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[WHEN YOU LOSE TO CHINA ON YOUR OWN BACKYARD] Boycotts Threatens to Turn Biden’s Summit of the Americas into a Political Disaster !!

Daniel808

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Last week, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador declared that he will boycott this year’s Summit of the Americas, scheduled to take place June 6-10 in Los Angeles, if the Biden administration fails to invite the leaders of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua.

While no final decision has yet been announced, several U.S. officials have indicated recently that the questionable human rights records and authoritarian governance of each of these countries disqualify them from attendance, a position that has raised hackles throughout the hemisphere.

Indeed, Lopez Obrador is not the only leader in the hemisphere who may not show up unless Washington extends invitations to all three countries. Last week, Bolivia’s president, Luis Arce, tweeted a similar intention, while several Caribbean leaders have suggested that at least some if not all members of CARICOM, which consists of 15 English-speaking Caribbean member-countries and five associate members, may decide to stay home. The newly elected president of Honduras, Xiomara Castro, has also suggestedshe won’t go if the three nations’ leaders are not invited.

These threats suggest that the first Summit to be hosted by the United States since its inaugural session in Miami in 1994 is not only setting up the Biden administration for a serious diplomatic embarrassment, but also for a major missed opportunity to focus attention on the growing strategic importance of its hemispheric neighbors. Washington needs the support of its regional partners to tackle critical issues, notably illegal migration, the drug trade, climate change, and growing Chinese influence in the Americas. The Summit itself is not solely to promote U.S. interests, but to promote the interests of all the countries in the Americas.

In a region where the United States is quickly losing influence and partner nations perceive U.S. disinterest, the Biden administration will lose political capital if it allows its growing tendency to divide the world into “democratic” friends and “authoritarian” states to dictate the invitation list for a forum that is much larger than Washington’s professed policy objectives, however laudable they may be. A summit with critical partners missing would also deliver a huge blow to Biden’s attempts to find solutions to U.S. domestic problems that range from border security to immigration flows to the rise in oil and gas prices.

Moreover, Washington’s position on the Summit is hypocritical, inconsistent, and ultimately undermines an already-faltering U.S. position in the Americas.

The United States has championed human rights and democracy promotion around the world, but those efforts have been uneven in the Americas, to say the least. From Mexico through Argentina, the United States practiced a policy of backing – sometimes even installing – politically violent, even genocidal dictators and local elites who supported Washington’s anti-communist policies, both before and during the Cold War. In Latin America, the United States has a far longer track record of supporting human rights violators than of advocating for the masses whose rights were violated. The special irony of excluding Cuba and Nicaragua from this year’s Summit is that Washington went to great lengths during the Cold War, including providing critical support to armed insurgencies and imposing severe economic sanctions, to destabilize and eventually overthrow leftist governments in both countries, thus infusing their successor leaders with understandable skepticism about Washington’s insistence that their exclusion reflects Washington’s dedication to democracy and human rights throughout the hemisphere.

On top of this, the case of Venezuela presents the United States with a dilemma. If the United States invites Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido, whom it recognizes as the legitimate president of the country, the Caribbean states, who have never recognized Guaido as Venezuela’s president, are more likely to boycott. Indeed, Washington is increasingly isolated by its continued loyalty to Guaido whose years-long efforts to unite the opposition against President Nicolas Maduro have come to naught. Even the European Union, which initially recognized Guaido as president after his election as president of the National Assembly, has reduced his status to one of privileged interlocutor” in an implicit acknowledgement of the abject failure of Washington’s de facto “regime change” policy.

Though White House press secretary Jen Psaki, who just stepped down this week, and State Department spokesman Ned Price indicated that the discussion of attendance remains hypothetical, even at this very late stage — no invitations have yet been issued — the growing hemispheric contretemps over who gets an invitation seems unlikely to end well. Christopher Sabatini, senior fellow for Latin America at Chatham House, a London-based think tank, wrote in Foreign Policy magazine that without a significant change in U.S. posturing, this year’s summit could be seen as “a gravestone on U.S. influence in the region.”

The Summit, which was initiated by former U.S. President Bill Clinton, is held every three years in a different country and was initially intended to help foster closer hemispheric cooperation around issues including democracy and shared economic and related problems. It was also intended to boost U.S. public and business interest in the country’s southern neighbors. But levels of U.S. interest in the forum have been inconsistent, especially in recent years.

