the thing is, you only get negative news about Latin America and no news on how much progress there is behind the scenes. e.g. colombian death squads and venezuela collapse, but no news on UNASUR, CELAC and how basically war between Colombia and Venezuela/Ecuador was pretty much certain in 2008, cheered on by Bush (with the USA media strongly backing the Colombia side and cheering the war drums), but the basically
everyone else on the continent formed a military alliance to stop Colombia, forcing Colombia to do a 180
o change on their foreign policy,
much to the annoyance of the USA who were pouring over $1 billion a year into a Colombian military build-up.
UNASUR more or less stopped that 2008 war (Colombia had already bombed Ecuadorian territory and the Colombia/USA media were accusing Ecuador/Venezuela of being terrorist-states in an effort to legitimize an invasion) by making it clear to Colombia that if they attacked Ecuador and Venezuela they'd be at war with Brazil, Argentina and Chile as well. Meanwhile, the USA wasn't damping down, they were cheerleaders for the war effort. Effectively, this was
huge egg on the Bush administrations face in terms of US influence in Latin America. no wonder the US press doesn't want to focus on this whole deal.
UNASUR is a merger of two rival regional blocs, Mercosur and CAN, both of which were strongly promoted by the USA, in the interests of "stability", and kept at each other throats. When they decided that this was a bad idea and they should just have a single bloc, suddenly America is like "pfft I don't think so! Go fuck yourselves". Which should tell you what the real priorities here are.
Later,
CELAC was an expansion of UNASUR with 33 nations.
Every nation in the western hemisphere except USA and Canada was invited. And who spearheaded the union? Venezuela (read the wiki page), who are apparently feared and hated by their neighbors, except ... when they suggest forming a union and excluding the USA from that union, literally everyone on the continent jumps in and signs the agreement. Other Latin American nations had the choice 5 years ago, to pick Team USA or Team Venezuela ... and they
all decided Team Venezuela was more palatable. What does this suggest about how the USA is viewed in Latin America? But this is not palatable to the US public so you won't read about it in the mainstream press.