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WSWS : News
& Analysis : South
& Central America
Moraless nationalization in Bolivia: Who got stabbed?
By Hector Benoit
5 May 2006
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The following article (translated from Portuguese) was sent
from Brazil on the eve of Thursdays meeting in the Argentine
tourist center of Puerto Iguazu between the presidents of Bolivia,
Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela to discuss Bolivian President
Evo Moraless May 1 decree declaring the nationalization
of the countrys oil and gas industries. The four South American
presidents agreed that Bolivian gas would keep flowing and prices
would be negotiated. Brazils state energy firm, Petrobras,
holds the largest interest in Bolivian gas, followed by Repsol,
a Spanish-Argentine company. President Luiz Inácio Lula
da Silva declared that the meeting would send a signal to investors
of regional stability and dialogue.
On May 1, the international day of the working class, Bolivias
recently elected President Evo Morales delivered a speech with
worldwide repercussions, announcing the nationalization of the
countrys gas and petroleum.
In the pronouncement, delivered in a dramatic tone aimed at
lending the decree an air of historic heroism, Morales said: The
Spanish, the North Americans, the Europeans looted the tin, the
silver and the natural resources. We should recognize that in
1937, under the leadership of the armed forces, petroleum was
nationalized for the first time, the second nationalization was
carried out in 1969 with the intellectual Marcelo Quiroga Santa
Cruz and his struggle continues today.
However, this history according to Morales tells only half
of the truth. The president forgot to say that Quiroga, during
that period, was the minister of petroleum in a military government
led by Gen. Alfredo Ovando Candia, who was the partner in a military
junta with Gen. René Barrientos, a valued collaborator
of the CIA, whose government organized the murder of Che Guevara.
The history of Bolivia is rich with such paradoxical interactions
between the fall of governments, opportunist intellectuals, military
officers, petty-bourgeois leaderships, the CIA, assassinations
and nationalizations. The last of these have generally been directed
at demagogic attempts to win popular support, and have never coincided
with the real interests of the oppressed Bolivian workers.
As Morales points out, this will be the third round of hydrocarbon
nationalizations to take place in Bolivia. Is there any reason
to believe that it will have better luck than the previous nationalizations?
Those earlier initiatives, despite being launched with the same
rhetoric, little by little were withdrawn. Are we witnessing this
time an act that really meets the needs of Bolivian workers? Is
this a genuinely anti-imperialist act, or an advance by the Bolivian
revolution in the direction of socialism?
These hypotheses seem, at the very least, highly improbable,
above all given the diverse historical experiences in Bolivia
and Latin America as a whole with petty-bourgeois forces that
advanced new, non-Marxist formulas for achieving socialism.
The party of Evo Morales, the MAS, falls into this category of
Latin American petty-bourgeois parties. It calls itself the Movement
toward Socialism, but it also has developed its own peculiar
route to reaching the new society.
According to Moraless chief theoretician, his vice president,
Álvaro Garcia Linera (sociologist, ex-Marxist, ex-guerrilla),
this new road is called Andean-Amazonian capitalism.
According to Linera, in an article published by Le Monde Diplomnatique,
Bolivia now needs to build a strong state that will regulate the
expansion of the industrial economy and transfer surpluses to
the communitarian sector, developing Andean-Amazonian
forms of self-organization.
Could these Andean-Amazonian forms be a metaphor
for talking about socialism? No, socialismaccording to Linerawould
only come, probably, after another half century. As he wrote in
the same article: The decolonization of the state and the
implementation of a new economic model will pose, from the first
day, a left-indigenous government that will begin to initiate
a process of irreversible change for the next half century.
But, as regards the present, it seems that Linera intends to
maintain capitalism or, rather, Andean-Amazonian capitalism.
As he writes: Andean-Amazonian capitalism is a form that,
I believe, is adapted to our reality to improve the possibilities
of the emancipation of the worker and community forces in the
medium term. For this reason, we conceive of it as a temporary
and transitory mechanism.
In this sense, the nationalization announced by Evo Morales
is not an expropriation carried out in the interests of the Bolivian
workers. Rather, it is a means of carrying forward this project
of saving capitalism in the region and blocking the building of
genuinely revolutionary organizations.
Many observers quickly commented that Morales carried out the
nationalization with the aim of winning the elections to the Constituent
Assembly, which will be held in July. If he failed to carry out
measures perceived as sufficiently stronglike his May 1
announcementhe would run the risk of losing control of the
assembly, and in a short space of time see the masses of Bolivians
marching once again, this time against his own government and
perhaps overturning one more president.
Thus, Moraless and Lineras nationalization decree,
far from expressing a consistently anti-imperialist policy, would
seem to be directed far more at the following objectives: winning
the July elections with a sufficient majority; saving Bolivian
capitalism; holding onto power and upholding the stability of
the region, thereby blocking the advance of the proletariat in
the Southern Cone.
Various facts point to this hypothesis. In the first place,
as is known, the foreign corporations have been given a 180-day
period to begin renegotiating their contracts. However, after
the July elections, given that Morales wins a solid victory, he
can begin ceding to the pressures exerted by the foreign companies.
Moreover, according to the decree, during the transition period,
the fields whose average production in 2005 was less than 33 million
cubic meters of gas daily would be maintained under the current
system for distributing the value produced, that is, they will
undergo no change whatsoever.
Most of the foreign companies would fall into this category.
