The host of this week's Summit of the Americas, the Prime Minister of
Trinidad & Tobago, Patrick Manning, was the only signatory to the
Declaration of Port of Spain. In that sense, it was even less successful than
the last summit in Mar del Plata in 2005, widely considered an unmitigated
failure. In every other respect, however, it was more successful, infused with
what Manning described as the “spirit of cooperation". There was not much
substance, but the style provided a marked contrast to 2005. Then Venezuela's
President Hugo Chávez hailed the “utter defeat" of the US-backed Free Trade Area
of the Americas (FTAA); this time he grasped the hand of his US peer Barack
Obama, even if he did press into his spare hand a copy of Open Veins of
Latin America, Eduardo Galeano's seminal left-wing polemic.End of preview - This article contains approximately 1213 words.
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