- 25 January 2005
- By Jessica Leigh, COHA Research
Fellow.
- Rice's outdated
Cold War credo suggests her term at the helm of the State Department will
witness no new diplomacy, let alone innovative ideas
- Bush's
championing of democracy and freedom in his inaugural address will no
doubt remain nothing more than rhetoric, and dangerous rhetoric at that.
- More bad news
for Latin America: while Rice’s words on the region are few, they are
retrogressive and full of clichés, displaying a total absence of any new
vision for the region.
Rice’s Latin America
Ever since President Bush made his much-anticipated announcement that
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice would succeed Colin Powell as the
Secretary of State in the President's second term, Dr. Rice's confirmation
by the Senate has never been in doubt, given the newly enhanced Republican
majority in that body. Not surprisingly, the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee voted to approve her nomination on January 19 with only two of its
members dissenting, John Kerry (D-MA) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA). The only
other hint of protest came when venerable parliamentarian and senior Senator
Robert Byrd (D-WV) insisted on a week's delay in the full Senate vote.
However, any display of bipartisanship visible at the hearing should not be
taken as evidence that the new Secretary of State intends to be moderate,
intent on broadening the conservative and ideologically-driven Latin
American policy agenda implemented by the Bush administration in its first
term. This approach previously had been vigorously defended by Rice in her
capacity as National Security Adviser over the past four years. In her new
post, Rice will likely gloss over key issues such as trade reform, workplace
democracy, enhanced human rights protections, anti-corruption measures or
increased transparency in governance. Instead, Rice will narrowly focus on
drugs, terrorism and the pursuit of oil (especially in Mexico, Canada and
Venezuela) and other essential strategic resources by China’s increasingly
consumption-driven economy. This hemispheric strategy, up to this point, had
been devised and implemented by a small group of conservative policymakers
and former protégés of retired Senator Jesse Helms. These include the former
White House special envoy to the Western Hemisphere, Otto Reich, the current
Assistant Secretary of State for Hemispheric Affairs Roger Noriega, and the
latter’s assistant, Dan Fisk. These ultra-operatives have been abetted from
the sidelines by the Department's arch ideologue, undersecretary of state
for arms control and international security John Bolton.
Setbacks on Many Fronts
Among the most damaging of these initiatives, all of which Rice defended and
pledged to support in her Senate confirmation hearings, have been the
continued pursuit of the administration's puerile and irrational grudge
against President Hugo Chávez of
Venezuela. Also, there is sure to be
continued and steadfast support for President Alvaro Uribe in Colombia,
irrespective of his potentially dangerous consolidation of power and
hands-off relationship with murderous right-wing guerrilla groups while he
engages in a massive military mobilization against their leftist
counterparts. In the Caribbean, Rice will continue the administration's
automatic anti-Cuba bashing, but is unlikely to utter a word of reproach for
the illegitimate and hapless government of Haitian interim prime minister
Gerard Latortue and his lawless Justice Minister Bernard Gousse, who have
presided over escalating political chaos and rampant human rights abuses on
the beleaguered island. As for the English-speaking Caribbean,
Rice is likely to ignore the CARICOM countries or use her economic leverage
to extort its members’ large number of votes in the UN and OAS.
Another key factor will be Rice’s use of the administration’s anti-terrorism
and pro-democracy doctrine recently spelled out in President Bush’s
inauguration address. Essentially, it will be the White House’s decision as
to what acts fall under both the terrorism and democracy formulations,
providing Rice with extraordinary powers that could be used to intimidate
and harangue Latin American nations to comply with
Washington’s dictates.
While Senators Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Lincoln Chafee (R-RI)—both
recently returned from a four-nation trip to South America—valiantly
attempted to make the case in the Senate for a more measured, moderate and
consistent regional policy, there is no evidence that the incoming Secretary
of State has any intention of giving their consul more than a cursory
hearing. Over the coming years, Rice will no doubt reveal that she is
incapable of providing bold and independent analysis that does not
automatically conform to standardized Cold War formulae. Accordingly, there
is little cause for optimism that Bush's second term will bring even the
most modest of improvements or display of enlightenment over his first
term's hemispheric policies, undoubtedly one of the worst this nation has
seen in generations.
The Demonization of
Chávez
Among the most blatant of a series of vacuous statements formulated by Rice
in her confirmation hearings were her virulent attacks on populist firebrand
President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela. Chávez has long been a nemesis of the
Bush administration for his self-proclaimed brotherly relations with Castro,
opposition to U.S. trade initiatives, prolific third-way economic strategies
and florid rhetorical attacks on U.S. policy toward Latin America and the
world, particularly Iraq. Assistant Secretary of State Noriega even went so
far as to give the State Department's blessing to a military coup that
briefly unseated the president in April 2002, having met with a group of the
plotters who visited Washington only weeks before the attempted putsch.