Thus, for example, according to the newspaper Estado de São
Paulo, British Petroleum (BP) said that it is analyzing
the impact of the measure, but wants to find formulas to continue
working with the Bolivian government. For BP, according
to the same source, the principal point is the 180 days
of negotiations, but as the company pointed out, it has
little presence in the country. Similarly, the Enron-Shell
consortium indicated no alarm whatsoever, and announced its respect
for the sovereign decision of the Bolivian government.
The firms most affected by the decree will be Repsol (Spanish-Argentine)
and, principally, Petrobras (the state-owned Brazilian energy
giant), which in recent years made large investments in Bolivia.
But it appears that even in these cases there is no great cause
for alarm, as the decree affirms that the Ministry of Mines and
Hydrocarbons will evaluate the investments made by the companies,
as well as interest payments, operational costs and profitability
of each field. The results of these evaluations, according to
the same newspaper, will serve as the basis for YPBF (Bolivias
state-run energy firm) to determine definitive compensation or
participation of each company in the new contracts.
Thus, it appears that the nationalization will be carried out
without expropriations and at the end of the 180 days of negotiations,
and, above all, after the July elections, the great
nationalization may be revealed in reality as a great farce.
It is only in this sense that one can comprehend the calm of
the director of gas and energy at Petrobras, Ildo Sauer. The
contract for the transport of gas is guaranteed until 2019, with
a volume of between 24 million and 30 million cubic meters daily,
he declared. Nothing has changed.
Meanwhile, the same tranquility was to be noted on the São
Paulo stock market in relation to Petrobras stocks. On the opening
of the market on the day following the decree in Bolivia, share
prices fell slightly, losing 0.21 percent. But they quickly rebounded,
closing 1.77 percent higher. Petrobras-ON stocks, meanwhile, rose
3.41 percent.
Similarly, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
despite the attacks by parliamentary and political opponents,
who demanded that he take firm action in defense of the national
interests, remained completely calm and went so far as to defend
the rights of self determination of nations and of the poor
people of Bolivia.
Without question, for the Lula government it is preferable
that Evo Morales, its ally whom it supported for the Bolivian
presidency, is strengthened in the July elections. Lula no doubt
hopes that Morales will return the favor in Brazils own
presidential elections, set for October.
Lulas foreign policy in Latin America has echoed his
domestic policy in Brazilmaintain political stability at
all costs and thereby guarantee continued profitability for international
finance capital.
A large section of the Brazilian press, ex-diplomats, politicians,
businessmen and the most right-wing trade union federation, Força
Sindical (the opponent of the CUT), used the Bolivian events to
criticize the Lula government, accusing it of irresponsibility.
The government, they charged, is not defending the enormous national
interests of Petrobras in Bolivia.
In fact, the interests of Brazil and its biggest state enterprise
in Bolivia are enormous. According to the Brazilian news web site,
UOL, the Bolivian affiliate of Petrobras accounts for 24 percent
of Bolivias tax receipts, 18 percent of its gross domestic
product and 20 percent of its foreign direct investment.
Beyond this, it is Petrobras itself that operates 75 percent
of the gas exports sent from Bolivia to Brazil, 46 percent of
the countrys reserves, 95 percent of its refining capacity
and 23 percent of its distribution of derivatives. Moreover, the
company produces 100 percent of the gasoline and 60 percent of
the diesel fuel consumed in Bolivia. Petrobrass direct investments
in the country between 1994 and 2005 totaled $1.5 billion.
As UOL also points out, Brazil and Bolivia signed a 1991 Letter
of intention of energy integration, which led to the construction
of a bi-national natural gas pipeline between 1997 and 2000, operated
by Petrobras, through which fuel is pumped to Brazilian territory.
This pipeline has a capacity of 30 million cubic meters a day.
The pipeline also operates in neighboring countries: in 2005 it
provided an average daily sale of 0.9 million cubic meters of
gas to Argentina.
Petrobras is exploring petroleum and natural gas fields in
six of the nine Bolivian states (Tarija, Chuquisaca, Cochabamba,
Beni, La Paz, and Santa Cruz de La Sierra) and operates the gigantic
gas fields of San Antonio and San Alberto, in the south of the
country. It was San Alberto that Morales chose as the ideal place
to announce his nationalization decree on May 1.
The same source states that the Brazilian corporations
affiliate, Petrobras Bolívia Refinación S.A.
(PBR), operates the two principal Bolivian oil refineriesGualberto
Villaroel in Cochabamba, and Guillermo Elder Bell, in Santa Cruz
de la Sierraand that these two together produce on average
40,000 barrels of oil a day, which were bought by Petrobras for
$100 million in 1999. Petrobras also owns 100 of the 400 gasoline
stations in Bolivia.
Is it possible, with so many interests in Bolivia, that Petrobras
and Lula didnt know in advance about the measures that Morales
was going to take on the 1st of May? Could the revolutionary
Morales have surprised them? This is just as unbelievable as Lulas
claims that he knew nothing about the corruption in his Workers
Party (PT), which existed, above all, in the state firms, among
them Petrobras.
With respect to Moraless nationalization and in the face
of the criticisms of the Brazilian government, Lulas advisor
on international affairs, Marco Aurélio Garcia, a university
professor with ample knowledge of the history of Latin America,
let slip the following statement: Brazil didnt get
stabbed in the back.
The obvious question is who then did Morales stab with his
nationalization? Did he stab the foreign companies, or rather
the Bolivian proletariat itself? After the 180 days have passed,
we will know better.
See Also:
Bolivias socialist
president-elect Morales guarantees private property
[4 January 2006]
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