Source: Washington Post Authors: Anthony Faiola and Thomas W. Lippman, Washington Post Foreign Service Page: A01 - Front Page Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Pubdate: Monday, 20 April 1998 SUMMIT ENDS WITH PROMISES HEMISPHERE LEADERS FOCUS ON TRADE SANTIAGO, Chile, April 19—The second Summit of the Americas ended here today with President Clinton and 33 other Western Hemisphere leaders signing a declaration that promised everything from a rethinking of the drug war to negotiations that could create the world's largest free-trade zone. The leaders treaded lightly on the challenges to democracy still looming in Latin American trouble spots from Paraguay to Peru, concentrating on "a second generation" of issues, such as education and economics. The topics reflected what participants labeled an overall deepening of Latin America's transition from dictatorships to democracies and from state-owned behemoths to free-market systems. Clinton underscored his belief that a greater pool of people must benefit from those changes if they are to hold. The Americas have undergone a "profound revolution in the last few years, a revolution of peace and freedom and prosperity," the president said. "Here in Santiago, we embrace our responsibility to make these historic forces lift the lives of all our people. . . . It is a future worthy of the new Americas in a new millennium." In Latin America, which long has been the inferior partner in a generally paternalistic relationship with the United States, the summit is widely viewed as a key turning point in equalizing that relationship. Latin officials, for instance, believe a great leap forward was made in the creation here of a Multilateral Counter Drug Alliance that would use the Organization of American States as a tool to evaluate each nation's record of combating drug trafficking -- a process seen here as a potential alternative to the highly disparaged U.S. procedure of "certifying" the anti-drug cooperation of individual nations. "We saw the [U.S.-Latin America] relationship change during this summit," Chilean Foreign Minister Jose Miguel Insulza said in an interview. "If Richard Nixon hadn't used the term 'mature partnership' to describe his ignoring of Latin America in the 1970s, that is exactly the term we would be using to describe the relationship today. We are talking more equally, and we are no longer having one-way conversations. The U.S. is listening to us, too." But U.S. officials were quick to point out that some changes are not likely to be immediately forthcoming. In discussing the U.S. drug certification process, national security adviser Samuel R. "Sandy" Berger declared: "We would have to obviously have a long discussion with Congress before there were any changes in U.S. law. I think that's not contemplated at this point." In general, however, he echoed Insulza's assessment of the hemispheric relationship. "One of the things that is very striking about this meeting," Berger said, "is that . . . there is no sense of America trying to dominate [the other] countries. . . . There is a genuine spirit of partnership." That new relationship manifested itself in a number of ways, not all pleasing to the Americans. One clear indication of hemispheric willingness to question U.S. policy came in the form of private calls for reinstatement of Cuba to the OAS and in public declarations that Cuban President Fidel Castro should be included in future hemispheric summits. On the heels of Pope John Paul II's visit to Cuba in January, it was revealed this weekend that Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien, who will host the next summit, possibly in 2000, has accepted an invitation to visit Havana next week, becoming the first Canadian leader to do so in 21 years. Meanwhile, other leaders here spoke of ending Cuba's isolation. "The exclusion of Cuba is unfair because that country isn't a threat to anyone," Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori told reporters. "The Cuban president should have been allowed to come here and express his point of view and to listen to criticism of him." But the Cuba issue was one of the few divisive notes in what was generally a diplomatic love fest. Indeed, the language of the final communique is so lofty that it almost echoes Marxist utopian rhetoric from bygone generations -- the difference being that trade and capital markets, rather than economic collectivism, are offered as the keys to a happier future for the region. As expected, the summit participants agreed to a strict schedule of negotiations for a proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas, despite the fact that Clinton arrived in the Chilean capital without "fast track" authority -- the power to sign trade accords that Congress could then only vote up or down, without amendment. The lack of fast track, which Clinton failed to win from Congress last November, ironically was viewed here as a deal maker, rather than a deal breaker. Countries such as Brazil - -- which had resisted the initial U.S. format for trade talks -- found the United States now willing to compromise on the structure of negotiations to keep the prospect of a vast free-trade zone alive. Although it will still be tough to persuade many opponents at home, U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky said that the proposed free trade area "is embraced by all of the countries without exception as integration to a broader agenda of strong democracies, the alleviation of poverty and the empowerment of people and sustainable development." In the summit communique, the nations agreed to sign an accord by 2005, with the first round of negotiations to begin as early as June. The 34-page "plan of action" goes on to address everything from new techniques to combat the drug trade to standards for transporting nuclear waste through the Panama Canal. Other new drug proposals include hemispheric efforts to crack down on money laundering, combat drug addiction and support "alternative development" programs to encourage farmers who grow drug-producing plants to cultivate legal crops. The summit plan also focused on illiteracy and pledged to "ensure, by the year 2010, universal access to and completion of quality primary education for 100 percent of children and access for at least 75 percent of young people to quality secondary education." The Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank have already committed $6 billion in concessionary loans for education over the next three years. The plan calls further for a strengthening of Latin American judicial systems -- still among the region's weakest institutions -- through creation of a new justice center that would train judges and prosecutors on applications of law. The document also outlines a tighter regulation of the region's banking system, greater cooperation in rooting out money laundering and greater participation in U.N. peacekeeping missions by Latin American armed forces. Indeed, at the same time the United States engages in a new partnership approach toward Latin America, the nations in the hemisphere appear more willing to work with Washington to address their myriad social and economic problems. There may be a lingering "us vs. them" attitude, especially in South America, but it was not much on display here. "You now have recognition by all these governments of the need to rebuild civil society at the local level," one senior U.S. official said. At the first summit of the Americas, in Miami in 1994, he said, "we couldn't get that recognized. Some of them wouldn't even talk about it." © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company