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David Jessop

April 10th, 2018

The implications of a divisive Summit of the Americas in Lima

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Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

David Jessop

April 10th, 2018

The implications of a divisive Summit of the Americas in Lima

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

The 8th Summit of the Americas in Lima, Peru, will be divisive, potentially leaving Latin America and the Caribbean in leaderless disarray just when changing international relationships require unity and a common identity, writes David Jessop (Caribbean Council).

The 8th Summit of the Americas, taking place in Lima, Peru, 13-14 April 2018, will likely illustrate just how divided the hemisphere has become.

Since the last such event was held in Panama City in 2015 much has changed. Then, improved hemispheric relations seemed possible. President Obama’s December 2014 decision to pursue détente with Havana and President Castro’s participation in the summit, ended Washington’s growing isolation in the Americas. It demonstrated, at least symbolically, that the US and its neighbours saw themselves as equals in the Americas and marked the high point of hemispheric compromise.

Much has changed since Obama’s December 2014 decision to pursue détente with Havana (Chuck Kennedy, public domain)

Three years on, the Lima summit will likely be very different. So much so that it may come to define the point in twenty-first century history when irreconcilable divisions emerged in the Americas over US policy, political ideology, trade and trade wars, and the presence of newer actors such as China.

At one level, the summit promises political theatre. Both President Trump and reportedly President Castro will be present, as will it seems President Maduro, albeit outside the conference hall, cast in the role of the disinvited guest.

Notwithstanding, something much more serious will be taking place. The meeting will by default revolve around the changes that have taken place in US policy towards the hemisphere since January 2017. This is even though the summit’s core issues relate to hemispheric cooperation and are aimed at advancing the development of Latin America and the Caribbean.

A lack of US sensitivity meets Latin American sensibilities

In Lima, participants will want to assess US thinking about its neighbours in the hemisphere and begin a process that will lead to determining their future response to the unilateralism of the Trump administration’s “America First” policy.

When the US President speaks, participants will want to understand better how he interprets in an hemispheric context the language contained in his administration’s recently published US National Security Strategy. What they will want to hear is how the US government intends achieving its stated objective of restoring the unipolarity that existed at the end of the Cold War, and what is meant by the suggestion that the US intends competing “with all tools of national power” to ensure “the regions of the world are not dominated by one power”.

They will also undoubtedly be seeking clarity on how the White House intends acting on the view expressed in February by the former US Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, that the Monroe Doctrine, which asserts US authority in the Americas, is still of relevance.

The summit ‘s success will depend partly on how Trump interprets the National Security Strategy (Shealah Craighead, public domain)

Not only are both matters linked directly to almost every matter slated for discussion, but they are also central to the hugely divisive issue of how the hemisphere responds to the internal situation in Venezuela.

The issue potentially pits the US and like-minded nations in the Lima group,  including Guyana, St Lucia, and the host country Peru, which rescinded Venezuela’s invitation to the summit based on a “rupture of the democratic order”, against others that are members of the Bolivarian Alliance (ALBA).

Despite this, the matter is far from straightforward. While many Latin and Caribbean nations are deeply concerned about the still growing humanitarian crisis in Venezuela and its wider effects, they are cautious about being seen to support too closely a US president who is unpopular on the street and intent on engineering regime change in a country within their hemisphere.

How much support the US receives on this issue will very much depend on how sensitive President Trump is to the fact that sovereignty and independence of action are central to public opinion, identity, and politics in every Latin America and Caribbean nation.

Regrettably, the signs are that the US President is tone deaf to hemispheric sensibilities. His decisions and provocations do not augur well. They include:

  • imposition of tariffs on steel and aluminium affecting Brazil, Mexico and Canada on the spurious basis of defending US national security
  • ordering the US national guard to the border with Mexico in the absence of his promised wall
  • offensive comments about Haiti and El Salvador, as well as about migrants from Latin America
  • aggressive rhetoric on Cuba
  • expulsion of so called “dreamers”
  • ending of protected status for some migrants from four Central American nations.

Implications for US-Caribbean cooperation and intraregional relations

All of this poses a particular dilemma for the Caribbean, which has issues of its own that it hopes to address with the US at and in the margins of the summit.

These include:

  1. obtaining assurances that the Caribbean Basin Initiative is secure and that the US will seek a new WTO waiver for the Initiative in 2019
  2. ascertaining the extent to which the US might support the region’s wish to mitigate and adapt to the existential threat of climate change
  3. exploring whether the US recognises the threat that de-risking has for the region’s future financial stability.

If as seems to be the case, the Trump administration sees the resolution of these and other issues as transactional, then the Lima summit may indicate, in private at least, what the political cost of any future accommodation with Washington may now be.

Writing recently in the Jamaica Observer about the summit, Bruce Golding, Jamaica’s former Prime Minister, suggested that although the practical gains from triennial Americas summits have been limited, the important advances have been in building trust in what he described as “a region that has been bedevilled by a huge trust deficit”.

Unfortunately, not only is trust among Latin American and Caribbean nations now dissipating rapidly across the hemisphere, but may go into free fall if Washington follows through on its desire to isolate nations not willing to conform to President Trump’s world view.

All indications are that not only will the 8th Summit of the Americas be divisive, it may also leave Latin America and the Caribbean in disarray and leaderless precisely when rapidly changing international relationships require the region to strengthen its unity and unique identity.

Notes:
• The views expressed here are of the authors and do not reflect the position of the Centre or of the LSE
• This post was originally published by the Caribbean Council
• Please read our Comments Policy before commenting

About the author

David Jessop

David Jessop is a Consultant and former Managing Director of the Caribbean Council. He has worked on Caribbean issues for over forty years. During that time he has provided high level support and advice to industries, associations, governments, and companies on investment, trade policy, and political issues in the Caribbean, the UK, and continental Europe. His fortnightly columns are syndicated to the Caribbean press and can be found on the Caribbean Council website.

Posted In: Geopolitics | The Trump era

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