Boycotts threaten to turn Biden’s Summit of the Americas into a political disaster
US neighbors say the president’s reported “democracy
vs. autocracy” invite list is a no-go and are willing to forgo the whole thing.
MAY 18, 2022
Written by
Aileen
Teague
Last
week, Mexican President Andrés Manuel
López Obrador declared that he will boycott this
year’s Summit of the Americas,
scheduled to take place June 6-10 in Los Angeles, if the Biden administration
fails to invite the leaders of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua.
While no
final decision has yet been announced, several U.S. officials have indicated
recently that the questionable human rights records and authoritarian
governance of each of these countries disqualify them from attendance, a
position that has raised hackles throughout the hemisphere.
Indeed, Lopez
Obrador is not the only leader in the hemisphere who may not show up unless
Washington extends invitations to all three countries. Last week, Bolivia’s
president, Luis Arce,
tweeted a similar intention, while several Caribbean leaders have
suggested that at least some if not all members of CARICOM, which consists of
15 English-speaking Caribbean member-countries and five associate members, may
decide to stay home. The newly elected president of Honduras, Xiomara
Castro, has also suggested she
won’t go if the three nations’ leaders are not invited.
These threats
suggest that the first Summit to be hosted by the United States since its
inaugural session in Miami in 1994 is not only setting up the Biden
administration for a serious diplomatic embarrassment, but also for a major
missed opportunity to focus attention on the growing strategic importance of
its hemispheric neighbors. Washington needs the support of its regional
partners to tackle critical issues, notably illegal migration, the drug trade,
climate change, and growing Chinese influence in the Americas. The Summit
itself is not solely to promote U.S. interests but to promote the interests
of all the countries in the Americas.
In a region
where the United States is quickly losing influence and partner nations
perceive U.S. disinterest, the Biden administration will lose political capital
if it allows its growing tendency to divide the world into “democratic” friends
and “authoritarian” states to dictate the invitation list for a forum that
is much larger than Washington’s professed policy objectives, however laudable
they may be. A summit with critical partners missing would also deliver a huge
blow to Biden’s attempts to find solutions to U.S. domestic problems that range
from border security to immigration flows to the rise in oil and gas prices.
Moreover,
Washington’s position on the Summit is hypocritical, inconsistent, and
ultimately undermines an already-faltering U.S. position in the Americas.
The United
States has championed human rights and democracy promotion around the world,
but those efforts have been uneven in the Americas, to say the least. From
Mexico through Argentina, the United States practiced a policy of backing –
sometimes even installing – politically violent, even genocidal dictators and
local elites who supported Washington’s anti-communist policies, both before
and during the Cold War. In Latin America, the United States has a far longer
track record of supporting human rights violators than of advocating for the
masses whose rights were violated. The special irony of excluding Cuba and
Nicaragua from this year’s Summit is that Washington went to great lengths
during the Cold War, including providing critical support to armed insurgencies
and imposing severe economic sanctions, to destabilize and eventually overthrow
leftist governments in both countries, thus infusing their successor leaders
with understandable skepticism about Washington’s insistence that their
exclusion reflects Washington’s dedication to democracy and human rights
throughout the hemisphere.
On top of
this, the case of Venezuela presents the United States with a dilemma. If the
United States invites Venezuelan opposition leader Juan
Guaido, whom it recognizes as the legitimate president
of the country, the Caribbean states, who have never recognized Guaido as
Venezuela’s president, are more likely to boycott. Indeed, Washington is
increasingly isolated by its continued loyalty to Guaido whose years-long
efforts to unite the opposition against President Nicolas Maduro have come to
naught. Even the European Union, which initially recognized Guaido as president
after his election as president of the National Assembly, has reduced his
status to one of privileged interlocutor”
in an implicit acknowledgment of the abject failure of Washington’s de facto “regime
change” policy.
Though White
House press secretary Jen Psaki, who just stepped down this week, and State
Department spokesman Ned Price indicated that the discussion of attendance
remains hypothetical, even at this very late stage — no invitations have yet been issued —
the growing hemispheric contretemps over who gets an invitation
seems unlikely to end well. Christopher Sabatini, senior fellow for Latin
America at Chatham House, a London-based think tank, wrote in Foreign Policy
magazine that without a significant change in U.S. posturing, this year’s
summit could be seen as “a gravestone on U.S. influence in
the region.”
