Washington
rumbles with suppressed outrage over Latin America’s
latest professions of its sovereignty – Bolivia’s
nationalization of its oil and natural gas reserves, and
Ecuador and Venezuela’s voiding of their energy
contracts. At the same time, Bolivia’s newly inaugurated
president, Evo Morales, is a prime candidate to join
Washington’s pantheon of Latin American bad boys,
presently represented by Fidel Castro and Hugo Chávez.
Meanwhile, the region’s new populist leadership, also
known as the “Pink Tide,” extends its colors across
South America and is poised to leap to much of the rest of
Latin America. Ostensibly, the “pink tide,” consists
of left-leaning South American governments seeking a third
way to register their political legitimation to their
citizens, as well as their autonomy regarding such foreign
policy issues as Iraq.
Meanwhile,
Washington’s surprisingly lame regional policy has
spurred disbelief even among the hemisphere’s most
ardent pro-U.S. governments, like El Salvador and Chile.
Some specialists maintain that while the region’s
oncoming economic enfranchisement can be understood from a
number of perspectives, perhaps the most forthcoming
analyses places the roots of the new movement in the
bedding soil of Washington’s egregiously failed regional
policy.
Throughout
the Cold War’s gestation, Democratic as well as
Republican presidents have not hesitated to call for U.S.
intervention in Latin America, however persistently
malignant such excursions turned out to be. These have
ranged from coup-making in Guatemala and Chile, to the
fostering of civil wars in Central America, with all of
these intrusions later proving to be irrelevant, or at
least insufficient to protect genuine, even narrowly
defined, U.S. national interests. Even more so, they
proved to be counter-productive or destructive. As a
result, much of the region has become estranged from
Washington’s leadership, a legacy now apparent in the
difficulties currently being encountered by U.S.
policymakers in the areas of trade, drugs and security. No
wonder that a series of recent polls undertaken throughout
Latin America regarding the Iraq war, and the popularity
of the Bush administration, an average of 85% of
respondents have voiced their opposition.
Post
Soviet Latin America
The demise of the Soviet Union in 1990 allowed the
illusion to be born of a new non-ideological hemispheric
alignment almost exclusively based on trade, and not,
unfortunately, on a reworked and broadened
confidence-building relationship between the U.S. and the
rest of the Americas. Latin Americans were hoping that
these would exhibit at least a passing interest in issues
pertaining to social justice and the assertion of
exercisable options.
Throughout the years, Washington’s policy towards the
region has been fueled by a paroxysm of odium aimed at
Havana. In Washington’s eye, Castro, along with such
kindred legions as Venezuela’s Chávez and now
Bolivia’s Morales, pose a lethal threat to
Washington’s Latin American cosmography. Under the Bush
White House, the relative closeness of this country’s
ties with any other given nation became a function of the
latter’s relations with Castro Cuba. Meanwhile,
non-ideological programs, such as maintaining the drug war
at a satisfactory level and the White House’s almost
obsessive interest in privatization and trade, were
prioritized first by the Clinton administration and then
by the Bush White House.
In
affected areas of Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru, already
functioning anti-drug strategies prompted a series of U.S.
initiatives which usually ended up in failure, as a result
of ill-conceived crop fumigation and interdiction
processes that led to widespread environmental damage
along with illness and disease among locally exposed
populations. The particular rights of indigenous
communities, along with upholding the region’s
sovereignty were among the casualties of these U.S.-led
efforts. During this epoch, the Pentagon authored a
growing pattern of collaboration, mainly with the
Colombian military, but also with the armed forces of
Ecuador, Peru, and Paraguay. These collaborations, as a
result of burdensome military budgets and other
ill-starred priorities, often ended with the wholesale
destruction of traditional agricultural practices and the
distortion of local economies.
Finding
its own way
The policy of replacing meaningful socially-directed aid
to the region with increased emphasis on the drug war, as
well as stepped up trade in upscale consumables and other
luxury items, usually benefited no more than 5% of the
populace. Only too late did a number of governments
discover that their often flawed economic liberalization
policies, encouraged by Washington conservative think
tanks and other proponents of the Washington Consensus,
not only failed to mend profound social and economic
structural lesions, but also predictably contributed to
tensions between the haves and the have-nots, both here
and abroad. For Latin America, this meant disenchantment
with the status quo, along with adding further stress to
already strained ties between the north and the south.
