Sure, President Obama’s trip hit all the right symbolic notes, but will it produce any meaningful, concrete results over the long term?
U.S. Policy
Celso Amorim, the man who led Brazil into its new global era, discusses his diplomatic vision and U.S.-Brazilian relations in the new issue of Americas Quarterly.
"[T]here is a chance of fundamentally repositioning the United States in hemispheric affairs in a manner consistent with its own core interests and the aspirations and ongoing changes of the region itself, to mutual benefit and reward," writes COA's Eric Farnsworth in Latin American Policy.
The U.S.-Colombia free trade agreement has moved closer to submission to Congress. A new COA update looks at the progress and potential next steps for advancing the bilateral trade pact.
In light of the ongoing economic reform process in Cuba, the report outlines specific steps that can be taken by the Cuban government, the U.S. government, NGOs and foundations to assist independent small and micro-entrepreneurs in Cuba.
The president’s tour of Latin America was too important to postpone, writes AS/COA's Christopher Sabatini in The Huffington Post.
El Salvador's President Mauricio Funes played host to his U.S. counterpart Barack Obama during the last leg of the American leader's Latin American tour. The two presidents spoke about how to create domestic potential to help young Salvadorans avoid migration and organized crime.