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Bushs recipe for Latin America: austerity, repression
and more US militarism
By Bill Vann and Tomas Rodriguez
28 March 2002
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In his four-day, three-nation tour of Latin America, George
W. Bush reprised all of the familiar homilies about hemispheric
partnership and mutual progress that have been the
stock-in-trade of every US president for 50 years. In the wake
of September 11, Washington has refurbished the rhetoric slightly.
It has replaced the old invocations of an alliance against communist
subversion used to justify the military interventions, CIA-organized
coups and US-backed dictatorships that characterized the region
for most of the twentieth century with a new sloganthe war
on terrorism.
The US presidents first trip south of Mexico took place
in the context of his administrations drive to escalate
the American intervention in Colombia. The White House is pressing
Congress to lift all restrictions on the use of the more than
$2 billion in arms aid that Washington has poured into the South
American nation over the last two years. Up to now the US intervention
has been limited by a congressional mandate confining military
aid to anti-drug efforts.
The administration has also unveiled plans for a new military
operation to protect the pipelines of US oil companies. The proposal
would scrap requirements that the Colombian military observe human
rights standards as well as the existing cap on the number of
US military personnel that can be deployed in the country.
Bush began his trip by addressing the United Nations conference
on global aid and development in Monterrey, Mexico, where he directly
linked the promise of a paltry $5 billion increase in US foreign
aid over the next five years to Washingtons global military
aims. We fight against poverty because hope is an answer
to terror, he said. Hope clearly takes a back seat to cruise
missiles and cluster bombs in his administrations budgetary
plans, which include a $48 billion increase in military spending
in a single year.
The UN had estimated that an additional $50 billion a yearjust
slightly more than the Pentagons planned budget increasewould
be required in aid from all of the wealthiest nations to meet
the conferences stated goal of halving by 2015 the number
of people worldwide who struggle to survive on less than one dollar
a day.
Bush made it clear that the US has no intention of dispensing
its largesse to the undeserving poor among the nations
of the world. The lesson of our time is clear, he
told the UN conference. When nations close their markets
and opportunity is hoarded by a privileged few, no amountno
amountof development aid is ever enough. We must tie greater
aid to political and economic reforms. And by insisting on reforms,
we do the work of compassion.
This president, installed in office by a right-wing majority
of unelected Supreme Court justices, whose administration reeks
from the Enron scandal, added a sanctimonious insistence on democracy
and transparency from those seeking new US aid. Many
at the UN conference saw the call for selectivity
in awarding aid grants as a revival of the Cold War policy of
assisting those countries that back Washingtons military
actions and strategic interests, while boycotting those that do
not.
The US president insisted that free trade and economic
reform, based on the subordination of the Latin American
economies to the needs of US-based transnational corporations,
constituted the only road to economic development. His treasury
secretary, Paul ONeill, was somewhat more blunt, dismissing
foreign aid generally as welfare, and declaring that
real economic development would take place solely
through capital coming into those countries to create jobs.
According to press reports, Bush had threatened to boycott
the conference when the US learned that the governments of Chile
and Brazil were planning to advance a resolution on emergency
aid to Argentina. That Latin American country, which epitomizes
the policy of open markets and economic reforms proposed
by Bush, is presently in a state of economic free-fall, having
seen its annual per capita income drop by $8,950 in the last five
years, declining to the dismal level of $3,190. The country, which
Washington held out as a model in the 1990s, now confronts 25
percent unemployment and unprecedented poverty while its currency
has lost 75 percent of its value in just two months.
For obvious reasons, Bush did not put Buenos Aires on his itinerary.
His free market sermons were not likely to have decreased
the social tumult that is gripping the country. Nor could the
US president land in Brazil, the continents largest country.
Preaching free trade there would have been unseemly,
given the trade war tariffs that Washington has imposed against
Brazilian steel exports.
In the three countries he did visit, Bush arrived empty-handed,
proposing no new substantive aid, and presenting a picture of
the economic and social health of these nations wildly at odds
with reality. In Mexico itself, according to a report from the
countrys National School of Social Work, poverty has increased
by 300 percent since 1994, affecting 40 million people, with 26
million of them indigent.
In Peru, Bushs second stop, the government of Alejandro
Toledo prepared for the US presidents visit by imposing
a virtual state of siege, deploying 22,000 soldiers and police
in the streets of Lima and outlawing all demonstrations. Police
quickly broke up a small anti-Bush protest in the center of the
city, using tear gas and arresting 18 people. Meanwhile, two US
warships armed with cruise missiles and carrying elite Marine
and Navy Seal units took up positions off the port city of Callao
for possible intervention.
Bush hailed Toledo as a symbol of Latin American democracy
for his successful electoral challenge to the corrupt and authoritarian
regime of Alberto Fujimori, who had been one of the closest allies
of the first President Bush. Caught in the same economic whirlpool
that has dragged down Argentina, Peru has seen its jobless rate
soar, sparking widespread worker unrest. Polls put support for
Toledo, elected after Fujimori fled the country last year, at
under 30 percent.
Bush emphasized military aid in his visit to Lima, drawing
a connection between September 11 and a bomb blast at the US embassy
just days before his arrival. Representatives of the two main
Peruvian guerrilla groupsShining Path and the Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement (MRTA)denied responsibility for the
car bomb, which claimed the lives of nine Peruvians. Both groups
were largely wiped out in a campaign of repression by the Fujimori
regime, and those who survived have called for an end to armed
actions and participation in a truth commission formed
to gather evidence on the crimes of the Fujimori regime.
