More Latin, less America.

AuthorFarnsworth, Eric
PositionLetters - Letter to the Editor

I was delighted to see such significant treatment given by The National Interest to the Free Trade Area of the Americas (Fall 2003). Even so, the article is still problematic.

President Clinton first mooted the idea of a hemispheric trade area at the 1994 Summit of the Americas in Miami. From the U.S. perspective, an FTAA was a logical extension of the first Bush Administration's Enterprise for the Americas Initiative, a strategic response to European integration. It was also the only way to get regional leaders to adopt a Summit agenda that addressed fundamentally domestic matters like anti-corruption and education, formerly off limits for outside discussion. Together, Summit provisions on trade and investment, financial cooperation, education, energy, healthcare and the like contributed to a comprehensive development initiative for the region unlike any previously undertaken because it largely focused on mutual responsibilities based on shared values and interests.

Negotiations for the FTAA were formally begun at the Santiago Summit in 1998. The Quebec City Summit that the current President attended reaffirmed the negotiations and clarified the date for their anticipated conclusion. (Two points to note: the free movement of labor has never been part of discussions, and the Bush Administration has not wavered from its view that agricultural subsidies should be addressed at the WTO, not the FTAA.)

As before, the United States remains the driving force behind the trade agenda. True, negotiations lacked momentum before Congress granted the President fast track trade negotiation authority, but since then the United States has concluded an agreement with Chile and launched negotiations with Central America and, soon, the Dominican Republic. Additional negotiations with Colombia and others are under active consideration. FTAA remains the ultimate...

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