To check Oneindia News on your Mobile
go to:   http://m.oneindia.in/news/
  •  

Rice heads to Latam to improve U.S. standing

WASHINGTON, Mar 9 (Reuters) US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice heads to Chile tomorrow for the inauguration of its first woman president, in a region where Washington has dwindling allies and leftist leaders are on the rise.

During her two-day trip to Chile, Rice will hold a host of meetings with Latin American leaders, including Bolivia's President Evo Morales, a coca farmer with close ties to communist Cuba and Venezuela who has described himself as a ''nightmare'' for Washington.

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez is off the list of intended meetings for Rice, unless the two have a chance encounter at functions planned for the inauguration on Saturday of Chile's new president, Michelle Bachelet.

Latin American experts suggested Rice should use this trip to improve US standing in the region where many say the United States is out of touch and to move the focus away from Venezuela-US tensions.

Outgoing Chilean president Ricardo Lagos said last month the United States and Venezuela should tone down their rhetorical outbursts to improve hemispheric relations.

''Rice has an enormous task to repair the present disarray in which we find US-Latin American relations,'' said Larry Birns of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, a liberal think-tank.

Part of the problem, said Birns, was that the United States viewed Latin America through the prism of Cuba and Venezuela, adding that if it was Rice's goals to win support among Latin American leaders to isolate Chavez, she would be disappointed.

''He (Chavez) is popular because he needles the United States and he talks like the average Latin American would talk,'' said Birns.

MORALES MEETING Several experts said a meeting between Rice and Morales would help improve Washington's image in the region.

''It will have a tremendous symbolic value that the United States is interested in having relations with the first indigenous president of a very poor country,'' said Peter Hakim of the think-tank Inter-American Dialogue.

Chilean analyst Patricio Navia said Rice's attendance at Bachelet's inauguration was important as Chile was one of Washington's best friends in the area and Rice could use the time to rebuild relations with others.

''Most understand that good relations with the United States are very important,'' said Navia, a political scientist at New York University and Chile's Diego Portales University.

Much of Latin America is under leftist leadership, posing a dilemma for Washington and its democracy agenda.

Julia Sweig, a Latin American expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, said there was strong suspicion among many Latin American leaders over the US democracy agenda.

''Democracy ought to be America's greatest strength but when the US says democracy they (Latin American leaders) see empire and imperialism,'' said Sweig.

She advised Rice to ''moderate her language'' and make clear the United States did not have a problem with leftist leaders coming to power.

One area where there was also suspicion was Washington's own handling of human rights issues, particularly following the abuse by US soldiers of prisoners in Iraq and detainees held at a US Naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

''All of a sudden, Latin America is saying that the US is not playing by the same rules as everyone else and this provokes an underlying distrust of the U.S.,'' said Hakim.

Reuters AD VP0246

Fewer insurgents enter Iraq from Syria, Russia says

UNIITED NATIONS, Mar 10 (Reuters) Fewer insurgents are crossing the border from Syria into Iraq these days to take part in attacks on Iraqi targets, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said. In talks with US officials in Washington on Tuesday, ''I was satisfied to get confirmation of information we also received, that there were fewer infiltrations into Iraq of the wrong people, and we welcome this development,'' he said yesterday. Lavrov, who spoke with reporters.....

Nigeria, Korea sign oil exploration deals

ABUJA, Mar 9 (Reuters) Nigeria signed production sharing contracts on Thursday with Korean National Oil Company (KNOC) on two highly prospective deep-water oil exploration blocks in the Gulf of Guinea. The contracts, between state companies KNOC and Nigerian National Petroleum Corp (NNPC), were signed during a visit to Nigeria by South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun. Securing energy supplies for his resource-poor country is a priority of Roh's trip. Nigerian and Korean officials also signed two.....

Dubai company says moving ports ops to US entity

WASHINGTON, Mar 9 (Reuters) The state-owned Arab company Dubai Ports World pledged today to transfer operation of US ports it has acquired from the British company P&O to a US entity. A statement by Dubai Ports World's chief operating officer, Edward Bilkey, was read on the US Senate floor, where senators were arguing about whether to have a vote on blocking the ports contract on national security grounds. The statement, read by Sen John Warner, a.....
User Comments
[ Post Comments ]
Be the first to comment on this article.
Oneindia  Oneindia Login