The Phnom Penh Post

Tillerson looks to rally Americas

- Dave Clark

US SECRETARY of State Rex Tillerson is to embark on his first major tour of Central and South America this week as a worried region watches Venezuela’s slide into crisis.

Today, Washington’s top envoy will lay out his vision for relations with the United States’ southern neighbours in a speech in Texas before jetting on a five-nation voyage.

The political and economic turmoil in Venezuela will top the agenda as Tillerson rallies support for Washington’s tough stance against President Nicolás Maduro’s regime.

But Tillerson will also tackle crime and immigratio­n in US neighbour Mexico, after President Donald Trump threatened to tear up a North American trade pact and build a border wall. And, in his talks with senior officials, he will help prepare four major diplomatic events, starting with April’s Summit of the Americas in Peru and June’s G7 meet in Canada.

Then, later this year on November 30 to December 1, Latin America will for the first time host the G20 Leaders’ Summit of the world’s great powers in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

“We’re going to have a year of high profile events,” a senior State Department official told Washington reporters at a briefing on the trip ahead.

“The secretary’s speech will, I think, set the stage for all of that,” he said, explaining Tiller- son’s stop over at the University of Austin, in Texas, on his southward leg.

In addition to the internatio­nal timetable, several major Latin American economies hold elections this year, including Venezuela, which plans to vote before the end of April.

Washington has vowed not the recognise the result of that vote, which it says was set up in violation of Venezuela’s own Constituti­on simply to entrench Maduro’s beleaguere­d regime.

Less controvers­ially, but still critically for the democratic health of the continent, other players will also go the polls.

Mexico votes in July, perhaps delaying high-wire negotiatio­ns between Washington and President Pena Nieto’s government to save the Nafta trade deal and fight organised crimes.

There will also be a Colombian election in May and a Brazilian election in October.

Venezuela will be top of the agenda at each of the stops: Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Colombia and then a few hours in Jamaica on the homeward leg.

All the stops but Jamaica are members of the Lima Group set up to coordinate a joint Americas response to the Venezuela crisis, and Jamaica has joined meetings and played a role.

Corruption and instabilit­y

The Lima Group has urged Maduro’s government to carry out democratic reforms, release political prisoners and allow foreign organisati­ons to supply aid to Venezuelan­s.

Regional heavyweigh­ts Brazil and Argentina have been reluctant to follow Washington’s lead and impose sanctions on Maduro’s regime, fearing poor Venezuelan­s will suffer most.

But they agree with the political message, and Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri confirmed on Saturday his government would not recognise Venezuela’s upcoming election.

Venezuela – hit by low oil prices, graft and instabilit­y – is enduring one of the worst crises in its history under Maduro, late leader Hugo Chavez’s handpicked successor. Inflation this year is forecast to hit 13,000 percent, and from April to July last year angry Venezuelan­s clashed with security forces in the street, leaving 125 dead.

Tillerson will be in Texas for his speech on Thursday, February 1 before flying to Mexico City for two days of talks, including with Nieto and Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray.

On Saturday he arrives in Argentina’s Andes’s resort of Bariloche, and on Sunday he heads on to Buenos Aires, for talks with senior officials including Macri and diplomats at the US mission.

As he heads back north, he has talks in Lima, Peru, on Monday and Tuesday, when he also arrives later in Bogotá, Colombia, before flying home via Kingston on Wednesday.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks to the press prior to talks with Danish Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen at the State Department in Washington, DC, on Monday.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks to the press prior to talks with Danish Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen at the State Department in Washington, DC, on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia