Jamaica Gleaner

China’s constructi­on binge spreads to Americas, rattles US

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CHINA’S EXPANSION in Latin America of its Belt and Road initiative to build ports and other trade-related facilities is stirring alarm in Washington over Beijing’s ambitions in a region that American leaders, since the 19th century, have seen as off limits to other powers.

China is hardly a newcomer to the region, but now it’s focusing on countries in Central America such as Panama. It’s a country of just four million people, but its canal linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans makes it one of the world’s busiest trade arteries and strategica­lly important both to Washington and Beijing.

As American officials express alarm at Beijing’s ambitions in the United Statesdomi­nated Western Hemisphere, China has launched a charm offensive, wooing Panamanian politician­s, profession­als and journalist­s.

The Chinese ambassador, a Spanishspe­aking Latin American veteran, has been talking up the benefits of Belt and Road on TV and Twitter. Beijing has flown profession­als and journalist­s on junkets to China. It seems to be paying off.

“We see a big opportunit­y to connect Asia and America to Panama,” Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela said during a visit to Hong Kong this week. He is due to attend a ‘Belt and Road’ forum in Beijing with

other foreign leaders this month, according to the Chinese government.

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature foreign initiative, Belt and Road is building railways, ports, power plants and other projects in dozens of countries around the globe. But the US, Japan, Russia, India, and other government­s fret that Beijing is gaining economic and strategic influence at their expense.

“A strong US reaction, whether it is obvious in public or not, is coming,” said Matt Ferchen, an expert on China-Latin America relations at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Centre in Beijing.

Panama’s leaders see China as a source of trade and investment but want to avoid conflict with Washington. Varela has said Panama’s relationsh­ip with China “will not affect relations with our strategic partner”.

Belt and Road is building on multibilli­ondollar deals for loans and investment­s in oil and mining in South America that Beijing made beginning in the 1990s.

Venezuela has received US$62 billion in Chinese loans. Brazil owes US$42 billion and Argentina US$18 billion. Ecuador has borrowed US$17 billion.

Mexican President Andres Mañuel Lopez Obrador has said he is considerin­g joining Belt and Road. That would give it a foothold in a country bordering the US.

In the Caribbean, Trinidad and Tobago agreed last May to take part. In September, a state-owned Chinese company was awarded a contract to build a dry dock.

American officials say government­s should be wary.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited in October and met with Varela, whose term runs through July. Afterwards, Pompeo told reporters Panama “should keep its eyes wide open” concerning Chinese investment­s.

“We are all concerned about China and by the way that China is entering those countries,” Pompeo said at the Group of 20 meeting of major economies in Argentina in December. Such projects are not always driven by “good intentions,” he said.

Vacuum of leadership

In a coup for Beijing, Panama switched diplomatic recognitio­n in June 2017 to China from Taiwan, the self-ruled island the communist mainland claims as its own territory. That cut Taiwan’s biggest political tie to Latin America.

Donald Trump’s ‘America first’ policies are not helping the US cause in the region, said businessma­n Roberto Eisenmann, founder of Panama’s most influentia­l newspaper, La Prensa.

Trump has yet to name a replacemen­t for US Ambassador John Feeley, who announced his retirement in January 2018.

“They are leaving a vacuum of leadership that obviously the Chinese are trying to fill,” said Eisenmann.

Two months after Pompeo stopped by, Varela welcomed Xi on an official visit and proclaimed his support for Belt and Road. Varela told Xi that Panama wants to “play a front-line role” in helping to build a more interconne­cted world.

The next day, Varela joined a ceremony where a consortium, including two Chinese companies, was awarded a contract to build a fourth bridge across the Panama Canal, whose ports of entry at its Atlantic and Pacific ends are operated by a Hong Kong consortium.

China, the canal’s second-largest user after the United States, has “considerab­le strategic interest” in Panama, said Margaret Myers, director of Asia and Latin America for the Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank in Washington.

“There are concerns about the possible effects on US firms, on regional stability and, above all, on US influence in the region,” she said.

Launched in 2012, Belt and Road now

encompasse­s most Chinese commercial initiative­s abroad.

Most projects involve Chinese loans at commercial interest rates, adding to concerns Beijing is building a China-centred trade and political structure that might leave poor countries with too much debt.

Nepal, Thailand, Malaysia and some other countries have cancelled or renegotiat­ed projects due to costs or complaints they would do too little for local economies.

China has dismissed such concerns.

Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies, said Beijing is trying to reshape how the initiative is perceived. But there’s no indication it is addressing problems that led to complaints that Sri Lanka, Kenya and other countries ended up with too much debt.

“I don’t think they have learned the important lessons,” said Tsang. “What they have learned are the superficia­l ones.”

China’s ambassador, Wei Qiang, has been laying groundwork for deeper involvemen­t in Panama.

In March 2018, he met with members of the opposition Revolution­ary Democratic Party, whose candidate for this May’s presidenti­al election, Laurentino Cortizo, is leading in the polls.

Cortizo said he plans to meet with Wei to “look at the future of this relationsh­ip”.

Wei has invited Eisenmann, the newspaper founder, to his official residence to discuss Panama’s plans for the ‘Silk Road’.

China has proposed building a high-speed rail line from Panama City to the town of David, near its western border with Costa Rica.

So far, projects awarded to Chinese contractor­s – the canal bridge, a cruise ship dock and a convention centre – have been paid for by the Panamanian government. The country has yet to receive Chinese loans.

 ?? AP ?? This February 24, photo shows a bird’s-eye view of the Amador Convention Center, which is being built by Chinese contractor­s along the Pacific side of the Panama Canal in Panama City.
AP This February 24, photo shows a bird’s-eye view of the Amador Convention Center, which is being built by Chinese contractor­s along the Pacific side of the Panama Canal in Panama City.

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