In an unprecedented move, President Donald Trump skipped the eighth summit held in Lima, Peru in 2018, sending Vice President Mike Pence in his place. Both Maduro and Daniel Ortega, Nicaragua’s increasingly authoritarian president, attended the 2018 Summit. After U.S. President Barack Obama normalized relations with Havana in 2014, Cuba was invited and participated in both the 2015 and 2018 Summits. Trump’s absence in 2018 merely served to highlight the increasing irrelevance and decreasing influence of the United States in the region and the faltering inter-American system.

Things have not much improved under Biden, in major part due to domestic political considerations and partisan politics. The confirmation of key ambassadorships in the Americas has been delayed in Congress for months due to holds put on confirmations by Republican Sen. Ted Cruz for unrelated reasons having to do with his opposition to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. It was only just announced that Frank Mora, Biden’s nominee as U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States, would be confirmed later this week, less than three weeks before the summit.

Domestic political bickering has also shaped the position the White House finds itself in with Cuba. Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey, a Cuban-American Democrat who also chairs the Foreign Relations Committee, has long opposed normalization of U.S.-Cuba relations. In an evenly split Senate, Menendez’s support is viewed by the White House as critical to a wide range of foreign policy issues, which gives him enormous leverage on the policies he cares most about. Although the administration this week moved more decisively to ease Trump-era sanctions against Havana despite strong objections by Menendez, whether it can bring itself to invite Cuba to the Summit remains up in the air.

Until the 2015 Summit where Obama met with then-President Raul Castro, an encounter that helped lay the groundwork for Obama’s historic trip to Havana a year later, the question of Cuba’s participation in the Summit, as well as other hemispheric venues, served as a perennial source of friction between the United States and most of the rest of the hemisphere. But Trump’s reversal of Obama’s opening to the Caribbean island – and Biden’s delays in fully restoring relations – have effectively thrust the issue back onto the hemispheric agenda in ways that are likely to negatively affect Washington’s relationships, particularly if, as polls currently predict, Luis Inacio Lula de Silva, is returned to the Brazilian presidency in elections later this year.

With incoming president Biden declaring “America is back,” one might have expected swift policy changes in the Americas, but the president’s initiatives have so far proved to be more rhetoric than reality.

On the campaign trail, Biden condemned Trump’s inhumane policies toward migrants, promising major changes if elected. Ultimately, President Biden has inherited the regional migration problem in his own right, with Vice President Kamala Harris, the point person in the administration’s Central America “root causes” strategy, famously telling Guatemalans, “do not come” during her June 2021 visit to Central America. Despite increased attention on migration from Central America, Cuba and elsewhere, the issue – and the perception in the region that Washington, even under Democrats, remains hostile to desperate migrants – continues to rankle relations between the U.S. and Latin America.

Indeed, with U.S. attention hyper-focused on its own priorities – namely migration, drug trafficking, and China – its regional partners are less inclined to work with a northern giant they see as selfish, arrogant, and hubristic. The question is, can the United States momentarily put aside its domestic fixations and great power concerns for the greater good of the hemisphere?

U.S. re-engagement with its partners in the region is long overdue. It is not that the United States should not hold countries accountable for their human rights records. It’s that making clean human rights records and democratic governance preconditions for being invited to a summit designed to tackle the hemisphere’s immense challenges is bad practice, not to say historically inconsistent and hypocritical.

The absence of Presidents López Obrador, Castro, and Arce, and the leaders of other regional partners would be keenly felt and damaging to the forum in future years. It would present China with new opportunities to assert its own growing influence. There is still time for the United States to create a relevant summit and promote successful partnerships in all the Americas, but it is running out.

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2...-and-nicaragua-to-the-summit-of-the-americas/





Mexico
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https://www.latimes.com/politics/st...tend-summit-of-the-americas-in-l-a-next-month




Cuba


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https://thehill.com/latino/3502083-cuban-president-says-he-wont-attend-summit-of-the-americas/
 
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Argentina even Fvck the US with organizing other Summit that invite Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela parallel to summit of the americas :enjoy:

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https://www.plenglish.com/news/2022...c-meeting-parallel-to-summit-of-the-americas/











Summit of Americas Puts US’ Declining Clout on Full Display
By Mu Lu Published: May 29, 2022 03:11 PM


Illustration: Liu Xidan/GT

Illustration: Liu Xidan/GT

Commented on the upcoming 9th Summit of the Americas, Evandro Menezes de Carvalho, director of the Center for Chinese Studies at the Brazilian college Getulio Vargas Foundation, said: "This year's Summit will have this stain on its history." The summit is scheduled to be held from June 6 to 10 in Los Angeles. However, Washington has been opposed by a few governments in the region, because of its attempt to use the summit to promote US' own interests and strengthen its ideological camp.

