats. Take the recent
election in Costa Rica: US
Ambassador to Costa Rica Mark
Langdale, a political appointee
who was a prolific fundraiser
for Bush, raised voters' ire
when he was quoted in the local
press, warning that the
country's reputation as a good
place to invest "will suffer" if
the Central American Free Trade
Agreement (CAFTA) wasn't
ratified.
While this was no doubt true,
articulating that point made it
seem as if the US was
threatening its southern
neighbor. And it didn't sit well
with voters who were about to
cast ballots in the country's
2006 presidential election.
Nobel-Prize winner Oscar Arias
had been expected to win in a
landslide, but his
identification as pro-CAFTA (and
pro-US) eroded his support to
the point where he eked out a
victory only after a month-long
recount determined he'd won by
the narrowest of margins.
A more egregious example
unfolded in Bolivia in 2002
during its presidential
election, when then-US
ambassador Manuel Rocha hinted
that if indigenous leader and
coca grower Evo Morales won, it
would jeopardize US aid to the
impoverished, landlocked
country. Support for Mr. Morales
soared to the point where he
nearly won the election, and his
strong showing laid the
groundwork for his election last
year.
These missteps come at a time
when the US can't afford to
behave so brazenly. That's in
large part because of the
emergence of Venezuelan
President Hugo Chávez, who has
been using his country's oil
wealth to realize his goal of
creating a regional
counterhegemony to the US. Mr.
Chavez harbors an active dislike
of the US (no doubt in part
because the Bush administration
reacted with undisguised glee
when he was briefly deposed in a
2002 coup). With oil topping $60
a barrel, the Venezuelan has
used his largesse to win
friends. He's provided cut-rate
oil to Caribbean nations and
purchased millions of dollars of
Argentine and Ecuadorean debt.
The Bush administration has
pressed regional leaders to
speak out against Chávez, but
aside from Mexican President
Vicente Fox, it has found no
takers. Given Venezuela's
efforts to sow goodwill in the
region - compared with our
approach of bullying our
southern neighbors - this isn't
surprising. The Bush
administration's highhanded
manner has created an opening
for Chávez. And given the number
of elections that are scheduled
in the region this year, that
opening comes at a key moment.
Costa Rica's election - where
the pro-US candidate paid a
price for his identification
with the Bush administration -
could be a harbinger of things
to come.
• Alexandra Starr, a former
political correspondent for
Businessweek, was an
Organization of American States
scholar from 1995 to 1998.
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