September 13, 2006
World: Nonaligned Movement Seeks Wider Role
by Jeremy Bransten
Leaders such as Venezuela's Chavez (left) and Iran's Ahmadinejad (right) are expected to attend the NAM summit (Fars)
PRAGUE, September 13, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- All this week, Cuba is hosting a
summit of the Nonaligned Movement (NAM), which many in the West
consider an anachronism.
Founded in 1961, NAM aimed to act as a counterweight to Western states and the Soviet bloc when most nations were being pressured to take sides in the Cold War. Its founders included heroes of the anticolonial struggle in Asia and Africa.
Those times are long gone, but NAM continues. In fact, it appears to be thriving, with more than 50 heads of state due in Havana this week -- including Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
In fact, with 116 countries, the Cold War organization has more members than ever. And the rhetoric at its summits remains fiery.
"We meet after the brutal aggression against our brothers in Lebanon and we indignantly watch the daily genocide to which the Palestinian people are subjected," Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque said at the opening ceremony in Havana on September 11.
"Our summit takes place at the same time that Iran is under increasing pressure as it exercises its rights to pursue a peaceful nuclear program and when other nonaligned countries are threatened by preventive war and aggression," Perez Roque continued.
Substance Behind The Oratory?As evidenced by Perez Roque's speech, NAM's leaders appear to want to redefine their mission, to focus on current issues -- among them the Middle East crisis and Iran's nuclear standoff with the West.
The United States and its allies, and their war on terror, have now become a target.
The summit gives some of Washington's main adversaries, like Venezuela's Chavez, Iran's Ahmadinejad, and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a platform to voice their anger -- and to compare notes.
Chavez, in particular, who has been traveling the world making oil deals and seeking allies in his campaign against the Bush administration, is expected to be the star of the show.
No More Than A Soapbox"What Chavez is looking for, is some extension of his [leftist] movement in Latin America and gaining leverage in other parts of the world -- and Iran is one area he sees where he might step in and bolster the regime, at least rhetorically," says Kirk Bowman, a specialist on Latin America at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
"Chavez really likes to go into places that are having battles or feuds with the U.S. and step in as some other alternative," Bowman continues. "And so this is his stage."
Chavez is expected to be the star of the summit (epa, file photo)
But Bowman does not expect anything of substance to emerge from Havana -- for two main reasons. First, he says, the NAM continues to define its mission primarily in negative terms. It stands against a lot of things but has few positive alternatives to offer. Secondly, he argues, its members are so diverse that they don't share much in common, aside from a temporary hostility to U.S. policy