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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Chavez touts new power bloc

Hopes to counter U.S. influence in Latin America

Ian James Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela – What if they threw a giant party for the Americas and didn’t invite the United States or Canada? That’s what Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is doing with a two-day, 33-nation summit starting today, welcoming nations from Brazil to Jamaica in what he hopes will be a grand alliance to counter U.S. influence.

Many presidents have less sweeping goals in mind, seeing the new Community of Latin American and Caribbean States mainly as a forum for resolving regional conflicts, building closer ties and promoting economic development.

Yet the bloc’s creation is also a sign that for many countries, the United States is no longer seen as an essential diplomatic player in regional affairs.

“The U.S. has lost an awful lot of space in the region, even though it’s still the most important, the most powerful country in the region,” said Eduardo Gamarra, a Latin American politics professor at Florida International University in Miami. Still, he said, it’s unclear whether the region’s governments are truly committed to forming a close alliance that brings together Latin America in ways that offset U.S. power.

Chavez, who sells the largest share of Venezuela’s oil to the United States, is urging the region to assert its independence, noting it was once a dream of 19th century independence hero Simon Bolivar to unify Latin American nations. Lampposts in Caracas are now festooned with banners picturing independence leaders ranging from Bolivar to Cuba’s Jose Marti, along with the slogan “the path of our Liberators.”

At least publicly, though, only some of Chavez’s closest allies seem to share his interests in creating alternatives to established bodies such as the Washington-based Organization of American States, which includes every nation in the Americas except Cuba among its active members.

Nor are the region’s leaders likely to agree with Chavez in creating organizations to replace those he strongly criticizes, such as the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the World Bank.

The new group, known by its Spanish initials CELAC, will add one more acronym to a region with plenty of smaller organizations, including Unasur, Mercosur and the Caribbean Community. Some of Chavez’s most fervent support comes from within the nine-nation, socialist-leaning Bolivarian Alternative bloc known as ALBA, which he has promoted with allies including Cuba and Nicaragua.

“This isn’t aimed at becoming a new economic integration bloc nor replacing the OAS,” said Maria Teresa Romero, an international studies professor at the Central University of Venezuela.

“President Chavez and others in the ALBA are using the CELAC for their political and propagandistic aims,” Romero said. For Chavez, she said, it’s a chance to show the outside world and Venezuelans “that he still has great international leadership” even though his influence has slipped in the past several years.

The summit’s agenda as described by diplomats includes rather modest aims: approving the group’s procedural rules as well as a clause dealing with democratic norms, formally launching the organization and adopting a declaration of shared principles.