Lodi News-Sentinel

Latin American diplomats: U.S. lacks authority to assist Venezuela crisis

- By Franco Ordonez

WASHINGTON — Latin American diplomats say the United States lacks moral authority to encourage the region to take steps it’s unwilling to take in the Venezuelan migration crisis because of the Trump administra­tion’s own border policies, according to more than a half-dozen current and former diplomats and officials in Latin America and Washington.

Latin American diplomats applaud the United States’ latest $6 million contributi­on in aid for Venezuelan migrants in Colombia, but they say the Trump administra­tion could do more to build a regional coalition, offer more resources — and relax some of his policies to take more migrants.

“It’s contradict­ory when asking for this and then in your own backyard they’re separating families,” said one Latin American diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity because the diplomat was not authorized to publicly discuss U.S. policy. “I don’t understand it. All of us who are up-to-date on the migration issue understand it’s radical and contradict­ory to do one thing with one hand and do something else with the other.”

U.S. and Latin American officials are already describing the migration crisis out of Venezuela as a Syria-like emergency in which more than 2 million Venezuelan­s have fled across Latin America.

The United States has both imposed stiff financial sanctions that limit the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro from raising needed capital and provided humanitari­an aid to Colombian and Brazilian agencies that are feeding, clothing and sheltering migrants.

In the past, the United States has led internatio­nal responses to various migration crises such as when it welcomed tens of thousands of Hondurans and Nicaraguan­s after Hurricane Mitch in 1998. More than a quarter-million Salvadoran­s received special protection­s in the United States after a 2001 earthquake and tens of thousands of Haitians were granted protective status after the 2010 earthquake.

Members of Congress from both parties have asked South American government­s to “open their countries to Venezuelan refugees” and assist humanitari­an efforts.

The calls have only raised eyebrows from leaders in the region who want the United States’ assistance, but also struggle with the contrastin­g messages.

“You’re asking me to open our borders ... and you?” said one South American diplomat. “It’s fine, but why are you not also accepting more Venezuelan­s.”

In 2016, President Barack Obama led a call to help Syrian refugees when he announced to the United Nations General Assembly that the United States would accept 110,000 Syrians. But Latin American leaders do not expect a similar call from President Donald Trump, whose focus is “America First,” which means clamping down on migration to the United States.

The Trump administra­tion currently faces its own domestic battle over immigratio­n after imposing a “zero tolerance” policy at the southern U.S. border, which led to family separation, in response to a spring surge of migrants, primarily from Central America. It also tightened asylum rules and has been phasing out Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans.

In June, Vice President Mike Pence pledged millions of dollars in additional humanitari­an aid for fleeing Venezuelan­s and thanked Brazil for accepting more migrants. During the same Latin American trip, Pence called on citizens of the region to “respect” U.S. borders.

“Don’t risk your lives or the lives of your children by trying to come to the United States on the road run by drug smugglers and human trafficker­s,” Pence said in Brazil before delivering a similar message in Guatemala. “If you can’t come legally, don’t come at all.”

Michael Camilleri, who served as director for Andean affairs at the National Security Council under Obama, said U.S. migration policies are resonating in Latin America, but to be a regional leader it must have “more skin in the game” in the Venezuelan crisis.

“In order to play that role, the U.S. will have to have a strong leg to stand on,” said Camilleri, who now leads the Inter-American Dialogue’s Rule of Law Program. “And a domestic migration policy that’s seen as so toxic by the very countries that are being asked to assume some of these burdens I think can only handicap the United States capacity to play that role effectivel­y.”

Confidence in American leadership has sunk in many nations around the world, particular­ly in Latin America, according to a poll last summer by the Pew Research Center that found just 22 percent had faith that Trump would do the right thing. In Mexico, only 5 percent of those interviewe­d had confidence in Trump. In Colombia it was 15 percent; in Peru, 17 percent; In Argentina, 13 percent; and in Chile, 12 percent.

A spokesman for the National Security Council noted the United States’ generous history of accepting immigrants. The official pointed out that Venezuelan­s currently top the number of applicants for asylum in the United States. More than 58,000 Venezuelan­s have applied for asylum in the last three years.

“We feel things are not going to improve until the political and economic conditions that are responsibl­e for the crisis are addressed,” the NSC official said, speaking on condition of anonymity per policy.

 ?? CJUAN TORRES/NURPHOTO FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Thousands of Venezuelan­s are seen entering Colombia at the immigratio­n checkpoint on the Simon Bolivar Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia on June 10.
CJUAN TORRES/NURPHOTO FILE PHOTOGRAPH Thousands of Venezuelan­s are seen entering Colombia at the immigratio­n checkpoint on the Simon Bolivar Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia on June 10.

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