The US announced that it has not invited the governments of Venezuela and Nicaragua and is only considering inviting a Cuban representative to the summit as an observer instead of as a full participant. However, the president of Mexico and the president of Bolivia have made it clear that all Latin American countries should be invited, otherwise they will refuse to participate.

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega said bluntly: "I say from here to the Yankee: forget it, we are not interested in being in that Summit." The Cuban Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that those countries that the US has not invited would meet within the framework of "the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America."

The Summit of the Americas has already become a diplomatic farce for Washington before it has even started. Biden's attempt to save the US' influence in Latin America has suffered a crisis of confidence. However, the US may have sowed the seeds of such an embarrassing situation long ago.

US-led small circle not attractive

The so-called values-based diplomacy promoted by the Biden administration is nothing more than targeted suppression, containment and confrontation under the guise of freedom and openness. It is old wine in new bottles.

The "value-based diplomacy" was confusing at the beginning of the Biden's administration, but such repeated acts have gradually revealed its true content, especially when the US has kept instigating the crisis between Russia and Ukraine, and driving the countries involved in the crisis into an even more difficult situation. This has made the international community realize that participating in the US-led small circle is nothing but acting as a pawn of US hegemony, creating divisions, inciting confrontation and undermining peace in regional and international relations.

Pan Deng, executive director of the Latin American and Caribbean Region Law Center of China University of Political Science and Law, believed that Latin America was originally a region with a strong will of integration and solidarity, and the once-split Latin America caused by the Venezuelan crisis has also aroused reflection. This time, the US wants to use the Summit of Americas to squeeze out left-wing countries such as Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, which will inevitably lead to further division of Latin America. This is something that Latin American countries do not want to see, therefore they firmly oppose excluding Cuba from the summit.

Carvalho told the Global Times, "The fact that US President Biden excludes Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua already disqualifies the Summit as belonging to the 'Americas.' This motivated selective exclusion, delegitimizes the purpose of the Summit and reveals its character: it is a meeting to promote, mainly, US economic and political interests."

During the past eight summits, Cuban leaders were excluded from attending the meeting. This time, the US has issued an invitation, but the leaders have shown their tough attitude that they will not attend the summit despite being invited. So, this will be the least united hemispheric summit.

Pan said that this shows that even in the region where it has the most control, the US has lost the leadership to do whatever it wants. "If it does things that harm others and creates divisions and hatred, the US' leadership will be rebutted," he said.

Never again when US calls and all others follow up

Carvalho believed that US influence in the region is decreasing because Latin American people seem to have learned from history. The US has never positioned itself as a friend of Latin American countries. "It never proposed any economic integration project that would support the effective development of Latin America. The US has resources and goodwill for Europeans, however for Latinos, the opposite," he said.

This collective opposition shows that regional countries are generally disappointed with the Biden administration's policy toward Latin America. In the past, they dared not speak out, but today, regional big countries have made their voices heard, and small countries collectively declare their disapproval. This time, Latin American countries have clearly conveyed at least one thing to the other hemisphere: the US hegemony is indeed declining.

However, the US has always refused to accept such a reality. The US still regards itself as the "only pole" in the world, fantasizing that other countries will easily follow its order in its own "backyard". But the reality is a huge slap in the US' face.

According to the NBC News on Wednesday, Mexican politician and academic Jorge Castaneda said in a video interview, "What's clear is that the time when the United States called the summit and everybody came is not happening with President Biden today, and it probably will not happen again with anybody."

"China's rise opens up new possibilities for developing countries to enter this multipolar international order. And the country that has the intelligence to understand this will be the one that will most know how to take advantage of this new moment in human history. The US would do better if they were busy thinking about how to live with this new reality," said Carvalho.

Times have changed. If the US continues to lamely resist a new multi-polar world order, it will only make a fool of itself on more occasions.

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202205/1266790.shtml
 
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‘Summit of The Gringos’ set to be a lonely affair
By Carlos Martinez Published: Jun 01, 2022 05:54 PM


Summit of the Americas Illustration: Chen Xia/GT

Summit of the Americas Illustration: Chen Xia/GT

The Ninth Summit of the Americas is due to take place from June 6 to 10 in Los Angeles, marking the first time it has been hosted in the US since Bill Clinton created the event in 1994. It comes as Joe Biden, 16 months into his presidency, is working on multiple fronts to rebuild a stable US-led imperialist alliance following the erratic legacy of Donald Trump.