The Summit,
which was initiated by former U.S. President Bill Clinton, is held every three
years in a different country and was initially intended to help foster closer
hemispheric cooperation around issues including democracy and shared economic
and related problems. It was also intended to boost U.S. public and business
interest in the country’s southern neighbors. But levels of U.S. interest in the
forum have been inconsistent, especially in recent years.
In an
unprecedented move, President Donald Trump skipped the
eighth summit held in Lima, Peru in 2018, sending
Vice President Mike Pence in his place. Both Maduro and Daniel Ortega,
Nicaragua’s increasingly authoritarian president, attended the 2018
Summit. After U.S. President Barack Obama normalized relations with Havana in
2014, Cuba was invited and participated in both the 2015 and 2018
Summits. Trump’s absence in 2018 merely served to highlight the increasing
irrelevance and decreasing influence of the United States in the region and the
faltering inter-American system.
Things have
not much improved under Biden, in major part due to domestic political
considerations and partisan politics. The confirmation of key
ambassadorships in the Americas has been delayed in Congress for months due to
holds put on confirmations by Republican Sen. Ted Cruz for unrelated reasons
having to do with his opposition to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline.
It was only just announced that Frank Mora,
Biden’s nominee as U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States,
would be confirmed later this week, less than three weeks before the summit.
Domestic
political bickering has also shaped the position the White House finds itself
in with Cuba. Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey,
a Cuban-American Democrat who also chairs the Foreign Relations Committee,
has long opposed the normalization of U.S.-Cuba relations.
In an evenly split Senate, Menendez’s support is viewed by the White House as
critical to a wide range of foreign policy issues, which gives him enormous
leverage on the policies he cares most about. Although the administration this week moved more decisively to
ease Trump-era sanctions against Havana despite strong objections by Menendez,
whether it can bring itself to invite Cuba to the Summit remains up in the
air.
Until the
2015 Summit where Obama met with then-President Raul Castro, an encounter that
helped lay the groundwork for Obama’s historic trip to Havana a year later, the
question of Cuba’s participation in the Summit, as well as other hemispheric
venues, served as a perennial source of friction between the United States and
most of the rest of the hemisphere. But Trump’s reversal of Obama’s opening to
the Caribbean island – and Biden’s delays in fully restoring relations –
have effectively thrust the issue back onto the hemispheric agenda in ways that
are likely to negatively affect Washington’s relationships, particularly if, as
polls currently predict, Luis Inacio Lula de Silva, is returned to the
Brazilian presidency in elections later this year.
With incoming
president Biden declaring “America is back,” one might have expected swift
policy changes in the Americas, but the president’s initiatives have so far
proved to be more rhetoric than reality.
Biden condemned Trump’s inhumane policies toward migrants on the campaign trail,
promising major changes if elected. Ultimately, President Biden has inherited
the regional migration problem in his own right, with Vice President Kamala
Harris, the point person in the administration’s Central America “root causes”
strategy, famously telling Guatemalans, “do
not come” during her June 2021 visit
to Central America. Despite increased attention on migration from Central
America, Cuba, and elsewhere, the issue – and the perception in the region that
Washington, even under Democrats, remains hostile to desperate migrants –
continues to rankle relations between the U.S. and Latin
America.
Indeed, with
U.S. attention hyper-focused on its own priorities – namely migration,
drug trafficking, and China – its regional partners are less inclined to
work with a northern giant they see as selfish, arrogant, and hubristic. The
question is, can the United States momentarily put aside its domestic fixations
and great power concerns for the greater good of the hemisphere?
U.S.
re-engagement with its partners in the region is long overdue. It is not that
the United States should not hold countries accountable for their human rights
records. It’s that making clean human rights records and democratic governance
preconditions for being invited to a summit designed to tackle the hemisphere’s
immense challenges is bad practice, not to say historically inconsistent
and hypocritical.
The absence
of Presidents López Obrador, Castro, and Arce, and the leaders of other
regional partners would be keenly felt and damaging to the forum in future
years. It would present China with new opportunities to assert its
own growing influence. There is still time for the United States to create a
relevant summit and promote successful partnerships in all of the Americas, but it
is running out.
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