For
its part, upon taking office, the Bush administration
immediately picked up where the previous administration
had left off but also embedded its hard ideological tenets
into U.S. hemispheric policy that the Clinton White House
had tended to neglect. This was the period that saw the
rise of such hard core ideologues and neo-Cold Warriors as
Otto Reich and his protégé Roger Noriega, after the
former, due to his extremism, was unable to secure a
confirmation vote from the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee to be Assistant Secretary of State for Latin
America. The Bush administration’s Latin Americanists
now saw the region uniquely through a prism molded by its
anti-Havana passions. The administration’s paradigm had
the hemisphere divided into a Zoroastrian world of
absolute darkness and light. On one hand, it found favor
with conservative El Salvador and pragmatic Chile, which
had allied themselves with Washington, in contrast to
Venezuela and Bolivia, whose leftist politics found left
those countries out in the cold.
The
Contradiction of U.S. Policy
The decision by Bush to submit U.S.-Latin American
relations to an outdated and small- minded game plan,
which featured a preemptive and expansionist foreign
policy accompanied by an increasingly dysfunctional
anti-drug policy, has already pushed strained
inter-American ties almost beyond the breaking point. In
spite of the economic weight and influence of the U.S
market, Latin America’s growing discontent over the
failures of the U.S. to make its market entirely
accessible to Latin American products, accompanied by the
trade advantages enjoyed by U.S. subsidized crops and
products, set the stage for an increasingly snarling
relationship between North and South.
The
failure to introduce reforms that would accelerate real,
inclusive growth, was compounded by a series of egregious
foreign policy missteps by the Bush administration.
Examples of these range from orchestrating the ouster of
constitutionally-elected President Aristide in Haiti, to
helping finance the abortive anti-Chávez coup of April
2002, to attempting to blackmail Central American and
Caribbean countries to join the “Coalition of the
Willing” in Iraq, and to supporting favored conservative
presidential candidates throughout the area. The latter
action, cynically caricatured its profound concern for
“free and fair” elections as it threatened the
suspension of various forms of aid if the “wrong” kind
of “democrat” was elected to office. Also, there was
the Reich-Noriega bullying of government leaders and local
politicians who didn’t take the “right” position on
such issues as the embargo against Cuba, the election of
the OAS secretary-general and free trade.
The
ferment generated by Washington’s increasingly malign
neglect of the region gave rise to what began to be known
as a “Pink Tide” movement that today is seen as
sweeping across South America. But despite the tendency of
Washington right-wingers and other species of conservative
think tanks, like Freedom House, to demonize leftist
movements like the Pink Tide, its emergence was a natural
reaction to pressing trade, security and social justice
issues of paramount concern for the region, even though
such concerns seemed to have dropped off Washington’s
agenda. The Bush administration, now led by the State
Department’s Secretary Rice, and the Pentagon, by
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, had no problem accusing these
left leaning governments, led by Hugo Chávez, of being
threats to the U.S. national interest and of being
destabilizing factors to other Latin American countries,
even though they could never quite identify the source of
that threat. In fact, the reforms enacted by these new
populist left-leaning leaders turned out to be far more
reminiscent of New Deal reforms than any mythic
reemergence of a grand neo-Stalinist era. The strength of
the movement mainly stemmed from the rejection by a new
wave of enlightened Latin American leaders of the faux
democratization which was being offered by various
U.S.-backed governments as a miracle cure for the maladies
of underdevelopment, but which upon the next dawn, turned
out to be only pure snake oil.
New Players
The recent re-awakening of the indigenous civilizations
has started to profoundly reshape Latin America’s
political landscape. As this new awareness peaked,
indigenous communities began to retroactively say “no”
to presidential candidates who, once in office, reneged on
their glib commitments and proceeded to repudiate campaign
pledges to their Aymara and Quechua-speaking altiplano
constituents. They then countered these acts of treachery
by ousting tainted leaders in Ecuador, Argentina and
Bolivia after their presidents had revealed themselves to
be anything but bona fide servants of the people.
