South America’s presidents gather in Brazil for first regional summit in 9 years

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BRASILIA, Brazil — South America’s leaders will gather in Brazil’s capital on Tuesday as part of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s attempt to reinvigorate regional integration efforts that have previously floundered amid the continent’s political swings and polarization.

Analysts say Lula senses an opportunity for integration because of the political affinities of the region’s current governments and appears to want to test leaders’ willingness to cooperate through a revived Union of South American Nations, or Unasur.

Lula said at a news conference Monday that the leaders should discuss cooperation in energy and crime-fighting, and suggested he might consider floating the idea of a regional currency to challenge the U.S dollar. But he said nothing would be decided during the meeting.

“The main idea is that we need to form a bloc to work together,” Lula said.

First established 15 years ago in Brazil’s capital during the second presidential term of Lula, a former trade unionist, the regional bloc sought to integrate the 12 South American nations culturally, socially, politically and economically.

Unasur’s promotor was late Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, who saw it as means to counteract U.S. influence in the region and the group had a reputation among some as having a leftist bent.

But a subsequent swing to the right on the continent saw the group fracture. The last meeting with all Unasur’s members took place in 2014. After 2017, disagreements over Unasur’s leadership and the participation of Venezuela’s authoritarian President Nicolás Maduro led seven countries to withdraw, including Brazil in 2019 under Lula’s predecessor, the far-right Jair Bolsonaro.

“Unasur’s greatest problem is that it was built in a moment when there were leftist leaders, and it shattered when right-wing leaders came along,” said Oliver Stuenkel, an international relations professor at Getúlio Vargas Foundation, a university and think tank in Sao Paulo. “It is easy to talk about its comeback now, but they need to think of ways to make this second attempt last.”

Tuesday’s meeting in Brasilia will bring together 11 South American presidents and the leader of the Council of Ministers of Peru, whose president, Dina Boluarte, faces charges and cannot leave the country. The meeting has been officially promoted as an encounter for South American heads of state, as Brazil does not wish to impose Unasur’s revival.

Lula on Monday underlined that this week’s meeting was just about getting together to build cohesion and discuss ideas. “Tomorrow’s meeting doesn’t decide anything,” he said.

He said that he has a “dream” to have a regional currency “so that we can do business without depending on the dollar, because the dollar belongs to the United States and it can do whatever it wants with it.”

The challenge, analysts say, will be having a bloc that can survive the region’s political shifts and instability.

While the majority of South America’s current presidents are leftist or centrist, there’s no guarantee the situation will remain that way. This was underscored in May by the success of right-wingers in Chile in a vote to select commission members to write a new constitution. That success came on the heels of voters’ rejection of a leftist-influenced draft to replace the Chile’s dictatorship-era charter. A similar swing toward the right is possible in Argentina, given that incumbent President Alberto Fernández will not seek reelection this year amid rampant inflation.

Venezuela’s Maduro arrived Monday for the Brasilia gathering, providing the opportunity for the first official bilateral meeting between Lula and the Venezuelan leader.

Under Bolsonaro, Brazil prohibited Maduro and many members of his government from entering the country, and it recognized opposition leader Juan Guaidó as the legitimate president of Venezuela.

At a joint news conference between Lula and Maduro later Monday, said it is a “historic moment” for both countries.

“After 8 years, president Maduro returns to visit Brazil and we get back the right to do our foreign affairs policy with the seriousness we always had, especially with countries which share borders with Brazil,” Lula said.

Maduro pointed out both leaders reestablished “an open and permanent dialogue between Brazil and Venezuela’s governments”. He also said that “union and diversity” should rule over “extremist and intolerant ideologies” which have tried to isolate Venezuela from the rest of the world.

Both leaders said they were interested in boosting trade between their countries.

“No matter if both governments agree with each other, Venezuela is a neighbor and can’t be ignored or have diplomatic ties broken, as we have practical issues that need to be solved,” said Carolina Silva Pedroso, an international relations professor at Sao Paulo’s Federal University.

Pedroso said Brazil could be a mediator in Venezuela’s political crisis, and it wants to reduce the number of immigrants crossing the border into Brazil, more than 400,000 since 2018.

But the group must overcome its legacy and struggles.

Unasur “couldn’t lead important projects in cooperation in diverse areas after some governments were electorally defeated,” said Pedroso. “And it did not establish a direct connection with the populations in its countries.”

The political instability in many South American countries will make it hard for leaders to move initiatives forward, analysts said.

Stuenkel said Brazil will want to guarantee that all the presidents meeting have some sort of diplomatic relationship, “but this will crash when a new president comes in.”

“Countries in the region need to think how they will react when Argentina breaks, or if any bilateral crisis evolves, such as Colombia and Peru’s conflict in the border,” he said.

Peru’s image has been damaged by criticism of Boluarte after her office violently repressed antigovernment protests following the ouster of her predecessor, Pedro Castillo.

Colombia, now governed by a leftist, has been critical of Boluarte’s government and both countries have cut diplomatic relations. They also hold a century-long dispute along their shared border over territory and responsibilities to halt drug trafficking.

Ecuador faces political instability which grew stronger in May, when president Guillermo Lasso dissolved parliament after facing an impeachment inquiry. New general elections are scheduled for later this year.

“A Unasur without 12 countries would not solve the region’s issues,” said Gisela Padovan, secretary for Latin America and Caribbean at Brazil’s Foreign Affairs Ministry. “And we need something permanent that does not depend on particular governments.”

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AP writers who contributed to this report are: Almudena Calatrava in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Carlos Valdez in La Paz, Bolivia; Frankin Briceño in Lima, Peru; Jorge Rueda in Caracas, Venezuela; and Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Ecuador.

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