Secretary of State Powell thus found himself in the embarrassing position of
having to disown his controversial subordinate's actions and reaffirm
Washington's support for democratic processes in the hemisphere, when Chávez
was hurriedly returned to office by military loyalists. The president then
went on to win a resounding victory in a popular referendum demanded by the
Venezuelan opposition in August 2004.
This lesson does not appear to have made much of an impression on Rice,
however, who denounced Chávez as an "unconstructive" leader who was
"[governing] in an illegal way" and stated that she had nothing positive to
say about his administration, a judgment she did not extend to a range of
other assorted tyrants discussed at the hearing, including the leaders of
Iran, North Korea and Syria. Senator Chafee, who met with President Chávez
on his recent tour of the region, was rightly incredulous, accurately noting
that the president had gone head to head with his domestic opposition in a
high-turnout referendum universally acknowledged to be free and fair and had
"cleaned their clocks and kicked their butts." He went on to assert that
such derogatory remarks about a democratically elected leader were openly
disrespectful to the Venezuelan electorate. Even more pointedly, he demanded
that the incoming Secretary of State justify her stubborn assertion that
Chávez was "unconstructive" at a time when the administration continues to
enthusiastically engage apparently more "constructively," but also more
authoritarian governments in Russia, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan.
Venezuela and the
Regional Arms Race
At this juncture, Rice was aided by Senators Norm Coleman (R-MN) and
freshman Mel Martinez (R-FL), coming to her rescue with the latter clearly
eager to curry favor with his Cuban-American Miami constituency by
energetically and vocally denouncing Chávez's ties with Castro. Martinez
also took the opportunity to voice concerns about attempts by Caracas to
purchase arms from Russia, suggesting that such actions had the potential to
"trigger an arms race in a region that frankly does not need one." Given
that Washington itself has funneled several billions of dollars in military
and economic aid to Bogotá via Plan Colombia to purchase armaments
ostensibly to be used to fight drug trafficking, but in reality also being
employed in military strikes against the leftist FARC guerrillas, Martinez's
outrage appears to be somewhat misplaced.
One of the relatively few voices of reason to be heard on the subject of
Venezuela was that of committee chairman Senator Richard Lugar (R-IN), who
highlighted Venezuela's major (and growing) importance as a U.S. oil
supplier and suggested the administration reconsider its hostile bilateral
agenda regarding Venezuela with this crucial point in mind. But despite
Lugar's stature as a leading Republican moderate and foreign policy expert,
Rice gave no ground on this or any of the administration's misplaced
hemispheric strategies, and it seems clear that the Bush administration will
continue to freeze out Chávez and limit its ties with Venezuela. Such a
strategy could potentially hold hugely negative implications for U.S.
relations with a broad coalition of center-left South American leaders,
including Presidents Néstor Kirchner of Argentina, Tabaré Vazquez of Uruguay
and most notably, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, all of whom have
aligned themselves with the Venezuelan president.
The Bush administration also risks grievously damaging the United States'
now fading reputation within Venezuela itself, where Chávez 's popularity,
as demonstrated once again in last year's referendum, has remained vibrant,
buoyed by his energetic and successful attempts to incorporate the
long-neglected lower classes into the political process. Thus, while the
days of endorsing coups in Caracas may have passed, balance and moderation
have yet to return to the Bush administration's policy-making capacity
towards Venezuela. On the contrary, its strategy continues to be driven by a
knee-jerk reflex against Chávez's populism and his at times intemperate
rhetoric, in the absence of any real comprehension of Venezuela's
tempestuous history that may have affected such a development.
Colombia: Creeping
Authoritarianism Ignored
Rice's violent denunciations of Chávez were matched by her equally
immoderate praise of his Andean neighbor and ideological adversary,
President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia. Since the beginning of Bush's term,
Uribe has been graced with most-favored-hemispheric-leader status by
Washington due to his conservative and pro-business economic stance, his
eager participation in the "War on Drugs" and "War on Terror," and, last but
certainly not least, his chilly relations with Chávez, who he accuses of
covertly supporting left-wing Colombian rebel groups.
Not only did Rice declare that "Colombia has outstanding leadership in
President Uribe," she blatantly distorted the facts by wrapping Uribe's
battle with guerrillas and paramilitaries—a long-running civil war with deep
roots in the last four decades of Colombian history—in the banner of the
“War on Terror,” stating that he has "mobilized Colombian society, the
Colombian people, to take on the terrorism, the narcoterrorism, in a new and
renewed fashion." The Colombian president's recent sanctioning of the
kidnapping of a Colombian leftist guerrilla leader in Caracas, to be later
handed over to Colombian authorities on their side of the border and most
likely to be subsequently extradited to the U.S., was no doubt all part of
this "renewed" battle on narcoterrorism.
