At last count more than 70 countries
around the world have offered assistance to the United States to
aid recovery from Hurricane Katrina. Most is heartfelt and comes
from longtime allies and countries that have received U.S.
assistance in their moments of need. But that is not true in every
case-for example, Cuba and Venezuela.
According to the news, Australia pledged $7.5 million to the
American Red Cross. China promised $5 million. France offered 600
tents, 1,000 cots, 60 generators, diesel pumps, and water treatment
stations. Mexico is sending 15 truckloads of food, water, and
medical supplies as well as naval ships and helicopters. Even El
Salvador-past victim of earthquakes, hurricanes, and war-pledged
troops to aid police patrols.
Although President George W. Bush said the United States will "rise
up and take care of it," these gifts are a way for other nations to
give back something to a country that has often lent a helping
hand. The Bush Administration should accept them, considering the
needs of the afflicted along the U.S. Gulf coast as well as the
chance to show that America can receive with as much grace as it
gives.
Cuban dictator Fidel Castro offered a thousand doctors and 26 tons
of medicine while Venezuela's autocratic leader Hugo Chávez
promised refined petroleum products, $1 million, and some 2,000
soldiers, firemen, and relief workers. However, charity from these
two should be handled with caution.
Their offers deny resources to needy citizens in their own
countries. Ordinary Cubans have no say over the tens of thousands
of medics, teachers, and intelligence officers Castro has
dispatched to Venezuela and other countries for political purposes,
to the point that they no longer have access to basic healthcare.
As for tons of medicine, it is curious that pharmacies open to most
Cubans don't even stock aspirin.
In Venezuela, President Chávez has taken personal control of
the state oil industry, essentially privatizing it in his name.
After pushing the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) to limit production and drive up prices, he now sells oil at
below-market prices to countries that align themselves with his
populist rhetoric. Flush with petrodollars, he has become a
ubiquitous gadfly on the international scene-at the expense of
Venezuela's poor, whose numbers have increased since he came into
office.
Further, Chávez is using the aid carrot to drive a wedge
between the American public and their local, state, and national
officials. Chávez cynically charged, "For four days there
were warnings that the hurricane was going to make a direct hit,
and the king of vacations at his ranch only said, 'You must
flee.'"
Besides distorting what really happened and ignoring the federalist
mix of local and national responsibilities in the United States,
Chávez's words contrast with his own behavior when rains and
coastal mudslides took the lives of some 16,000 Venezuelans in
December 1999. His government gave no evacuation orders even as
slides were beginning in the mountains. Moreover, Chávez was
missing for 36 hours-allegedly in Havana.
Upon the request of Venezuelan Defense Minister Raúl
Salazar, the United States sent helicopters and soldiers
immediately, contributing $4 million in relief. But in January
2000, Chávez abruptly blocked U.S. Army engineers from
coming to rebuild a needed highway-reportedly counseled by Castro
to curtail further demonstrations of American goodwill and keep out
spies.
In 2001, however, Chávez sent Venezuelan troops to help El
Salvador restore rural dwellings after a devastating earthquake.
Salvadoran officials nearly declared them persona non grata for
allegedly urging villagers to vote for the leftist Farabundo
Martí National Liberation Front party in upcoming elections.
Cuban doctors operating in other countries have served similar
political purposes according to defectors.
The U.S. rescue and recovery effort is challenging enough to
present opportunities for mistakes and mischief. Foreign countries
sending personnel should be able to cooperate with U.S. local,
state, and federal authorities. Allies that have participated with
Americans in peace-keeping exercises and bilateral relief and law
enforcement efforts have already demonstrated that capacity.
Better to employ their expertise-which will be tested severely
enough-than let in political opportunists eager to sow discord or
probe the coastline for weaknesses in defense. Besides, U.S.
government relief workers aren't exactly welcome in Castro's Cuba
or Chávez's Venezuela.
Stephen Johnson is Senior Policy Analyst for Latin America in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage Foundation.