This process ran coterminously with the deepening
political involvement of those indigenous groups, who,
with an increasingly powerful voice, began saying no to
neoliberal reforms with roadblocks and other rejectionist
public manifestations. As Latin American populations were
spurning traditional politicians and their dusty programs,
different actors emerged to capture the discontent by
offering new solutions. These were most visible in 1998
with Hugo Chávez’s victory in Venezuela, Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva’s 2002 triumph in Brazil and in Evo
Morales’ defining victory in Bolivia last March. While
the May 28 triumph in Colombia of Álvaro Uribe,
Washington’s most favored South American leader,
produced great joy at the State Department, that last
insititution had to be disheartened by the strong showing
by left-leaning candidate Carlos Gaviria. Even with
Uribe’s big vote, Washington is still a bit disenchanted
by his strong sense of nationalism and his querulous
reaction to any display of U.S. sentiments of mastery over
Colombia’s public policy, the war against drugs, or
Uribe’s desire to maintain close business-like ties with
Chávez.
But
just as it appeared that this pink tide was spreading to
Argentina, Uruguay and Bolivia, and had gained credence
and political voltage in Peru, Ecuador, Costa Rica, the
Dominican Republic, Mexico and some of the Caribbean
islands, two developments could be discerned: first that
Chávez had come to be seen by huge numbers throughout
Latin America as being the movement’s spiritual leader
as well as its sage, just as the staccato-like peppering
of the political scene by Chávez’s ADS-like
interventions in other countries helped to weaken their
already only loosely-connected common front. Chávez is
sometimes belied by what his critics see as his buffoonish
outbursts and raffish personality, but could well be seen
as perhaps the most dynamic leader in the region today –
though his power lies more with the streets than the
diplomats of other Pink Tide countries.
A Hero for the Poor
As both a committed democrat (having been confirmed by
popular vote three times; twice in national elections and
once more in a recall referendum), and seen by the
majority of Venezuela and much of the rest of Latin
America, as an inspired social activist, Chávez appears
to embody the region’s greatest hope for the future and
the growing despair over his irrepressible style. The
Venezuelan leader’s myriad social programs, ranging from
medical services for the nation’s poor through an
innovative oil for doctor exchange arrangement with Cuba,
to a meaningful land reform and educational project, to a
broad pattern of discounted oil sales to many neighboring
countries as well as directly to deprived neighborhoods
within countries, have given luster to his revolutionary
credentials. In exchange, he has not asked for tribute,
but merely called upon other leaders to do what is best
for their own countries. Chávez has also been the
region’s chief proponent of increased integration in the
case of social justice, as well as promoting cheap
petroleum for the Caribbean islands with strained
economies, and poor neighborhoods in Boston and the Bronx,
while spearheading the effort to construct a gas pipeline
running between Venezuela, Brazil and Argentina, with an
extension to Bolivia. In spite of the State Department’s
most benighted efforts to caricature him as a human
right’s abuser, a bully and an anti-democrat, Chávez
has demonstrated that he has an incontestable record for
transparency and for obeying the law, far more clinically
than much of the leadership of his middle class detractors
within Venezuela, or Washington’s hypocritical salvos
from those who helped to finance a coup to oust him in
2002.
A New Model Dares to Emerge
Furthermore, Chávez and now Morales may, if they
politically survive, represent a historic development in
Latin America. As long as they remain on the scene, they
will be the first democratically elected leaders espousing
a mixed economy which contains socialist values that the
region has witnessed since Salvador Allende came to power
in Chile in 1970. Clearly, up to this point, due to open
market competition and Washington’s denigration of a
mixed economy that features a vigorous role for the public
sector, a sense of civic responsibility has not been
available for the average Latin American. The UN has
stated that the region has the highest level of
concentrated wealth in the world. The result is that the
process produces few “winners” and a plethora of
“losers” throughout the region.
The
values shared by Chávez and now Morales are not without
their detractors: The Venezuelan President is attracting
the same portion of Washington-backed subterfuge that
eventually led to the coups that overthrew Arbenz in
Guatemala in 1954, and Allende in 1973. The Bush
administration has employed a range of stratagems against
its Venezuelan nemesis as part of an intensifying campaign
to ridicule, pillory, and perhaps eventually arrange for
the demise of his government. Themes ranging from
Washington providing strategic funding to nominally, if
heavily compromised, domestic “democratic” bodies such
as Súmate, to allegedly encouraging acts of
espionage and attempts to foment anti-Chávez unrest
within the Venezuelan military, are almost daily events.
