Peru and US Close to Signing Deal to Counter Chinese Influence in Region: Diplomat

Peru and US Close to Signing Deal to Counter Chinese Influence in Region: Diplomat
(L-R) US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Peru's President Martin Vizcarra and Peruvian Foreign Minister Nestor Popolisio pose for pictures at the Governement Palace in Lima, Peru on April 13, 2019. - Pompeo landed in Peru on Saturday on the third-leg of a four-nation tour of Latin American allies focusing heavily on Venezuela and countering China's economic reach. Ernesto Benavides/AFP via Getty Images
Reuters
Updated:

LIMA—Peru and the United States are in the final stages of talks on a deal to promote American investments in the South American country as part of a U.S. initiative to counter Chinese influence in the region, a Peruvian diplomat told Reuters.

The United States launched its “Growth in the Americas” initiative in 2018 to bolster private-sector investments in energy and infrastructure in Latin America after China invited countries in the region to join its “One Belt, One Road” (OBOR, also known as Belt and Road) initiative.

So far, the United States has signed memorandums of understanding within the Growth in the Americas framework with Argentina, Chile, Jamaica and Panama. Chile, Jamaica, Panama and Peru have also signed MOUs with China to join its OBOR.

“The Trump administration is interested in balancing Chinese influence in the region a bit,” Cecilia Galarreta, the director of North American affairs in Peru’s foreign ministry, told Reuters on the sidelines of an event on Dec. 5.

Galarreta said the draft MOU with Washington to join the Growth in the Americas initiative was now being evaluated in the energy and mines ministry and the finance ministry.

China replaced the United States as Peru’s top trade partner years ago and Chinese companies are increasingly investing in infrastructure projects in the Andean country.

“We’ve had meetings with delegations from the United States that have strongly insisted on the importance of the greater presence of North American companies investing here, especially in infrastructure,” Deputy Foreign Minister Jaime Pomareda told Reuters on the sidelines of the same event.

The U.S. embassy in Lima did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

By Maria Cervantes