Police have yet to name any suspects, while some in the Peruvian
left have attributed the explosion to Fujimori supporters in the
military and suggested possible CIA involvement.
Declaring the US and Peru partners in the fight against
terrorism, Bush vowed to help in Perus military
effort to avoid the infiltration of terrorists like the FARC (Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia). For his part, Toledo confirmed
that Peru has transferred military bases it had maintained on
its contested border with Ecuador to the Colombian frontier. Following
Bushs visit, the Peruvian foreign minister denied reports
that the two sides had agreed on setting up US military bases
in Peru.
The Toledo government made no progress in its request that
Washington grant access to CIA files on the Fujimori regimes
hated secret police chief, Vladimiro Montesinos, who directed
massacres, assassinations and torture, while bribing or blackmailing
much of Perus political establishment and embezzling hundreds
of millions of dollars. Montesinos, cashiered from the Peruvian
army for handing military secrets to the CIA, was a long-time
asset of US intelligence.
Both US and Peruvian officials revealed that Bush and Toledo
did discuss the plight of Lori Berenson, an American citizen who
was convicted by a secret, hooded military court of treason
to the fatherland in 1996 for her alleged ties to MRTA members.
Peruvian officials said the case is totally closed
as far as they are concerned. They described the US president
as respectful of a second rigged trial in which the
32-year-old New Yorker was convicted on the basis of the same
illegal evidence used by the military tribunal and sentenced to
20 years on charges of aiding the guerrillas. Berenson has steadfastly
proclaimed her innocence, insisting that she has been victimized
solely for her political views and her sympathy for those persecuted
by the Fujimori regime.
Given the Bush administrations aim of securing the Toledo
governments support for US intervention in Colombia, the
US president had no interest in interceding on Berensons
behalf. Bush was, no doubt, all the more reluctant to press her
case in light of the Organization of American States recent
censure of the US for denying basic human rights to the Afghan
War POWs it is holding without charges or hearings at the Guantanamo
naval base in Cuba.
Bushs final stop was El Salvador, which he described
as one of the shining lights of Latin America. Having
suffered 70,000 deathsmost of them workers and peasants
killed by US-trained military death squadsin the civil war
of the 1980s, the Central American nation is today more socially
polarized and impoverished than when the civil war began in 1979.
According to the UN, 48 percent of the 6.1 million Salvadoreans
live in poverty. With the per capita gross domestic product lower
than it was a quarter of a century ago, the wealthiest 20 percent
of the population controls 55.3 percent of the wealth, while the
poorest 20 percent accounts for just 3.7 percent.
Throughout Central America, a series of natural disasters has
exacerbated the social crisis produced by a century of US economic
exploitation. Drought has killed off crops of subsistence farmers
in rural villages, leaving hundreds of thousands without food.
In Guatemala, a recent study by the countrys health ministry
found that in the worst-hit areas, 80 percent of the population
is malnourished, while nationwide 46 percent of the countrys
5 million children are chronically undernourished.
In a five-and-a-half-hour stopover, Bush held a working
lunch with the Central American presidents, but offered
no new programs for the millions of the regions people who
have little or no food.
Thousands of workers and students, meanwhile, protested the
US presidents visit in marches that also commemorated the
twenty-second anniversary of Archbishop Oscar Romeros assassination
at the hands of a right-wing death squad. The killing of the Catholic
prelate came just weeks after he called for an end to US military
aid that he said was being used to murder unarmed civilians.
In El Salvador as in Peru, Bush was pressed to enact free trade
agreements that would allow the regions products unrestricted
access to US markets. The US president made no commitments. While
extolling free trade as a lofty principle, Washingtons
real concern is the smashing of all impediments to US-based banks
and multinational corporations looting the national economies
of Latin America, while at the same time freezing out their European
and Japanese competitors.
Decades of pursuing this policy have created a social catastrophe
throughout the continent. The regions combined foreign debt
has risen to nearly $800 billion and now consumes a large share
of every governments budget in the form of interest and
service fees alone. According to the Economic Commission for Latin
America (CEPAL), the number of poor in the region rose from 200
million to 224 million between 1998 and 2000. Many more millions
are being plunged into misery as national economies feel the impact
of the deepening recession in the US and internationally.
These conditions must produce social explosions throughout
Latin America. Bushs trip, with its emphasis on spreading
the war on terrorism to the continent, is a clear
warning that Washington is preparing another round of counterrevolutionary
violence to protect its grip on what it has long claimed as US
capitalisms backyard.
See Also:
Shock therapy for Argentina: 75,000 jobs
disappear in one month
[25 March 2002]
Steel decision threatens to spark trade
war
[8 March 2002]
US militarism targets South
American oil
[20 February 2002]
291 dead in Lima: the social
roots of Perus tragic fire
[28 January 2002]
Argentina on the edge
of defaultIs Brazil next?
[23 November 2001]
Central American famine
worsens
[5 September 2001]
Peruvian court sentences
Lori Berenson to 20 years
[22 June 2001]
Hundreds die in El
Salvador earthquake
[16 January 2001]
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