All sense of proportionality has now fled the scene in
Washington. When Chávez expels a U.S. embassy military
attaché (a relatively junior officer) for trafficking
documents with Venezuelan military personnel, and the U.S.
retaliates by expelling the second in command at the
Venezuela embassy in Washington, this does not advance
constructive engagement. It’s as if in return for Chávez
launching a rhetorical gonzo jab against President Bush
– his beloved “Mr. Danger” – the “Decider”
readies the B-3’s to bomb Caracas. Meanwhile, in its
totally discredited annual certification reports regarding
drug trafficking, human trafficking, human rights abuses
and a respect for religious freedom, as well as in the war
against terrorism, the administration shamelessly
manipulates data in order to come forth with preordained
findings, with Venezuela being the target of choice for
such skewering.
The
Advantages of a Flushed Leader
Chávez, of course, has had the sort of leverage that
Allende grievously lacked: with oil at over $70 a barrel,
the Venezuelan leader is not only flush with petrodollars,
but ready and able to fund revolutionary domestic and
regional projects. He holds the additional trump card of
an increasingly important strategic resource that has yet
to be exploited on a major scale: the heavy crude yielded
from the Orinoco tar sands. Furthermore, with a widening
slate of regional allies, theoretically including venues
like Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Bolivia, and with
several other potential candidates in the wings and
Mercosur as his eventual roost, Chávez theoretically has
the geopolitical heft to stand up to U.S. machinations. At
the same time, the already fragmenting loose knit Pink
Tide alliance is suffering from some important viperous
tendencies, including Chávez’s lamentable habit of
self-destructively intervening in the local affairs of
other Latin American countries.
Standing
up to Washington is a theme that has gained widespread
currency elsewhere in South America, as part of a
leitmotif of the pink tide movement, which in reality may
be a movement that is more apparent than real. The
resounding defeat of both U.S.-backed candidates in the
OAS Secretary-General race a number of months ago,
indicated that the region was no longer entirely willing
to docilely follow the diktats coming from the north.
Additionally, Brazil’s decision around the same time to
deny the U.S. even token observer status at the Arab-Latin
American Summit in Brasilia represented a momentous, if
symbolic, shift in U.S.-Latin American relations –
something like the dog being ready to bite the hand of its
owner.
A
Rush of New Development
As one of the more dynamic aspects of a now fast moving
scenario, Evo Morales in Bolivia has emerged as a
particularly plucky figure, unwilling to allow his
country’s traditional bended knee posture to the U.S to
continue unchallenged. He insists that while wanting to
have a good relationship with the U.S., it must be not one
based on “submission.” Underscoring this escape from
the “Latin American ghetto,” Morales’ travels after
winning the presidency, included quick visits to Caracas,
Europe, South Africa, Brazil and China, but conspicuously
left out Washington, suggesting that the emperor’s ring
no longer needed to be kissed. The trip also highlighted
another phenomenon of the pink tide, which is an
increasing propensity to turn towards multilateral ties
with non-traditional partners in order to achieve
diversification. Trade between South America and the EU is
quickening as the region seeks to construct new economic
and political ties around the world, and as Washington
becomes an increasingly problematic partner. Nascent
bodies such as the Ibero-American Summit and the IBSA
(India-Brazil-South Africa) South-South alliance seek to
integrate Latin America into a world that looks and acts
more like them, and as a way to escape the imperial
ukases, traditionally emitted from the State Department.
The
forward, if fitful, motion of the pink tide has the
potential to profoundly reshape the internal politics of
Latin America and grant the region a new and enhanced
place in the global pecking order. For Washington, which
has been wholly unable to constructively engage this
movement and still clings to the disabling vision of a
wholly U.S.-dominated “back yard” sustained more by
manipulation than by collective regional interests, the
pink tide, whatever its centrifugal tensions, presents a
serious diplomatic dilemma. Rumsfeld almost derisively
indicates that the Pink Tide could be dealt with by a
series of U.S. mini military bases (FOLS) or “lilly
pads” throughout the region, along with a beefed up and
entirely complaisant Latin American military
establishment.
If
the White House continues to return to a now poisoned well
to draw from the very legacy of its past arrogant
initiatives that have helped create the disastrous
conditions that have so frayed traditional bonds, the rest
of the hemisphere can be excused for becoming increasingly
alienated from a diplomatic hegemon which has so lost its
way that it risks finding itself pushed aside as an
outdated and rather useless relic.