Los Angeles Times

Absences won’t hurt summit, Blinken says

Top diplomat says some nations in region are represente­d by citizens, not leaders.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

Despite the absence of presidents from some of the region’s key countries, the U.S.-hosted Summit of the Americas, taking place in Los Angeles this week, can serve as a venue of delicate dialogue and incrementa­l problem-solving, America’s top diplomat said Thursday.

In an interview with The Times, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken defended the Biden administra­tion’s decision to exclude Cuba, along with Nicaragua and Venezuela, while inviting other government­s with similarly questionab­le democratic credential­s such as Brazil.

The snub prompted Mexico and most of Central America to send lower-level delegation­s to a conference seen as a milestone for the region — a major embarrassm­ent for a country hosting the event for the first time since its 1994 inaugural session in Miami.

“The notion that some countries are not here, I would dispute,” Blinken said, noting that dissidents, artists and members of civil society from Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela were attending — though they have next to no power in their countries.

“I would argue they are more representa­tive of their respective countries than the regimes that happen to be in place right now,” he said.

Blinken noted that the U.S. had negotiatio­ns with Cuba earlier this year on immigratio­n issues, and that the Biden administra­tion had eased some of the restrictio­ns imposed by former President Trump on travel, visas and remittance­s involving Cubans and U.S. citizens. But Cuban officials say most of those measures have been purely cosmetic with little practical effect in relieving the suffering of that country’s citizens.

The slow pace at which the Biden administra­tion has sought better relations with Cuba has surprised and disappoint­ed many advocates for detente, a softening that started with then-President Obama when Biden was vice president, and Washington finally attempted to put an end to half a century of Cold War hostilitie­s.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez told The Times in a separate interview Thursday that the summit was a “disaster” because valuable informatio­n that countries like his could have supplied — particular­ly with regard to climate change and fighting COVID-19 — was missing from the conversati­on.

Blinken also used the summit to stress concern about freedom of the press in a region where journalist­s are often killed, threatened or sued into silence, and acknowledg­ed that it’s often the leaders of their countries who bear responsibi­lity. Several presidents, prime ministers, governors and mayors allow a climate of impunity that gives rise to crimes against reporters. Seventeen journalist­s have been killed in the Americas just this year due to their work, according to UNESCO.

The U.S. goal, Blinken said, is to boost watchdog organizati­ons that advocate for journalist safety, and to pressure government leaders on the issue.

“We are first and foremost trying to put a spotlight on this, [and] second, engaging directly with government­s about the need to take actions to protect journalist­s,” Blinken said.

He announced that at the summit’s conclusion, the U.S. would designate a new $75-million contributi­on to 300 civil society and human rights groups in Latin America, including some that work on journalist safety.

“We see government­s around the world using socalled legal tools to actually put free press out of business, especially independen­t media, for example, with lawsuits designed to make them go bankrupt,” Blinken said. “We put in place funds that journalist­s can draw on and media enterprise­s can draw on in order to be able to defend themselves against these kinds of prosecutio­ns.”

He cited Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who often speaks out against journalist­s who criticize him, as someone who has promised to take “preventive actions” to stop the violence that dogs reporters there.

When asked whether the Biden administra­tion’s plans to meet with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman later this month undermine rhetoric about press freedom, Blinken said there were overriding interests that took precedence.

The Saudi heir apparent has been implicated in the murder four years ago of Saudi journalist and U.S. resident Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. The Biden administra­tion had vowed to ostracize the crown prince, but now has found Saudi Arabia more important in efforts to address world energy supplies and challenge an increasing­ly belligeren­t Iran.

Amid the fractures in the Americas and assaults on democracy throughout the region — including in the United States — and worldwide, a summit that on the surface seems to accomplish little at least brings some people together to highlight pressing issues.

“The animating principle is that in order to answer these problems, virtually all of them require some level of cooperatio­n across borders,” Blinken said. “None of our countries can do this alone.

“And we’re finding that with all of these — virtually all of these — government­s, even when there are political difference­s between us, there’s a drive as well, to find ways to cooperate, because it’s in everyone’s interest to do so.”

 ?? SECRETARY OF STATE Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? Antony J. Blinken defends Biden administra­tion decisions in an interview with The Times during the Summit of the Americas in L.A.
SECRETARY OF STATE Jason Armond Los Angeles Times Antony J. Blinken defends Biden administra­tion decisions in an interview with The Times during the Summit of the Americas in L.A.

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