http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/08/world/americas/08cnd-latin.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

 
Bush Faces Clash of Agendas in Latin America 
By JIM RUTENBERG and LARRY ROHTER
Published: March 8, 2007
SÃO PAULO, Brazil, March 8 - President Bush is scheduled to arrive here late 
tonight for the start of what he has portrayed as a "We Care" tour aimed at 
dispelling perceptions that he has neglected his southern neighbors.

 
Nabor Goulart/Associated Press
Protesters in Porto Alegre, Brazil, today demonstrating against President 
Bush's upcoming visit. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Rodrigo Arangua/AFP-Getty Images
Students in Bogota, Colombia, today protesting the upcoming visit of President 
Bush. 

But the fresh graffiti on streets here in South America's largest city calls 
Mr. Bush a murderer. And the smattering of protests and the placement of 
antiaircraft guns around town that have preceded his arrival present an 
alternate interpretation of his visit: as a clash between the United 
States-style capitalism he espouses and the socialist approach pushed by 
leftist leaders who have grown in power and popularity.

And as the Bush administration prepares to use the president's five-nation tour 
to highlight a new ethanol development deal with Brazil, the world leader in 
that technology, and American health care and education programs elsewhere, 
much of the pre-tour attention is focusing on what may best be called "The 
Rumble on the River."

President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, Mr. Bush's chief nemesis in Latin America, 
will be leading a protest against him in Buenos Aires as Mr. Bush arrives 
across the Rio de la Plata in Montevideo, Uruguay, on Friday night. "Our planes 
will almost cross paths," Mr. Chávez said this week, although he denied any 
intention to sabotage Mr. Bush's visit.

Mr. Bush played down Mr. Chávez's planned rally in interviews with South 
American reporters this week, telling a group of them on Tuesday: "I go a lot 
of places and there are street rallies. And my attitude is, I love freedom and 
the right for people to express themselves."

Whether inadvertently or not, though, Mr. Bush irritated Mr. Chávez with a 
speech he gave in Washington on Monday. In it, he said Simón Bolivar, the hero 
of South America's independence struggle and Mr. Chávez's idol, "belongs to all 
of us who love liberty." That remark brought a sharp and sarcastic rejoinder 
from Mr. Chávez the next day during his weekly radio program. 

But in spite of administration attempts to minimize the shadow cast on the 
visit by Mr. Chávez - who has called Mr. Bush "the devil" and has pushed an 
aggressively anti-American agenda throughout the region - the tour itself seems 
at least in part geared to counter his influence. Mr. Chávez has built that 
influence in part by showering poor communities in Latin America with money for 
housing and health care and freely dispensing oil at cut-rate prices.

Mr. Bush's new agreement with Brazil to increase ethanol production in the 
region represents a way to cut back on the influence Mr. Chavez's oil supply 
gives him while at the same time encouraging employment and economic 
development. And before arriving here, Mr. Bush announced a number of new 
initiatives to help the poor in Latin America, whom he referred to, in a 
venture into Spanish, as "workers and peasants."

He promised hundreds of millions of dollars to help families buy homes and said 
he would dispatch a Navy hospital ship to the region to provide free health 
services.

In his interviews this week, Mr. Bush has repeated that the United States' aid 
to Latin America has doubled during his tenure to roughly $1.6 billion a year. 
"When you total all up the money that is spent, because of the generosity of 
our taxpayers, that's $8.5 billion to programs that promote social justice," 
including education and health, he told reporters on Tuesday. 

But the view from here could scarcely be more different. In an editorial 
headlined "Uncle Scrooge's paltry package," the conservative daily newspaper O 
Estado de São Paulo on Wednesday noted that Mr. Bush's offering amounts to "the 
equivalent of five days' cost of the war in Iraq, and a drop of water compared 
with the ocean of petrodollars in which Chávezism is navigating at full speed, 
from Argentina to Nicaragua."

Some of Mr. Bush's aides this week said they were worried that perceptions in 
the region that the United States had neglected its southern neighbors, and 
that frustration in lower classes that had not reaped the benefits of free 
trade, were helping to fuel the region's leftist movements.

Stephen J. Hadley, Mr. Bush's national security adviser, said, "It's something 
we have not done well enough - getting out the full scope of the president's 
message."

Mr. Bush told reporters that he hoped to counter Mr. Chávez's message by 
espousing the benefits of free trade.

Asked by a reporter about Mr. Chávez's "so-called alternative development 
model" calling for nationalization of industry, Mr. Bush said: "I strongly 
believe that government-run industry is inefficient and will lead to more 
poverty. I believe if the state tries to run the economy, it will enhance 
poverty and reduce opportunity."

He added, "So the United States brings a message of open markets and open 
government to the region."

But even Mr. Bush's Brazilian hosts seemed divided in their reaction to that 
message. Although President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will be meeting with Mr. 
Bush on Friday to sign the ethanol accord and is scheduled to visit him at Camp 
David on March 31, the party he leads has chosen to support and participate in 
the anti-Bush demonstrations. 

The party, the Leftist Workers' Party, warned on its Web site that Mr. Bush 
"shouldn't count on Brazil for imperialist actions in the region." One essay 
called him "the big boss of international terrorism," while another declared 
that Mr. Bush was "persona non grata" in Brazil.

"The United States in general and the Bush government in particular are 
brutally violent," wrote Valter Pomar, the party's head of international 
affairs. "We will only be free of this threat when the North American people 
constitute a government on the left."


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