Monday, January 18, 2010

Pinera Victory Could Complicate Chile's Diplomacy

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published NYT: January 18, 2010
Filed at 12:09 p.m. ET
Leer completo desde New York Times...
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -- Billionaire and now President-elect Sebastian Pinera invoked the calls to service of John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama as he challenged Chileans to come together to improve their country.
The conservative businessman, who won Sunday's election by a 52-48 percent margin over former President Eduardo Frei, vowed to appoint the ''best, most prepared, most honest and most dedicated'' people to help transform Chile ''into the best country in the world.''
But Pinera's long and rousing victory speech made no mention of foreign policy other than his vow to fight drug trafficking, and given his recent comments about Chile's neighbors, he may find unity on a continent dominated by leftist governments very hard to achieve.
Pinera's election victory Sunday night ends two decades of uninterrupted rule by a center-left coalition, and returns to power the same political parties that provided civic support for Augusto Pinochet's brutal 1973-1990 dictatorship.
That legacy alone is bound to complicate relations with Argentina, whose leader has made prosecuting human rights violators a centerpiece of her presidency, and Uruguay, which just elected a former leftist guerrilla as its president.
According to Pinera's campaign Web site, his foreign policy goals include peacefully resolving conflicts, reaching strategic accords and promoting Latin American integration while protecting Chile's sovereignty and national identity.
''For Chile it's vitally important to have and maintain good relations with our neighbors and other American nations,'' Pinera's platform reads.
But while President Michelle Bachelet tried to defuse border tensions with Peru and Bolivia and avoid antagonizing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, Pinera's more nationalistic tone -- and friendship with Colombia's conservative President Alvaro Uribe -- could make relations difficult.
Pinera has criticized Latin American populism as a failed approach, and in last week's presidential debate, he called Cuba a ''dictatorship,'' said Venezuela is ''not a democracy'' and vowed never to concede land nor sea that belongs to Chile.
''This tone is clearly going to become an obstacle to building good relations with Bolivia, and certainly with Venezuela,'' said Marcelo Mella, a political scientist at the University of Santiago. ''It seems to me that nationalistic and chauvinistic declarations won't help generate a good climate for resolving conflicts.''
Pinera received good wishes on Monday from across the spectrum. Peru's president called for dialogue even as the international court in the Hague considers their disputed maritime border, and Bolivia's Evo Morales expressed hope that Pinera will follow through on Bachelet's promises regarding water rights and access to the sea.
''I don't agree with continuing to divide Latin America between governments of the right and left, when there are models of stability that adhere to democratic norms,'' said Uribe, who called Pinera ''a good friend of Colombia.''
As a billionaire with a doctorate in economics from Harvard University who has vowed to create jobs and boost economic growth in the world's top copper producing nation, Pinera has unique business experience among Latin leaders.
But his holdings also could complicate matters for Chilean diplomats.
Pinera's investments include a large share of LAN, Chile's main airline, which has sizable operations in Peru, Ecuador and Argentina that are subject to those governments' regulations, for example.
While Pinera has promised to sell off his LAN shares before taking office in March, he wants to keep control of Chile's leading television channel and most popular soccer team, both of which inevitably have dealings with other countries.
And while Pinera put more than $500 million in Chilean investments into trusts last year, he reportedly has many other holdings outside Chile.
Mella, for one, thinks Pinera will soon moderate his campaign statements. ''I don't have any doubt that a degree of pragmatism will exist once he takes office,'' he said.
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Associated Press Writer Eva Vergara contributed to this story.