Posted on Sun, Sep. 21, 2008
BY JORGE G. CASTAÑEDA
www.project-syndicate.org
MEXICO CITY -- For the next American president, fixing the international 
mess inherited from the Bush administration will be no simple task. 
While Latin America will not be a priority for either an Obama or McCain 
administration, continuing the United States' neglect of the last seven 
years is no longer viable.
Two distinct political/diplomatic challenges stand out: Cuba's imminent 
transition or succession crisis, and the continuing ascent of the 
region's ''two lefts,'' one represented by Venezuela's President Hugo 
Chávez and the other by Brazil's increasingly influential President Luiz 
Inácio Lula da Silva. The next U.S. administration will prove successful 
only if it grasps that Latin America is living through a moment that 
combines the best and worst aspects of its history: the fastest economic 
growth since the 1970s, with poverty and inequality diminishing, and 
more democratic and respectful of human rights than ever before, but 
becoming more politically polarized.
In Cuba, Fidel Castro's eventual passing from the scene represents an 
immense challenge. The United States cannot continue with the failed 
policies of the past half-century. Demanding a full-fledged democratic 
transition as a pre-condition for normalizing U.S.-Cuban relations is 
both unrealistic and unpalatable to Latin America. Yet the United States 
cannot set aside the question of democracy and human rights in Cuba 
while it awaits the departure of Fidel's brother, Raúl.
Realpolitik and fear of another exodus of Cuban refugees across the 
Florida Straits may tempt the United States to pursue a ''Chinese'' or 
''Vietnamese'' solution to Cuba: normalizing diplomatic relations in 
exchange for economic reform, while leaving the question of internal 
political change until later. But U.S. leaders should not succumb to 
this temptation. The United States, Canada, Europe and Latin America 
have constructed a regional legal framework, which must not be 
abandoned, to defend democratic rule and human rights in the hemisphere.
Elections the norm
Cuba needs to return to the regional concert of powers, but it must 
accept this concert's rules. Holding free and fair elections may not be 
the primary issue, but nor are they issues that should be shelved in the 
interests of stability and expediency. Elections must instead be part of 
a comprehensive process of normalization: They should neither be a 
deal-breaker nor a nonissue. While the United States should lift its 
trade embargo as soon as Cuba's transition begins, everything else 
should be conditional on Cuba initiating a process of resolving all 
outstanding issues.
But Cuba is just part of what might be called Latin America's ''left'' 
problem. Indeed, much has been written recently about the ascent of the 
left in Latin America over the past decade. In fact, there are two lefts 
in the region: a modern, democratic, globalized and market-friendly 
left, found in Chile, Brazil, Uruguay, parts of Central America and, up 
to a point, in Peru; and a retrograde, populist, authoritarian, statist 
and anti-American left, found in Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Cuba, 
Ecuador, Bolivia, Venezuela and, to a lesser extent, in Argentina, 
Colombia and Paraguay.
Some of these ''lefts'' are in power; some, as in Mexico in its last, 
disputed presidential election, barely missed conquering it, but may 
still do so.
During the past two years, it has become increasingly evident that the 
''modern'' or ''soft'' left is, all in all, governing well. The other 
left has proved to be more extreme and erratic than many anticipated. 
The former feels no urge to ''export'' its ''model,'' whereas the latter 
has a strategy and the means to do so.
The retrograde left today can realize Che Guevara's old dream: not 
''one, two, many Vietnams,'' but ''one, two, many Venezuelas,'' winning 
power by the ballot and then conserving it through constitutional 
changes and the creation of armed militias and monolithic parties. It 
can finance all of this with the support of Venezuela's state oil 
company, implementing social policies that are misguided over the long 
term but seductive in the short run, especially when carried out by 
Cuban doctors, teachers and instructors.
Herein lies a dilemma for the next U.S. president: how to address the 
clear rift between the two lefts in a way that improves U.S.-Latin 
American relations, fortifies the modern left and weakens the retrograde 
left without resorting to the failed interventionist policies of the 
past. The best, strictly Latin America-focused steps, are self-evident, 
if not easily achievable. They require strengthening the governments of 
the modern left, or those of the center or center-right threatened by 
the old-fashioned left, and simultaneously making it clear to the latter 
that there is a price to be paid for violating the basic tenets of 
democracy, respect for human rights and the rule of law.
Transform relationships
Turning its back in the face of such challenges is no longer a viable 
American option. Aside from areas of particular concern (oil, arms, 
guerrillas, drugs), the United States needs Latin America dearly 
nowadays because resistance to it is springing up everywhere -- and with 
greater virulence than at any time since World War II's end. The next 
U.S. president must reinvigorate a relationship that is ready to be 
substantially transformed for the first time since Franklin Roosevelt's 
Good Neighbor Policy of seven decades ago.
Jorge G. Castañeda, former foreign minister of Mexico (2000-03), is a 
Global Distinguished Professor of Politics and Latin American Studies at 
New York University.
©2008 Project Syndicate
http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/other-views/story/693805.html
 
 
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