Obama seeks new relationship with Latin America

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama  will try to establish a cooperative new relationship with Latin  America this week, but U.S. resistance to change on highly symbolic issues like Cuba and immigration could undercut the  effort, analysts said.

Obama travels to Mexico on Thursday for his first visit to  the region as president and heads to Trinidad and Tobago on  Friday for the Fifth Summit of the Americas. As he did at the  G20 summit of major economic powers in London this month, the  president plans to emphasize listening to regional leaders and  working on shared goals.

“With all that is at stake today, we cannot afford to talk  past one another,” Obama said on Saturday in his weekly radio  speech. “We have to find, and build on, our mutual interests.”

Jeffrey Davidow, Obama’s special adviser for the summit,  said there had been a push to establish a new tone with  pre-summit consultations and diplomacy. Obama met Mexican  President Felipe Calderon before taking office and several  Cabinet officials have visited Latin America.

“I think coming so early in the administration,” Davidow  said, “this … legitimately can be seen as a new beginning.”

Obama’s popularity, compared to former President George W.  Bush, and his performance at the G20 give him tremendous  goodwill among fellow leaders as he begins the visit, analysts  said, but much hinges on his pledge to listen and learn.

“What matters is the day after,” Luis Alberto Moreno,  president of the Inter-American Development Bank, told a  briefing. “If the U.S. is … saying that they’re willing to  listen and to learn … you have to walk the walk.

“And in this regard there’s a number of issues that should  not be removed from the agenda: things like Cuba, things like  immigration,” he said.

Those issues, though not on the summit agenda, are sure to  be debated. President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and like-minded  leaders are expected to push for Cuba to be readmitted to the  Organization of American States. Debate over Cuba would underscore the divide between the United States and the  region.

Washington has said it would not end its 47-year-old  embargo on the communist island. But Obama is looking at  loosening restrictions on family visits and remittances to  Cuba, steps many view as inadequate.

“The measures that the administration seems to be willing  to roll out regarding Cuban-American family travel are so  limited in their impact, narrow in their scope that perversely  this administration, which wants the summit not to be a Cuba  summit, might make it a Cuba summit,” said Julia Sweig, head of  Latin American studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

That would be a mistake, analysts said, because the main  issue confronting the leaders is the global economic crisis. As  Latin America’s main trade partner, the United States can best  help the situation by getting its own economy back on track.

“The recovery of the U.S. economy is the key factor and  everyone will be looking to President Obama for his description  of how his plans are laid out,” said Peter DeShazo, director of  the Americas program at the Center for Strategic and  Inter-national studies.