Kuwait Times

Blinken promises US’ shift from military focus in Latin America

Biden seeks to champion stable democracie­s

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QUITO: The United States has focused too much on security over other assistance in Latin America, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said yesterday, as he vowed a concerted push to encourage democracy. Amid a rise both of authoritar­ians and populists in Latin America, Blinken is visiting Ecuador and Colombia as President Joe Biden seeks to champion stable democracie­s.

Both nations receive US security training and are led by conservati­ves who have taken controvers­ial measures, with Colombian forces this year killing dozens of anti-government protesters and Ecuador on Tuesday announcing a state of emergency just as Blinken visited. “Our record on improving civilian security in the region’s democracie­s has been mixed,” Blinken was to say in a speech Wednesday in the Ecuadorian capital Quito, according to advance excerpts.

“That’s because too often, we tried to fix this problem by relying too much on training and equipping security forces, and too little on other tools in our kit,” he was to say. “And we focused too much on addressing the symptoms of organized crime, like homicides and drug traffickin­g, and too little on the root causes. We’re working to correct that imbalance.” Among US initiative­s that go beyond security, Blinken pointed to the Biden administra­tion’s greater push on fighting corruption, including denying visas to officials involved in graft.

Blinken said the United States, alongside its frequent calls for elections, would also be more attentive to economic concerns such as improving labor standards, health care and education. “This should be obvious, but the reality is that we’ve often put more energy into strengthen­ing civil and political rights such as free and fair elections, the rule of law, freedom of speech and assembly - than we have into strengthen­ing people’s economic and social rights.”

Challenge from China

The Biden administra­tion, largely following the lead of former president Donald Trump, has ramped up pressure on leftist autocratic leaders in Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela, where President Nicolas Maduro has suspended dialogue with the US-backed opposition. While US statements have been more cautious, questions about democracy have also been rising in the region’s most populous nation, Brazil, where farright President Jair Bolsonaro has taken a page from Trump in sowing doubts about the legitimacy of upcoming elections.

“We find ourselves in a moment of democratic reckoning,” Blinken was to say. While democracy in recent decades has brought “unpreceden­ted prosperity” to Latin America, he was to say that the future depended on whether elected leaders can “deliver on the issues that matter most to people.” His call for an economic focus comes as China lavishes loan money for infrastruc­ture in Latin America, worrying the United States which sees a rising and authoritar­ian Beijing as the biggest long-term challenge.

In Ecuador, which has received billions of dollars in Chinese loans to fund electricit­y, oil and other projects, Blinken

We’re working to correct that imbalance

said he was not asking countries to “choose between the United States and China” but called for greater scrutiny about Beijing’s investment­s in sensitive areas. While far smaller in financial scope

than China’s loans, the United States recently sought to make a tangible impact by announcing $150 million in loans for small businesses run by women in Ecuador. —AFP

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 ?? ?? QUITO: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gives his thumb up during a visit to the Camari market centre, where local artisans and farmers exhibit their products, in Quito. —AFP
QUITO: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gives his thumb up during a visit to the Camari market centre, where local artisans and farmers exhibit their products, in Quito. —AFP

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