President Lagos, Chile’s Tony Blair, Visits Washington
• Chilean President Ricardo Lagos’ foreign and domestic policy is rapidly gaining his country a reputation as
Washington’s lap dog.
Chilean President Ricardo Lagos came to the White House yesterday to meet President Bush and discuss “democracy and
trade relations in the Western Hemisphere as well as expanding economic opportunity in the region.” After this meeting
Lagos convened with key U.S. foreign policy officials, including Secretary of State Colin Powell, National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick. His high level Washington meetings reflect the
extremely close ties that Santiago enjoys with the conservative U.S. administration. Since taking office in 2000, Lagos
has worked tirelessly to strengthen links between the ultra-conservative Bush administration and socialist Chile,
identifying himself with U.S. geopolitical interests, while ignoring the many voices within Chile that have opposed his
concessionary strategy.
Free Trade at a Price
Seven months ago, a bilateral free-trade agreement between Chile and the U.S. went into effect after more than a decade
of negotiations, rendering 85 percent of consumer and industrial commerce between the two countries tariff-free—the
first successful agreement between a South American nation and the U.S., and only the second in the hemisphere, after
NAFTA. The agreements were finalized in December 2002, ratified by both legislatures in fall 2003 and went into effect
on Jan. 1 of this year. It still remains to be seen whether the bilateral agreement will solve Chile’s endemic income
disparities; the poorest 10 percent of its population receives only 3.7 percent of the nation’s income, while the
richest 10 percent of the population receives 53.4 percent.
In 2003, the UN Security Council was at a stalemate over the pending situation in Iraq and the U.S.’ desire to use force
against Saddam Hussein’s regime. A coalition of UN member states insisted that the U.S. delay a potential war against
Iraq, hoping that Baghdad would comply with UN weapons inspection teams. With Lagos’ consent, Chilean Ambassador to the
UN Juan Gabriel Valdés criticized U.S. unilateralism, insisting that the U.S. conform to the international body’s
position and creating tensions between the two governments. Under pressure from Powell and other U.S. officials using
the status of the fragile free trade agreement as leverage, Lagos fired Valdés and sent him to head the Chilean embassy
in Buenos Aires. As a result, the White House expedited the signing and subsequent U.S. passage of the trade accord.
Chile Suddenly Anti-Castro
Beyond the humiliation of Valdés, a lifetime friend of President Lagos, Chile voted to condemn Cuba’s human rights
record at the Geneva UN Human Rights Commission in April—a break from the solidarity normally shown by the majority of
Latin American nations. Although a number of prominent members of Chile’s legislative body, including leaders of Lagos's
own Concertación coalition, called for the country to join Brazil and Argentina in abstaining from the Geneva vote,
Chile isolated itself from the region’s historical sympathy for Cuba, demonstrating the growing influence of the U.S. in
Santiago. In calling for abstention, the socialist Senator and chairman of Chile’s Congressional Committee on Human
Rights, Jaime Naranjo, described the Washington authored condemnation as a “useless ritual which has failed to have any
effect on civil liberties in Cuba.” Even the senatorial leader of Chile’s center-right Christian Democratic Party, Jorge
Lavandero, called President Bush “the world’s worst violator of human rights,” in reference to U.S. actions in Iraq.
Despite the resounding Latin American opposition to the U.S.’ condemnation of Cuba, Lagos, in the interest of remaining
in Washington’s good graces, maintained his support for Bush’s policy. His actions have been a clear signal to most in
the region that Washington now has Chile securely in its back pocket, to be unleashed when needed.
Politically Motivated Compliance
Obediently following Washington’s lead, Chile sent a small military brigade to the Middle East. Chile also supported the
U.S. engineered ousting of Haiti’s constitutionally elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Yesterday’s summit meeting
between Bush and Lagos is only expected to tighten Santiago’s ardently pro-Washington, pro-free trade foreign policies,
especially given the approach of municipal elections this fall and what is sure to be a fiercely fought presidential
election in 2006. Having dropped hints that he is considering a return to La Moneda for a second term, President Lagos
unquestionably views securing a Concertación victory in local elections as a top priority for the remainder of his term.
A key element in Lagos’ strategy will be an attempt to outflank the Chilean right—which has historically advocated for
closer ties with Washington—by taking credit for Chile’s ascension into the U.S.’s inner circle of closest allies.
Lagos has bet that his trip to Washington and the prestige associated with the U.S. alliance will distract the Chilean
population from economic indicators that suggest Chile is moving in the wrong direction. He remains hopeful that the
free trade agreement will improve Chile’s economic prospects. However, Santiago should be aware that its alliance with
the U.S. could alienate the Andean nation from its Latin American neighbors.
This analysis was prepared by Will Conkling, COHA Research Associate