Title: LATIN AMERICA AND THE WAR ON TERROR
1LATIN AMERICA AND THE WAR ON TERROR
- Democracy and the Rise
- Of the New Left
2READING
- Smith, Talons, chs. 10-11
- Roberto Russell, U.S. Policy toward Latin
America A View from the South (Course Reader
9)
3(No Transcript)
4WAR ON TERRORTHE RULES OF THE GAME
- Nations can respond however they chooseincluding
the use of indiscriminate force.
- Preventive action is appropriate and acceptable.
- There is no need to adhere to international
treaties or conventions.
- Alliances are formed around one central issuethe
anti-terror campaign. Democracy and human rights
are secondary issues.
- Spectator nations must tread cautiously.
5GWB AND LATIN AMERICA
- Lack of high-level attention
- Abandonment of negotiations with Mexico for
immigration reform
- Overriding concern with support for
anti-terrorist campaign (not democracy)
- Hubs, spokes, and FTAs
- Politicization of drug war
- Awaiting Fidels demise
- Opposition to Chávez and the Pink Tide
6GWB and Latin America Comparative and Historical
Perspective _________Latin America as P
riority___________ ______ Low _______
_______ High _____ Operational Mode for
U.S. ____ Unilateral Ad hoc Systema
tic imposition intervention
(Bush 2001-04) (Reagan
1981-89) _______ _________________ _
_________________ Intermittent, Co
nsistent, Multilateral low-level
high-level diplomacy engagemen
t (Clinton 1993-2000) (Kennedy 19
61-63) ________________________________________
____________________
7PROBLEM!
- Democracy and U.S.-Latin American relations
- The rise of the pink tide
- Context Bushs Second Inaugural Address
8THE PINK TIDE ORIGINS
- Economiclack of growth (through 2003), poverty
and inequality, frustration with Washington
Consensus
- Politicalweakness of representative
institutions, inattention to poor, persistence of
corruption
- Internationalwar in Iraq, opposition to Bush
policies and growing distaste for American
society
9THE PINK TIDE MEMBERSHIP
- Hugo Chávez, Venezuela (1998, 2004, 2006)
- Lula, Brazil (2002, 2006)
- Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández, Argentina
(2003, 2007)
- Evo Morales, Bolivia (2005)
- Daniel Ortega, Nicaragua (2006)
- Rafael Correa, Ecuador (2006)
- Near-Misses
- Ollanta Humala, Peru (2006)
- Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Mexico (2006)
10CLARIFICATIONS 1
- Differentiation right/center/left
- Contending leaders in/for Latin America
- Vicente Fox (Mexico)
- Lula (Brazil)
- Hugo Chávez (Venezuela)
11CLARIFICATIONS 2
- Disenchanted masses in Latin America ?
- Voters for pink tide candidates ?
- Leftist candidates for office ?
- Leftist winners of presidential elections ?
- Pro-Chávez chief executives ?
- Hugo Chávez
- Notes
- Tidal swell is spontaneous, not organized
- Rivalries and defections
12THE PINK TIDE GOALS
- Domesticwinning power, rearranging electoral
alignments overturning status quo, possibly
through institutional reform changing policy
direction - Hemisphericgaining support throughout Latin
America (invoking Bolivarian dream), reducing
U.S. hegemony
- Globalchallenging international order, forging
alliances with developing world and non-aligned
nations
13CHALLENGING AMERICAN MYTHS
- The Cherished Assumptionfreely elected leaders
will support U.S. policy
- The Western Hemisphere ideathe new world is
distinct from old, will forge common front in
international arena
- Democracy rationale for regime changefree
elections as protective shield
- The hegemonic presumptionthe United States can
dictate political life in Latin America
14GWB AND THE PINK TIDE
- Strategy of inoculation
- Circumvention through FTAs
- Cultivation (and cooptation?) of Lula
- The presidential tour (March 8-14)
- Carefully selected sitesBrazil, Uruguay,
Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico
- Rhetoric of social concern
- Only deliverable ethanol agreement
- The Chávez counter-tour
15(No Transcript)
16VISIONS FOR LATIN AMERICAGWB AND USA
- Democraticwith tilt to right or center-right
- Prosperouswith commitment to free-market
policies and ties to United States
- Unifiedunder U.S. leadership
- Peacefulin view of unanimity
- Deferentialfollowing U.S. lead in global arena
17REALITY CHECK 1
- Democracy broad ideological spectrum, from
left to right
- Prosperity mixed economies rejection of
Washington Consensus, FTAs, and FTAA
- Ideology diversity rather than unity
- Outlooks anti-U.S. attitudes strong and growing
among large share of population
- Alliances rejection of U.S. leadership and
rules of the game
18REALITY CHECK 2
- Not everyone wants the same thing!
19Rank-Order Preferences for U.S. Policy
___Partners___
__Targets___ U.S. Policy (Me
xico, (Cuba, __Rivals___ ___Bystanders__
__Configuration__ _Bush II__ __Colombia)_
_ __Venezuela)__ __(Brazil?)__
___(Others)____ Low priority 1
4 2 1 4
Unilateral Low priority 2 3
1 2 2
Multilateral High priority
3 1 4 4 3
Unilateral High priority 4
2 3 3 1
Multilateral Note As presented here
, ordinal rankings mean that 1 stands for the
first-place (most preferable) choice,
2 for the second-place choice, 3 for the
third-place choice, and 4 for the fourth-place
(least preferable) choice.
20The End.