Obama cool meets Chavez mania at Americas summit

Sun Apr 19, 2009 9:18pm BST
 
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By Patrick Markey

PORT OF SPAIN (Reuters) - If President Barack Obama needed a reminder that times have changed in the Americas, his fellow presidents gave him one when Air Force One touched down in Trinidad and Tobago for a regional summit.

Four years ago when his predecessor George W. Bush flew into Argentina for the last Summit of the Americas he was greeted by rock-tossing protesters and an alternative summit led by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, raging against "the evil empire."

This time, the U.S. president was met by smiles, the cheery clang of Caribbean steel drums and prime ministers and presidents seeking out his autograph. Chavez even told the young U.S. leader, twice: "I want to be your friend."

"This is the Obama summit," one Brazilian diplomat said.

An observation blimp circled over the conference center in Port of Spain, where a cruise ship housed journalists and white-jacketed police guarded perimeters as Obama and other leaders brainstormed on the economy, energy and security.

Obama had to parry demands to lift the U.S. embargo on Cuba and got a history lesson about U.S. imperialism from Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. But the positive vibes surrounding the young U.S. leader were hard to ignore.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe was one of several leaders who obtained a prized Obama signature. He showed off a scribbled message from Obama: "To President Uribe, with admiration."

"Barack Obama signed this little letter for me ... I'm going to send this to get framed," he joked with reporters outside the summit conference hall.  Continued...

 
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