Rice also emphasized the administration's determination to press ahead in
negotiating a free trade agreement with Bogotá, the next step in
Washington's trade strategy that seeks to use bilateral agreements with
compliant partners in order to increase pressure on negotiators for the
currently stalled Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA). The first of
these agreements was the 2003 accord between U.S.-Chile, which was followed
by the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), currently awaiting
ratification, and now the pact with Colombia. At the same time, the FTAA,
originally scheduled to be completed in 2005, has been blocked by the
unwillingness of hemispheric heavyweights Brazil and Argentina, under the
leadership of center-left presidents Lula da Silva and Kirchner, these two
countries have been reluctant to press ahead without meaningful concessions
from the United States on the subject of agricultural subsidies, a crucial
deal-breaker for Latin American economies heavily dependent on their export
sectors declining in such commodities.
Uribe and Human
Rights
Not surprisingly, Rice failed to mention the increasing criticisms of the
Uribe administration by human rights and civil society groups who have noted
the president's growing tendency to centralize power in his own hands,
including his single-mindedly successful promotion of a recently enacted
constitutional amendment that will allow him to seek reelection in 2006. Nor
did she address the Colombian leader’s apparent willingness to negotiate
cease-fire agreements with right-wing paramilitary groups that will allow
those guilty of the most barbarous crimes to walk away without judicial
accounting for decades' worth of derelictions, and without surrendering any
of the riches they accumulated through participation in the nation's
flourishing drug trade.
It was left to feisty Senator Boxer, who won headlines around the world for
her aggressive criticisms of the administration's flawed rationale for the
war in Iraq, to question Rice's glowing endorsement of Uribe, while
contrasting it with the administration's frigid relations with Venezuela and
suggesting that the discrepancy revealed a certain inconsistency, if not
blatant hypocrisy. As Boxer put it, "you praise Uribe for democracy even
though [...] he's trying to pass a law that would forbid sitting governors
and sitting senators from running against him, and you condemn the head of
Venezuela, Chávez, after having the administration [...] briefly praise a
coup. And it wasn’t until the OAS spoke up and said, well, wait a minute,
that's wrong, then we backed off. So we really do need more consistency
here." Boxer should be praised for her willingness to challenge Rice and to
question the administration's Colombia policy, one of the less noticed of
its many failed or double standard hemispheric endeavors.
Cuba: After Forty
Years, Still No Sign of Thaw
Another notable, if hardly surprising, feature of Rice's confirmation
hearings was her valiant but thankless attempt to defend the Bush
administration's continuing embrace of a sterile hard-line position toward
Cuba, reinforced most recently in 2004 with the promulgation of new
restrictions on travel and remittances to the island. The revised rules led
to the suspension of educational exchange programs and will limit
Cuban-Americans to one trip per three years for visits only to members of
their immediate family. Needless to say, the administration's Cuba policy
received rousing endorsements from Florida's hardliners, particularly
Senator Martinez, who seized the first of what will undoubtedly be many
opportunities to prattle about the importance of disseminating "free news
and information" in Cuba through Radio Martí and boosting U.S. support for
Cuban dissidents such as the leaders of the Varela petition project. In the
past, brazen attempts by James Cason, the recently appointed head of the
U.S. interests section in Havana, to intensify already provocative U.S.
connections with dissidents and encourage them to engage in more overt
opposition, have been damaging and unconstructive to both the individuals
involved and the potential for further recruiting. They have served only to
undermine the credibility of authentic Cuban critics of the Castro regime
and incite new crackdowns by Havana against the minority of democracy
advocates who have been attracted by Cason's handouts. Also, such
anticipated acts of overreaction by Cuban officials are then used by
Washington to justify a further tightening of the bankrupt U.S. embargo.
None of these factors, of course, deterred Senator Martinez from launching
his impassioned anti-Castro rant only days after his senatorial swearing-in.
Martinez was joined on this point by his Democratic colleague from Florida,
Senator Bill Nelson, who frequently is a rational voice on hemispheric
affairs regarding such issues as Haiti, but like all Florida politicians
dependent on Miami's votes, remains irrevocably under the sway of hardliners
when it comes to defining bilateral relations with Havana. It was thus left
to Senator Dodd, a respected foreign policy leader with decades of
experience on hemispheric issues, to serve as one of the lone voices of
reason in the debate over Rice's nomination. In a sharp and aggressive
exchange with Rice, Dodd suggested that hopes for political evolution in
Cuba are likely to be stifled rather than buoyed by a hermetic suspension of
contact between the island and the United States and highlighted the absurd
travel policy between the two nations. When the nominee attempted to defend
the administration's policy by arguing that Castro skimmed the proceeds of
tourism in Cuba and used the funds to prop up his regime, Dodd quickly
retorted that the North Korean and Iranian governments no doubt do the same.
