ANALYSIS: Deadlock over Cuba detracted from Latin American leaders' otherwise warm embrace for Barack Obama
FOREIGN LEADERS have jostled to be in pictures with him and pressed for autographs.
Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, who called the last US president the “devil”, gave Barack Obama a book on Latin America and clasped hands with him as if he’d been reunited with an old friend.
Obama proved an able statesman during his trip to Mexico and Trinidad and Tobago that ended yesterday, as he did earlier in the month in Europe.
But on both trips he found that personal diplomacy has its limitations – that a leader’s abundant charisma cannot overcome hard national interests or policy disputes marinated in decades of resentment.
Obama came to the summit of 34 democratically elected leaders in the western hemisphere hoping to talk about issues that invite consensus, environmental protection and economic recovery among them.
Many of his counterparts, however, wanted a commitment to end the US’s 47-year trade embargo against Cuba, a commitment Obama would not make.
“It’s fair to say there’s a disagreement on Cuba,” deputy national security adviser Denis McDonough said.
On Obama’s trip, the limits of personal diplomacy were evident on all sides. Obama stopped first in Mexico City, where he repeatedly praised President Felipe Calderón for his “courage” in combating drug cartels.
His stop in Mexico was designed to show solidarity with Calderón. Calderón made few specific demands of Obama, but he did want the US to reinstate a ban on assault weapons, arguing that since the prohibition lapsed in 2004, the number of these powerful guns showing up in Mexico has soared.
Obama would not relent. White House aides said that reimposing the weapons ban would be politically untenable, requiring votes of conservative congressional Democrats worried about alienating gun rights advocates.
The president faced much the same reality in his European debut earlier this month. Smitten with Michelle Obama, the paparazzi may have doted on America’s premier power couple but the president, nevertheless, came away with major goals unfulfilled.
Although European leaders spoke of the importance of the Afghanistan mission, the 5,000 new troops pledged by Nato failed to include the combat forces sought by Washington, and the $1.1 trillion in loans and guarantees to countries most hurt by the global downturn announced at the Group of 20 summit fell short of the “new global deal” called for by Obama and British prime minister Gordon Brown.
Not that there were not achievements for Obama along the way. A project that Obama has embraced is burnishing the United States’ image in the world.
His predecessor, George W Bush, was often criticised for ignoring or dictating terms to world leaders, rather than working collaboratively. To that end, Obama says it’s important for him to listen. And he has scored points for reticence.
During one session at the Summit of the Americas devoted to democratic governance, Obama did not speak at all, McDonough said. He merely listened and took “copious notes”.
Obama prepared carefully for the latest summit. The White House knew beforehand that Cuba would be a focus, aides said. Obama was not about to end the embargo, but he did make a concession before arriving in Trinidad, lifting restrictions on Cuban Americans who wish to visit family.
Speaking at the opening ceremony, Obama said: “The United States seeks a new beginning with Cuba.” The statement followed Cuban president Raúl Castro’s comment a day earlier expressing willingness to discuss a wide range of traditionally off-limit topics, including human rights.
As it turned out, Obama’s statement, which included, “I am prepared to have my administration engage with the Cuban government on a wide range of issues – from human rights, free speech, and democratic reform to drugs, migration and economic issues”, was not enough to defuse the issue.
Increasingly Latin America has made US policy on Cuba the measure by which to test Obama’s pledge to improve relations in the region. That’s the case not only for leaders on the left like Chávez and Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, but also for moderates such as Argentina’s Cristina Fernández.
Fernández used her opening remarks at the summit to call for lifting of the “anachronistic blockade”. Cuba is “a theme that is on everyone’s mind”, Brazilian foreign minister Celso Amorim said. “The big test was progress in the relations with Cuba. I think a small step in the right direction has been taken. And now what we need is direct dialogue.”
Shortly after Fidel Castro took power half a century ago, Washington broke relations with Cuba and persuaded most of the hemisphere to follow suit.
Every country has since reversed itself, except the US.
Experts on the region said that to Latin American leaders, Obama’s actions on Cuba may seem small.
Administration officials have cast the liberalised travel policy as historic. But past presidents have gone further.
Julia Sweig, author of a forthcoming book called Cuba: What Everyone Needs to Know, said former president Jimmy Carter dropped all travel restrictions to Cuba. And another Democratic president, Bill Clinton, allowed Americans to visit Cuba as part of certain cultural exchange programmes.
“What they [Latin American leaders] do know is that he only opened the door a little to a handful of Americans,” Sweig said. “And some know it was once open much more. By taking only a limited step, he [Obama] paradoxically turns it into more of a Cuba summit than he would prefer.”
– (LA Times-Washington Post service)