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Andres Oppenheimer
Colombia's right-of-center President Juan Manuel Santos may have been kidding when he recently said that radical leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez is his "new best friend," but few in Washington are laughing.
There is a growing feeling in the U.S. capital -- especially in
Since Santos took office in August, he has taken several steps to distance himself from former president Alvaro Uribe's policies. Consider:
-- Santos' first official trip as president was to Brazil. Since then, he has toured several Latin American countries, but has yet to set foot on Washington, D.C.
-- Santos has met several times with Chávez, and both have vowed to dramatically improve Colombian-Venezuelan ties. Relations were openly hostile under Uribe, in part because the former Colombian president repeatedly condemned Venezuela's clandestine support for Colombia's FARC guerrillas.
-- Complying with Chávez's wishes, the Colombian president recently announced that he will extradite suspected Venezuelan drug kingpin Walid Makled to Venezuela, rather than to the United States. Both Venezuela and the United States had requested Makled, who has testified that top Venezuelan government officials were protecting his drug trafficking operations. Chávez wants Makled at home, to keep him silent, or press him to recant his testimony.
-- The Santos government has no immediate plans to submit to the
-- Santos is scheduled to launch free trade agreements with Canada and the
Carl Meacham, a senior staffer for
Rep. Connie Mack, a conservative Republican who is scheduled to become chair of the House Western Hemisphere subcommittee next year, conceded to me that "there are a lot of concerns" about Colombia in
Curious about what's in Santos' mind, I talked with several Colombians who are very close to the new president.
Most told me that, indeed, there is a deliberate foreign policy shift in Colombia. It was prompted by the U.S. failure to deliver on its trade deal with Colombia despite major diplomatic overtures from Colombia.
In recent years, Colombia has accepted U.S. troops in Colombian military bases, has sent Colombian police officers and anti-drug agents to Afghanistan in support of U.S. troops, and has voted with the United States on most issues at
Despite these and other gestures, there has been no positive response on the free-trade deal from Washington. President Barack Obama's close ties with anti-free trade U.S. labor unions has kept him from pushing more aggressively for ratification of the trade deal, they said.
"Colombians are somewhat disillusioned with the United States," says Enrique Santos Calderon, until recently managing editor and columnist of El Tiempo, Colombia's most influential newspaper, and the president's brother. "There is a feeling that we need to take some distance, and stop making unilateral favors that are not reciprocated."
My opinion: The new Colombian president is moving closer to Chávez mainly for economic reasons. Venezuela is one of Colombia's biggest export markets, and previous tensions between the two countries had hurt Colombian exports badly.
In addition, Santos is also using his temporary honeymoon with Chávez as a negotiating strategy to move Washington into action on the free-trade deal. Since the previous policy didn't work, he's trying something else.
I've known Santos for many years, and I always keep in mind that one of his favorite hobbies is playing poker. As a good poker player, he is keeping everybody guessing, including his friends in the U.S. capital.
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