When the Biden administration proclaimed that that "diplomacy is back" and that the US would "repair its alliances," this was merely a promise to carry forward the century-old project of domination and hegemonism. So much is obvious from the proposed expansion of NATO, attempts to weaken Russia, the creation of AUKUS, the revival of the Quad, the encouraging of Taiwanese secessionism, and the recent launch of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity.

In this context, the Summit provides an opportunity for the US to reassert its leadership in what it has long considered its backyard for centuries. But things are not going according to plan. In response to a US announcement that the US hasn't invited the governments of Venezuela and Nicaragua and is only considering inviting a Cuban representative to the summit as an observer instead of as a full participant, multiple leaders in the region declared they refuse to attend.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador stated that: "If everyone is not invited, I will not go," questioning if it was truly a summit, or just one of the friends of the US. Bolivian President Luis Arce echoed the sentiment of his Mexican counterpart, saying that he would not participate if the exclusion took place. Likewise Xiomara Castro, the recently-elected leftist President of Honduras stated: "If all the nations aren't there, it isn't a Summit of the Americas." It may well be that the entire CARICOM - an intergovernmental organization with 15 member states in the Caribbean - boycotts the Summit.

Biden is so concerned about the collapse of the Summit that he dispatched his envoy Christopher Dodd to Argentina to convince President Alberto Fernández to attend. Fernández did not confirm whether or not he would go to the Summit, but he did take the opportunity to reproach Dodd and condemned the exclusion, saying "it's shameful that the US maintains a blockade against Cuba and Venezuela"- with Venezuela's senior politician Diosdado Cabello rejecting it as a "summit of the gringos."

The Monroe Doctrine, first articulated by president James Monroe in 1823, denounced European colonialism and interference in the Western Hemisphere, not on the basis of any anti-colonial principle but as an assertion of the US' exclusive rights to exploit the continent. Since that time, the US' relationship in Latin America has largely been characterized by neocolonialism, and the region's land, natural resources, labor and markets have been subservient to the needs of US monopoly capital.

When the US has been unable to secure its interests through quiet pressure and economic coercion, it has not hesitated to use force. This has included a well documented history of military coups including in Guatemala, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, as well as an attempted invasion of Cuba, a civil war in Nicaragua, as well as recent efforts aimed at Venezuela and Brazil.

But the US cannot stem the tide of multipolarity.

The peoples of the region are simply not willing to accept the Monroe Doctrine any longer. Speaking in January this year, President Biden thought he was presenting Latin America a valuable gift by upgrading its status from "backyard" to "frontyard." However, the peoples of the region are no longer willing to be any type of yard. China's rise has been important to Latin America to move away from the US, with bilateral trade increasing from just $12 billion in 2000 to $315 billion today. A majority of countries in the Latin American and Caribbean region have signed up to the Belt and Road Initiative. As US peace activist Medea Benjamin noted recently: "China has surpassed the US as the number one trading partner, giving Latin American countries more freedom to defy the United States."

As trade, investment and diplomatic ties with China have grown, Latin America has a historic opportunity to climb the ladder of sovereign development, improve the living standards of its people, and affirm its status as a key player in an increasingly multipolar world.

As spokesperson of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Wang Wenbin stated recently, Latin America is neither a frontyard nor a backyard of the US, "and the Summit of the Americas is not the Summit of the United States of America." If the US wants to improve its relationship with the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, it should follow China's example and adopt an international relations strategy based on mutual respect, mutual benefit, equal treatment and non-interference. In short, it should give up on the Project for a New American Century and come to terms with humanity's trajectory away from hegemonism.

The author is a British author and independent political commentator.

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202206/1267136.shtml
 
United States does not care about it's own back yard but send warships halfway round the world to China's front yard.

Now where have I heard that before....oh yea.. Australia.
 
Because those muricans troller hiding from the threat that open the truth like this one :enjoy:

what truth? Mexico insists on an all inclusive summit that includes Cuba? I think senor López Obrado has a valid point. I have been part of trade and investment delegations and I can tell you many countries, rebuke, insult and the defy the US in private discussions. If and when the issue is made public it is often intended for the domestic audience or to extract concessions - welcome to the real world ... :lol:
 
what truth? Mexico insists on an all inclusive summit that includes Cuba? I think senor López Obrado has a valid point. I have been part of trade and investment delegations and I can tell you many countries, rebuke, insult and the defy the US in private discussions. If and when the issue is made public it is often intended for the domestic audience or to extract concessions - welcome to the real world ... :lol:
I guess promote trade between countries is not in US agenda. US only think of increasing its influence at expense others.
 

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