Back in 2001, many Latin Americans harboured hopes that George W. Bush would give greater priority to a ¡°backyard¡± that the US had often taken for granted. After all, the newly elected president was a former governor of Texas, a state bordering Mexico, he spoke a bit of Spanish and the ¡°cowboy summit¡± at the ranch of Vicente Fox, then his Mexican counterpart, was the occasion for Mr Bush¡¯s first official foreign visit. ¡°Some look south and see problems. Not me; I look south and see opportunities and potential,¡± he had said on the eve of that meeting. ×Ö´®2
Then came the attacks of September 11 and more pressing concerns. The administration¡¯s apparent indifference to Argentina¡¯s financial collapse later that year, its bungled response a few months later to a Venezuelan coup and, above all, its invasion of Iraq made Mr Bush a deeply unpopular figure in the region.