Bangkok Post

South America is a battlefiel­d in the new Cold War

- HAL BRANDS Hal Brands is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

The political crisis in Venezuela has pitted the US against a dictator who refuses to leave office. But the crisis has a broader significan­ce: It shows that Latin America has again become an arena in which rival great powers struggle for influence and advantage. As the US faces surging geopolitic­al rivalry around the world, its position is also coming under pressure in its own backyard.

The region has been the focus of global competitio­n before, of course, from the Spanish-Portuguese rivalry of the 15th and 16th centuries to the Cold War between Washington and Moscow. But after the fall of the Soviet Union, Latin America seemed — for a time, at least — to have become a geopolitic­s-free zone. The retreat and disintegra­tion of the Soviet Union left the US with no challenger for predominan­t regional influence. Castro’s Cuba turned inward, consumed by a profound economic crisis. As countries democratis­ed and embraced free markets, the region became essentiall­y unipolar in an ideologica­l sense, as well.

By the early 2000s, however, the climate was shifting. First came a new generation of leaders who viewed neoliberal economics as the source of the region’s poverty and inequality. Government­s led by the likes of Chávez in Venezuela, Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in Ecuador coupled populist political appeals and economic programmes with a penchant for illiberali­sm and, in some cases, outright authoritar­ianism. They challenged the US diplomatic­ally and rhetorical­ly, while establishi­ng close ties with Cuba. This created a bloc of regional actors that opposed American power — just as outside actors were beginning to assert, or reassert, their own influence in the region.

As China’s economy has boomed over the last two decades, its presence in Latin America has grown as well. Chinese trade and investment has surged nearly everywhere, not just countries run by radical populists. Chinese commerce and loans have provided a lifeline to illiberal rulers such as Chávez and now Mr Maduro by reducing their vulnerabil­ity to US and Western pressure. Chinese military engagement followed, creating fears that Beijing may be trying to establish a strategic foothold in the Western Hemisphere. Although aspects of China’s relationsh­ip with Latin American countries remain controvers­ial — some Chinese infrastruc­ture projects have been criticised because they often employ Chinese rather than Latin American workers, for instance — Beijing has undoubtedl­y become a player in the Western Hemisphere.

Russia has provided economic and diplomatic support to Chavez, Mr Maduro and other autocratic rulers such as Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega. It has sold jets, tanks and other weapons to populist government­s, and resumed providing military technology and oil to Cuba. Much to the concern of the US government, the Kremlin has also been working to establish a significan­t intelligen­ce presence in Nicaragua. As the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace observes: “Moscow’s approach to Latin America today echoes Soviet outreach in the 1960s through 1980s.”

Russian and Chinese relations with Latin American countries are often described as simply transactio­nal, and it is true that both Moscow and Beijing can drive hard bargains for their support. One price of Russia’s continued backing of the Maduro regime has been a significan­t ownership stake in the Venezuelan oil industry. China, too, has seen Venezuela as an energy source, and its economic growth would have driven enhanced involvemen­t in Latin America.

But for both countries, that involvemen­t also has a deeply competitiv­e logic. Reaching into Latin America is a way of keeping the US offbalance by exerting influence in Washington’s “near abroad”. It helps augment Beijing’s and Moscow’s global influence and stature at a time of intensifyi­ng rivalry with Washington. Finally, supporting autocratic regimes such as those in Caracas and Managua — whether quietly, as in China’s case, or more vocally, as in Russia’s — is a way of making sure that the world remains ideologica­lly safe for authoritar­ianism in Beijing and Moscow, as well.

All this constitute­s the backdrop to the Venezuelan crisis. The growth of Russian and Chinese influence in Latin America broadly, and Venezuela specifical­ly, is a key reason the Trump administra­tion has so uncharacte­ristically taken up the banner of human rights and democracy. By imposing harsh economic sanctions, calling for the military to desert Mr Maduro, and backing the political opposition led by the Juan Guiadó, the Trump administra­tion is seeking to deprive Moscow, Beijing and Havana of a critical partner in Latin America. And while Russia and China have responded very differentl­y to this crisis, both are working, in their own ways, to protect that partner.

The Chinese government has registered its opposition to the internatio­nal campaign against Mr Maduro’s government; it has continued to recognise his embattled government even as dozens of democratic countries have thrown their support behind Mr Guiadó. Russia has been far more assertive, denouncing Washington for trying to “engineer a coup d’etat”, in the words of its United Nations representa­tive. It has warned against American military interventi­on, and symbolical­ly dispatched two nuclearcap­able strategic bombers to Venezuela. More concretely, Moscow has reportedly dispatched

400 mercenarie­s to reinforce Mr Maduro’s praetorian guard and pledged additional economic support. There is thus a certain Cold War feel to the current crisis, with the US and its rivals lining up on opposite sides.

To be sure, there is an element of bluff in Moscow’s position. It can project only very limited military power into Venezuela or any other part of Latin America. Still, by providing Mr Maduro with moral and material support that he would otherwise lack, both Russia and China are making the current crisis more difficult to resolve.

Is the US ready for this new environmen­t where local crises and global tensions once again interact in challengin­g ways? The Trump administra­tion deserves some credit here. It has spoken candidly about the dangers Chinese and Russian influence present to both Latin America and the US It has also worked closely with other Latin American government­s to coordinate the diplomatic pressure campaign against Mr Maduro.

There are also less helpful tendencies in US policy. Mr Trump’s earlier hostility to Nafta gave Latin American countries incentive to diversify their economic relations, with China a willing target. The administra­tion has warned about the threats posed by Chinese investment in dire tones, without making clear where else Latin American countries should turn for resources.

Then there are the president’s offensive comments toward people of Hispanic descent. In a

2015 Pew Research Center poll, a median of 66 of Latin Americans from seven different countries viewed the US positively. Under Mr Trump, the number has fallen to 47%.

Developing a comprehens­ive strategy for dealing with Chinese and Russian influence will require consistent policies and cultivatin­g key relationsh­ips. Washington is increasing­ly waking up to the new struggle for advantage in Latin America. The outcome in Venezuela will be an early indicator of whether US policy is up to the task.

 ?? AFP ?? Venezuela’s opposition leader and selfprocla­imed acting president Juan Guaido heads to a session of the National Assembly after signing the assistance book in Caracas on Feb 5.
AFP Venezuela’s opposition leader and selfprocla­imed acting president Juan Guaido heads to a session of the National Assembly after signing the assistance book in Caracas on Feb 5.

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