Lagniappe
Simon
Romero /NYT : Ideological
opposites,
Colombia and Venezuela, begin to attract
BOGOTÁ,
Colombia: The
Bush administration has no closer friend in South America than President Álvaro
Uribe, an Oxford-educated lawyer raised in the privileged world of cattle
estates and elite schools. Hugo Chávez, the president
of neighboring Venezuela, was born into poverty and rose through
the ranks of the army before emerging as the chief scourge of
American policy in the region.
Such ideological opposites might be expected to focus on historical
rivalries between their countries, which were at the edge of
war as recently as the late 1980s. Instead, they are rapidly
moving to strike energy deals, resolve a festering boundary dispute
and boost trade, with Colombia's exports to Venezuela climbing
to a record $4 billion this year.
"This is the most favorable moment for relations between
the two countries since they separated in 1830," said Socorro
Ramírez, a political scientist at the National University
here and a specialist on Venezuela, referring to the origins
of Colombia and Venezuela as one nation after their independence
from Spain.
Obstacles to warmer ties persist, with senior officials often
exchanging barbs. Their 2,240-kilometer, or 1,400-mile, border
remains a haven for guerrillas, drug trafficking and other intrigue;
two Colombian intelligence agents were recently killed on the
Venezuelan side in an unsolved incident. New tolls at the Colombian
border led to protests in Venezuela this month.
But Uribe
has surprised Colombia's conservative political establishment
by embracing projects that have lifted Chávez's profile
across the region. Most boldly, he welcomed Chávez's offer
to help broker the release of dozens of captives held by Colombia's
largest rebel group, including three American military contractors
captured in 2003.
[At a meeting near Venezuela's border on Oct. 12 to inaugurate
a new pipeline taking Colombian natural gas to its neighbor,
Uribe also offered to join the Bank of the South, a regional
development bank championed by Venezuela as an alternative
to Washington-based multilateral financial institutions like
the World Bank.]
The United
States has much at stake as the main consuming market for both
Colombia's cocaine and Venezuela's oil, but Washington's
low prestige in much of the Andes has left Uribe, boxed in by
pro-Chávez governments in Ecuador and Bolivia, with little
choice but to strengthen bonds with Chávez.
Uribe is
still subject to taunts from Chávez, who practices
a confrontational style ingrained in Venezuela's political system,
as when he urged the Colombian leader this month to lend a guerrilla
leader a plane to travel to Caracas for talks. The suggestion
was met here with bland declarations of respect for Venezuela
as a "brother country."
"What exists in Venezuela, as well as Colombia, is political
leadership that reflects the popular will, and we respect that," Fernando
Araújo, Colombia's foreign minister, said in a telephone
interview.
Efforts here
to engage Chávez stand in sharp contrast
to those of the Bush administration, which has verbally clashed
with Venezuela over issues ranging from Chávez's growing
arms purchases from Russia to his tightening political alliances
with Cuba and Iran.
"Uribe surely has no illusions about Chávez's regional
ambitions, but he wisely keeps any provocative rhetoric in check," said
Michael Shifter, vice president for policy at the Inter-American
Dialogue, a policy group in Washington focusing on Latin America. "Washington
might draw some lessons from Uribe's ability to deal with Chávez."
Relations between the two neighbors have evolved since reaching
a critical point in 2005, when a diplomatic crisis erupted over
Colombia's abduction in Venezuela of Rodrigo Granda, a senior
guerrilla leader with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia,
or FARC. Uribe freed Granda last month in a gesture intended
to move the hostage negotiations forward; Granda quickly decamped
to Cuba.
Since the
2005 crisis, Uribe and Chávez have steadily
mended ties, driven largely by growing economic interdependence
and Venezuela's ambitions to lessen its reliance on the United
States as the main market for its oil.
Venezuela, for instance, has South America's largest natural
gas reserves but still needs more from eastern Colombia to maintain
oil production in the region around Lake Maracaibo.
But Venezuelan officials have said they would like to reverse
the pipeline's flow once their own larger reserves are tapped.
The two countries
are also considering a pipeline to take Venezuelan crude oil
to Colombia's Pacific coast, a project that would reduce
delivery time of exporting oil to China, a cornerstone of Chávez's
desire to diversify Venezuela's energy exports.
Recent economic policies in Venezuela, meanwhile, have created
bountiful opportunities for Colombia. For instance, Venezuelan
farmers stymied by price controls have been unable to meet climbing
domestic demand for food, with Colombian farmers rushing to meet
Venezuela's shortages of basic products like milk and eggs.
How long will
the honeymoon last?" Poder, a business magazine
here, said in a report this month marveling at Colombia's new phase
of relations with Venezuela. The country's exports to Venezuela
are surging almost 50 percent this year, with food up 31 percent
in the first half of 2007 from last year, and automobile exports
up 59 percent. The
Uribe government has developed a non-confrontational policy
toward the Chávez administration; Chávez has a
similar way of dealing with Uribe. He has avoided pressing Uribe
on claims of human rights abuses by paramilitary death squads,
an issue some legislators in Washington have used to delay a
trade deal between the United States and Colombia.
Scholars compare the warming ties with precedents elsewhere
in the region, like the thaw in the 1980s between Argentina and
Brazil, countries whose militaries were once orientated for potential
threats along their border but which are now too busy trading
with each other to focus on disputes.
The similar
governing styles of Uribe and Chávez may
also have helped the leaders form a bond. Both prioritize close
contact with the poor and verbally attack critics in the media,
and have lashed out at domestic political opponents.
"Uribe is a populist of the right and Chávez is
a populist of the left," said Kenneth Maxwell, a professor
of Latin American history at Harvard University. "They see
eye to eye."
Simon
Romero is The New York Times'
Andean correspondent, he is base in Caracas.
Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these views.
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