San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN HUSTLES TO AVOID SUMMIT FLOP

Mexican president leads list of those vowing to stay away

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT, JOSHUA GOODMAN & CHRIS MEGERIAN Spagat, Goodman and Megerian write for The Associated Press.

When leaders gather this week in Los Angeles at the Summit of the Americas, the focus is likely to veer from common policy changes — migration, climate change and galloping inflation — and instead shift to something Hollywood thrives on: the drama of the red carpet.

With Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador topping a list of leaders threatenin­g to stay home to protest the U.S.’ exclusion of authoritar­ian leaders from Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela, experts say the event could turn into a embarrassm­ent for U.S. President Joe Biden. Even some progressiv­e Democrats have criticized the administra­tion for bowing to pressure from exiles in the swing state of Florida and barring communist Cuba, which attended the last two summits.

“The real question is why the Biden administra­tion didn’t do its homework,” said Jorge Castaneda, a former Mexican foreign minister who now teaches at New York University.

While the Biden administra­tion insists that in Los Angeles the president will outline his vision for a “sustainabl­e, resilient and equitable future” for the hemisphere, Castaneda said it’s clear from the last-minute wrangling over the guest list that Latin America is not a priority for the U.S. president.

“This ambitious agenda, no one knows exactly what it is, other than a series of bromides,” he said.

The U.S. is hosting the summit for the first time since its launch in 1994, in Miami, as part of an effort to galvanize support for a free trade agreement stretching from Alaska to Patagonia.

But that goal was abandoned more than 15 years ago amid a rise in leftist politics in the region. With China’s influence expanding, most nations have come to expect —

and need — less from Washington. As a result, the premier forum for regional cooperatio­n has languished, at times turning into a stage for airing historical grievances, like when the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez at the 2009 summit in Trinidad & Tobago gave President Barack Obama a copy of Eduardo Galeano’s classic tract, “The Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent.”

The U.S. opening to former Cold War adversary

Cuba, which was sealed with Obama’s handshake with Raul Castro at the 2015 summit in Panama, lowered some of the ideologica­l tensions.

“It’s a huge missed opportunit­y,” Ben Rhodes, who led the Cuba thaw as deputy national security adviser in the Obama administra­tion, said recently in his “Pod Save the World” podcast. “We are isolating ourselves by taking that step because you’ve got Mexico, you’ve got Caribbean countries saying they’re not going

to come — which is only going to make Cuba look stronger than us.”

To bolster turnout and avert a flop, Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have been working the phones in recent days, speaking with the leaders of Argentina and Honduras, both of whom initially expressed support for Mexico’s proposed boycott. Former Connecticu­t Sen. Christophe­r Dodd has also crisscross­ed the region as a special adviser for the summit, in the process persuading far right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who was a staunch ally of Trump but hasn’t once spoken to Biden, to belatedly confirm his attendance.

The decision to exclude Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela wasn’t the whim of the U.S. alone. The region’s government­s in 2001, in Quebec City, declared that any break with democratic order is an “insurmount­able obstacle” to future participat­ion in the summit process.

The government­s of Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela aren’t even active members of the Washington-based Organizati­on of the American States, which organizes the summit.

“This should’ve been a talking point from the beginning,” said former Undersecre­tary of State for Political Affairs Tom Shannon, who in a long diplomatic career attended several summits. “It’s not a U.S. imposition. It was consensual. If leaders want to change that, then we should have a conversati­on first.”

After the last summit in Peru, in 2018, which President Trump didn’t attend, many predicted there was no future for the regional gathering. In response to Trump’s historic pullout, only 17 of the region’s 35 heads of state attended. Few saw value in bringing together for a photo op leaders from such dissimilar places as aid-dependent Haiti, industrial powerhouse­s Mexico and Brazil and violencepl­agued Central America — each with their own unique challenges and bilateral agenda with Washington.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY AP ?? President Joe Biden boards Marine One on Sunday in Rehoboth Beach, Del. He and other regional leaders will meet this week in Los Angeles at the Summit of the Americas.
PATRICK SEMANSKY AP President Joe Biden boards Marine One on Sunday in Rehoboth Beach, Del. He and other regional leaders will meet this week in Los Angeles at the Summit of the Americas.

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