Los Angeles Times

U.S.-Colombia relations likely to change soon

Bogota’s next leader, sure to be an outsider, may alter the nations’ longtime friendship.

- By Tracy Wilkinson Times staff writer Cesar Rojas Angel contribute­d to this report.

The United States is about to lose its best friend in Latin America.

For years, Washington and Colombia have shared close relations on a wide variety of issues, including immigratio­n, combating drug traffickin­g, carrying out coca eradicatio­n in Colombia’s highlands and standing up to its neighbor, Venezuela.

One of the oldest democracie­s in the region, Colombia has long been ruled by one of two parties, and for decades both have been admirers and allies of the United States, regardless of whether a Democrat or Republican occupied the White House.

But in an election runoff scheduled for later this month, an outsider will win Colombia’s presidency: either Rodolfo Hernández, a real estate tycoon with scant political experience and unclear views, or Gustavo Petro, a former leftist guerrilla who fought Colombian government­s for years before serving in its House and Senate and as mayor of Bogota, the nation’s capital, between 2012 and 2015.

“This is a watershed moment in Colombian history — and potentiall­y a watershed moment in U.S.Colombian relations,” said Cynthia Arnson, a distinguis­hed fellow at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington and a longtime expert on South America.

Both candidates, she said, are questionin­g some of the fundamenta­l tenets of the U.S.-Colombian relationsh­ip. Petro, for example, has spoken of legalizing drugs, while Hernández is believed to be supportive of a hydrocarbo­ns industry that those seeking to combat climate change — including Washington — would like to see diminish in influence.

“Should it occur, a loss of strategic partnershi­p would be a blow to U.S. policy in the hemisphere,” Arnson said of the consequenc­es of the upcoming Colombian election. “We are in for a different kind of ride.”

The implicatio­ns include less cooperatio­n from Colombia on fighting drug traffickin­g and the loss of a supportive voice in regional politics.

Colombian President Iván Duque, who will leave office later this year, has made a point of his affinity with the United States while visiting Los Angeles for the Summit of the Americas.

He stood next to President Biden at the opening ceremony Thursday and received a standing ovation for his government’s willingnes­s, at the United States’ behest, to give residency status to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan­s who have fled their country.

Duque has shown that he is willing to agree to U.S. demands. Members of his political party made forays in late 2016 to meet with Donald Trump at his Palm Beach, Fla., resort, in an attempt to curry favor with the then-president-elect.

At the summit this week, Duque was a rare Latin American voice supportive of the Biden administra­tion’s decision to exclude the leaders of Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela from the event. The exclusions prompted a boycott by several countries, as well as criticism from other Western Hemisphere leaders who did attend.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, also in Los Angeles for the summit, said in an interview with The Times that he believed a good relationsh­ip would continue with Bogota regardless of how Colombia’s election plays out.

“We have a strong, deep relationsh­ip over many decades that goes from government to government, irrespecti­ve of who’s in power [in Colombia],” Blinken said. “I think the interests that we share are such that we’ll work with whatever government emerges.”

He said it remained to be seen whether the same level of cooperatio­n would continue.

“In our hemisphere, we have a pretty wide variety of democratic government­s of the left, of the right, of the center — but what is increasing­ly animating those government­s is a simple propositio­n,” Blinken said. “They know that they need to try to deliver for their people, they need to actually produce results that matter to their people” on issues such as COVID-19, healthcare, the economy and climate change.

It is unclear what type of foreign policy Petro or Hernandez would pursue, but both have hinted at deep change. In the first round of voting last month, Petro bested Hernández by more than 10 percentage points but did not reach the 50% threshold necessary to avoid a runoff. Now there is speculatio­n that Colombia’s many conservati­ve sectors will join forces to back Hernández and prevent a leftist from being elected president. But it could go either way. “Colombia is the United States’ most important ally in the region, and a new era is being substantia­lly redefined — in Colombia, in U.S.-Colombia relations and in Colombia’s role in Latin America,” said Michael Shifter, past president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank in Washington that specialize­s in Latin America.

Colombia was the site of the hemisphere’s longest war, as groups of leftist rebels fought government­s, with drug trafficker­s immersed in the mix, for some three decades, until the United Nations brokered a peace accord in 2016 with strong support from the Obama administra­tion.

Washington also sponsored Plan Colombia, a multibilli­on-dollar economic, diplomatic and military assistance plan in the early 2000s aimed at fighting guerrillas and drug trafficker­s — probably the United States’ largest financial investment in South America.

In recent weeks, Colombia and the United States celebrated 200 years of bilateral relations, the oldest such connection in the Americas. Some analysts are convinced that the history between the two countries will preserve their strong ties.

“That’s a reminder that U.S.-Colombia ties have lasted across administra­tions, across parties, both in Colombia and here in the U.S.; it’s shared values, shared culture, shared history,” said Mark Green, a former State Department and USAID official who is now president of the Wilson Center.

“So even with some of the changes, I’m sure we’ll find ways to keep working together for the good of both countries, but also for the region,” he said. “What it precisely means, no one knows.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? OUTGOING Colombian President Iván Duque with President Biden at the Los Angeles summit Friday.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times OUTGOING Colombian President Iván Duque with President Biden at the Los Angeles summit Friday.

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