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A New Day for Partnership in the Americas

by: Joe Biden  |  La Nacion

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Children of Rocinha shantytown, Rio de Janeiro - one of the largest slums in Latin America - look on as Brazilian police conduct a drug raid. (Photo: Reuters Pictures)

    Next month, President Obama will travel to Trinidad and Tobago to meet his colleagues from across the Western Hemisphere at the Summit of the Americas. In advance of that historic meeting, I am traveling to Central and South America to consult with Latin American leaders gathered in Chile and Costa Rica about the Summit and the challenges faced by the people of the Americas.

    These meetings are an important first step toward a new day in relations and building partnerships with and among the countries and people of the Hemisphere.

    The President and I understand that only by working together can our countries overcome the challenges we face. Today, we are more than just independent nations who happen to be on the same side of the globe. In today's interconnected world, we are all neighbors who face many common concerns.

    The current global economic crisis has touched virtually all of us-every country, every community, every family. Citizens everywhere are searching for answers, looking for hope-and turning to their leaders to provide them. It is our duty as global partners to heed their calls, to together forge a shared solution to a common problem.

    Our Administration is taking several steps to make this happen. Our Congress has approved the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which is designed to promote job creation and to set a course for growth for the next generation. The President has proposed a budget designed to set a foundation for the economy of the future, with important investments in health care, education, and energy. And we are working with our partners in the G-20, who meet next week in London, on a coordinated plan to ensure recovery and restart growth, and to reform the international regulatory and supervisory system to ensure that no such crisis occurs again.

    Rekindling the U.S. economy and ensuring that international financial institutions serve the interests of the people are particularly important for the Americas. Our economic interconnection means that a robust U.S. economy is good for the hemisphere and can become an engine for bottom up economic growth and equality throughout the region.

    The economy isn't the only challenge requiring our cooperation. We also face dual challenges of security – both for our countries and for the individuals who inhabit them. Our countries are plagued by gang violence and the illegal trafficking of weapons and narcotics.

    In the United States, we need to do more to reduce demand for illicit drugs and stem the flow of weapons and bulk cash south across our borders. We applaud Mexico's courageous stand against violent drug cartels, as well as Colombia's anti-drug efforts, but we know that they will have the side effect of pushing traffickers into Central America. We will build on the Meridá Initiative – started last year under President Bush – to assist Mexico and the Central American nations in a joint effort to confront that threat head-on. The drug trade is a problem we all share and one whose ultimate solution we must devise together.

    Consistent with the Inter-American Democratic Charter, we must also focus on building and encouraging strong democracies, where basic fairness, social equality, and a deep respect for human rights and the rule of law are the guiding principles of everything we do. Democracy is about more than elections; it's about strong, transparent governance and a thriving civil society. It is also about addressing as effectively as possible the challenges of poverty, inequality and social exclusion.

    We recognize that the United States is still striving to meet its constitutional goal of forming a "more perfect union" and that we have, in the past, fallen short of our own ideals. But we pledge every day to honor the values that animate our democracy, and to lead by example. This is why, on his third day in office, the President ordered the closure of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay.

    Finally, we all face the threat to our planet posed by the changing climate, and, so, we share the need to develop clean energy sources to combat-and reverse-this critical threat. The President and I are deeply committed to leading in the development of an urgent and coordinated response to climate change. Working as partners, we must harness the potential of green energy in a way that protects our planet for future generations, while also catalyzing economic growth for the generations of today.

    As we face these threats and as we confront the most serious economic crisis in generations, the countries of the Hemisphere must look forward. And we must work together, as partners, to give our citizens hope that brighter days lie ahead.

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    English version from The White House Press Office.

    This op-ed by Vice President Joe Biden appeared this morning in the following Latin American newspapers: La Nación (Argentina), O Globo (Brazil), El Mercurio (Chile), El Tiempo (Colombia), La Nación (Costa Rica), El Comercio (Ecuador), El Universal (México), El Comercio (Perú), El Nuevo Día (Puerto Rico), El País (Uruguay), El Nacional (Venezuela).

  

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We need to look at history

We need to look at history in this business of "gang violence and illegal trafficking of weapons and narcotics". I am old enough to remember when FDR repealed Prohibition in the US where gang warfare in Chicago was rampant, bathtub gin filled every bathtub, illegal stills were operating in every woodlot and beer was being brewed on back porches. My mother was Very angry when the beer bottles exploded and made an awful mess. The FBI was helpless and Al Capone was pulled in not on trafficking but on tax evasion by the IRS. The point of all this is that it would be far wiser and more economically sound to decriminalize all drugs, not just marijuana, putting their sale under license and controlling the quality. This would remove their use out of criminal cartels and place them under the jurisdiction of government as with alcohol, tobacco, casinos and lotteries. This would increase government revenues and free up police and security for Real crime such as have been foisted on our country by the financial sector, in addition to murder, rape, fraud and treason and so on. I think the aggressive, punitive cops-and-robber border patrols and high fences now in practice are no more effective now than they were all those many years ago.

Does anyone really believe

Does anyone really believe that the U.S. government, whether headed by the Republican wing of the ruling class or the Democratic wing, really has the interests of Latin American peoples in mind? The Obama regime has just made it clear that they have no intention of removing the internationally condemned 50 year old embargo on Cuba. The U.S. is intervening militarily on behalf of the extraordinarily unpopular right wing Mexican president Felipe Calderon. The U.S. government continues to pursue a failed "drug war" and military intervention in Colombia, widely considered a failed state. The Obama regime is picking up where the Bush regime and prior U.S. regimes did in hostility towards the numerous and growing number of progressive and revolutionary governments in Latin America. The people of the U.S. should not allow Obama's openly militarist policy in Afghanistan to distract them from the policies of destablization and intervention which have been planned and are beginning to take shape towards our brothers and sisters in Latin America. The sham drug war rationale is smoke and mirrors behind which to carry our more nefarious U.S. imperialist policies.

Deeds speak louder than

Deeds speak louder than words, the Obama presidency, could start by repelling the policies of the USA, that have failed and will continue to fail, in their attempt to control the people`s natural resources, south of the Rio grande