San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

OFFICIAL: U.S CONSIDERS INVITING CUBA TO AMERICAS SUMMIT IN L.A.

Mexico’s president has threatened to boycott meeting

- BY CHRIS MEGERIAN & MATTHEW LEE Megerian and Lee write for

While President Joe Biden travels in Asia, his administra­tion is scrambling to salvage next month’s summit focused on Latin America.

The Summit of the Americas, which the United States is hosting for the first time since the inaugural event in 1994, has risked collapsing over concerns about the guest list. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has threatened to boycott if Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua aren’t included. Unlike Washington, which considers the three autocratic government­s as pariahs, Mexico’s leftist leader maintains regular ties with them.

A hollow summit would undermine efforts by the U.S. to reassert its influence in Latin America when China is making inroads and concerns grow that democracy is backslidin­g in the region.

Now Biden is considerin­g inviting a Cuban representa­tive to attend the summit as an observer, according to a U.S. official who declined to be identified while speaking about sensitive deliberati­ons. It’s unclear if Cuba would accept the invitation — which would be extended to someone in the foreign ministry, not the foreign minister himself — and whether that would assuage López Obrador’s concerns.

López Obrador reiterated Friday that he “wants everyone to be invited,“but indicated that he was hopeful about reaching a resolution, adding that “we have a lot of confidence in President Biden and he respects us.”

Even if López Obrador attends, there could still be a notable absence in Los Angeles: Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro, who leads Latin America’s most populous country, hasn’t said whether he’ll attend.

The uncertaint­y is a sign of chaotic planning for the summit, which is scheduled to take place in a little more than two weeks in Los Angeles. Normally, gatherings for heads of state are organized long in advance, with clear agendas and guest lists.

“There’s no excuse that they didn’t have enough time,” said Ryan Berg, a senior fellow in the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “This is our chance to set a regional agenda. It’s a great opportunit­y. And I’m afraid we’re not going to take it.”

The National Security Council did not respond to a request for comment. Ned Price, speaking for the U.S. State Department, said the first wave of invitation­s was sent out Thursday, but there could be additions. He declined to say who had gotten invitation­s.

He said speculatio­n about who was attending was “understand­able,” noting that Biden will be the first U.S. president to attend the summit since 2015, when President Barack Obama went to Panama.

President Donald Trump skipped the next summit in Peru in 2018, sending Vice President Mike Pence in his place.

“Our agenda is to focus on working together when it comes to the core challenges that face our hemisphere,” Price said, including migration, climate change and the economic impacts of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Cuba’s participat­ion is often a controvers­ial issue for the summit, which has been held every few years and includes countries from Canada to Chile. The island nation was not invited to the first gathering in Miami, but Obama made headlines by shaking hands with Cuban President Raul Castro in Panama.

Questions about Biden’s approach to Latin America are piling up when his attention has been elsewhere. He’s taken a lead in responding to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, helping to forge an internatio­nal coalition to punish Moscow with sanctions and arm Kyiv with new weapons.

Biden is also trying to refocus U.S. foreign policy on Asia, where he views the rising power of China as the country’s foremost longterm challenge. He’s currently on his first trip to the continent as president, visiting South Korea and Japan.

Berg argued that neglecting Latin America could undermine Biden’s goals, since China has been trying to make inroads in the region.

“It’s always been difficult for Latin America to get its due,” he said. “But we’re pretty close to being in a geopolitic­al situation where Latin America moves from a strategic asset for us to a strategic liability.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH AP FILE ?? President Joe Biden meets with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in November.
SUSAN WALSH AP FILE President Joe Biden meets with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in November.

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