Ultimately, Dodd's trenchant postscript to his skillful exposition of the
counterproductive nature of the administration's hard-line Cuban policy,
including its fervent promotion of the decades-old embargo, was his
observation that Bush administration Latin American policy was being shaped
by "domestic politics rather than foreign policy," a truth long and widely
acknowledged by analysts of U.S.-Cuba relations but rarely spoken out loud,
much less in the Senate chambers. It is irrefutable that this
administration's pathological hostility toward Havana is driven by the
desire to ensure that Florida's diadem, its electoral votes (won narrowly by
Bush in 2000 and more easily in last year's election) remain in the
Republican column in 2008 and beyond. Senator Dodd is to be commended for
exposing President Bush's "Cuba policy" as the tawdry election vehicle that
it has come to be.
Haiti: Chaos Unchecked
Ultimately, perhaps the most disturbing aspect of Dr. Rice's presentation
before the committee was her utter inability to formulate even the rudiments
of a strategy to address the intensifying political, economic and human
rights crisis in Haiti, a country that has spiraled steadily downward into
chaos since the U.S.-orchestrated coup against president Jean-Bertrand
Aristide on February 29, 2004. The question was introduced by Nelson, who,
not surprisingly, takes a particular interest in the achievement of
political stability in Haiti in light of the past decade's history of waves
of desperate Haitian refugees trying to reach Florida during periods of
upheaval on the island. His criticism of the administration's Haiti policy
spotlighted the stunning hypocrisy of the State Department's constant
reaffirmations of support for democratization in the hemisphere while at the
same time it gave explicit support to the ouster of Aristide, one of the
first democratically elected presidents in Haiti's history. As Nelson put
it, "it's kind of hard to say we support democracy and elections and then we
go and push him out."
The senator went on to emphasize the insufficiency of the U.N.-mandated
peacekeeping force, MINUSTAH, currently deployed in Haiti in order to
reestablish political stability, and pressed Rice on the necessity to expand
the force and to ensure that the $1 billion in aid pledged to Haiti at last
summer's donors conference in fact materializes, even though it would be
going to the notably corrupt and ineffective government led by interim Prime
Minister Latortue. In her response, Rice was deliberately evasive,
emphasizing the need to establish a professional police force in Haiti and
the importance of the existing stabilization force taking on a more
aggressive role in reining in the militias that have seized control over
significant swaths of the country. This elaborate but airy response was
clearly nothing more than a rhetorical ploy intended to distract attention
from the undeniable fact that the administration has no intention of
reengaging in Haiti or providing even a tiny fraction of the resources that
are realistically required to begin the long process of political
stabilization and economic recovery there until the prospect of a
reemergence of Aristide’s party either directly or indirectly in the
governmental process is prevented.
The phrase that perhaps best encapsulates the profoundly flawed nature of
the administration's Haiti policy was Rice's bizarre statement that "we
probably dodged a bullet in the earlier days with the ability to get
Aristide out peacefully, because he had lost the ability to control that
country." She thus wins the dubious honor of being the first person to apply
the term "peacefully" to the process leading up to the armed rebellion that
all but toppled the Aristide government, which then had witnessed a coup de
main administered by U.S. marines and the embassy in Port-au-Prince, and was
then forced to give way to an illegitimate, Washington-imposed
"transitional" government characterized by international observers as among
the most inept and worst violators of human rights in Haiti's recent
history. She then went on to suggest that Washington has been in some way
the hapless victim of the continued political upheavals in the beleaguered
island nation, rather than its principal promoter. If her comments at the
confirmation hearing are any indication, the Bush administration will not
soon lose the distinction of being the main author behind Haiti's most
recent crisis.
Toward 2008: Little Reason for Optimism
Despite the recent fanfare surrounding indications suggesting that the Bush
administration intends to reorient itself to focus on domestic policy
priorities in the president's second and final term, observers should not be
fooled into believing that the foreign policy initiatives to be unveiled
under the new leadership of incoming Secretary of State Rice will be any
less invasive and presumptive than those unleashed by the Rumsfeld-Powell-Rice
troika over the last four years. On the contrary, all the evidence suggests
that the administration's actions abroad, and particularly in Latin America,
will continue to be marked by a unilateralism stunning in its arrogance and
an ignorance equally appalling in its breadth. It is to be hoped that a day
will eventually arrive when Washington can begin to recoup the damage to its
hemispheric reputation inflicted by this president's explosive combination
of ideological fervor, a reckless disregard for the truth and a staff more
adept at serving up elemental neoconservative dogma than sound foreign
policy. The fulfillment of such aspirations, however, may have to wait until
at least 2008, and perhaps beyond.
This analysis was prepared by Jessica Leight, COHA Research Fellow.
http://www.coha.org/NEW_PRESS_RELEASES/New_Press_Releases_2005/05.07%20Rice%20Nomination%20the%20one.htm
January 25, 2005
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