Latin America: the attack on democracy
John Pilger argues that an unreported war is being waged by the US to restore power to the privilege
By John Pilger Published 24 April 2008Beyond the sound and fury of its conquest of Iraq and campaign against Iran, the world's dominant power is waging a largely unreported war on another continent - Latin America. Using proxies, Washington aims to restore and reinforce the political control of a privileged group calling itself middle-class, to shift the responsibility for massacres and drug trafficking away from the psychotic regime in Colombia and its mafiosi, and to extinguish hopes raised among Latin America's impoverished majority by the reform governments of Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia.
In Colombia, the main battleground, the class nature of the war is distorted by the guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the Farc, whose own resort to kidnapping and the drugs trade has provided an instrument with which to smear those who have distinguished Latin America's epic history of rebellion by opposing the proto-fascism of George W Bush's regime. "You don't fight terror with terror," said President Hugo Chávez as US warplanes bombed to death thousands of civilians in Afghanistan following the 11 September 2001 attacks. Thereafter, he was a marked man. Yet, as every poll has shown, he spoke for the great majority of human beings who have grasped that the "war on terror" is a crusade of domination. Almost alone among national leaders standing up to Bush, Chávez was declared an enemy and his plans for a functioning social democracy independent of the United States a threat to Washington's grip on Latin America. "Even worse," wrote the Latin America specialist James Petras, "Chávez's nationalist policies represented an alternative in Latin America at a time (2000-2003) when mass insurrections, popular uprisings and the collapse of pro-US client rulers (Argentina, Ecuador and Bolivia) were constant front-page news."
It is impossible to underestimate the threat of this alternative as perceived by the "middle classes" in countries which have an abundance of privilege and poverty. In Venezuela, their "grotesque fantasies of being ruled by a 'brutal communist dictator'", to quote Petras, are reminiscent of the paranoia of the white population that backed South Africa's apartheid regime. Like in South Africa, racism in Venezuela is rampant, with the poor ignored, despised or patronised, and a Caracas shock jock allowed casually to dismiss Chávez, who is of mixed race, as a "monkey". This fatuous venom has come not only from the super-rich behind their walls in suburbs called Country Club, but from the pretenders to their ranks in middle-level management, journalism, public relations, the arts, education and the other professions, who identify vicariously with all things American. Journalists in broadcasting and the press have played a crucial role - acknowledged by one of the generals and bankers who tried unsuccessfully to overthrow Chávez in 2002. "We couldn't have done it without them," he said. "The media were our secret weapon."
Many of these people regard themselves as liberals, and have the ear of foreign journalists who like to describe themselves as being "on the left". This is not surprising. When Chávez was first elected in 1998, Venezuela was not an archetypical Latin American tyranny, but a liberal democracy with certain freedoms, run by and for its elite, which had plundered the oil revenue and let crumbs fall to the invisible millions in the barrios. A pact between the two main parties, known as puntofijismo, resembled the convergence of new Labour and the Tories in Britain and Republicans and Democrats in the US. For them, the idea of popular sovereignty was anathema, and still is.
Take higher education. At the taxpayer-funded elite "public" Venezuelan Central University, more than 90 per cent of the students come from the upper and "middle" classes. These and other elite students have been infiltrated by CIA-linked groups and, in defending their privilege, have been lauded by foreign liberals.
With Colombia as its front line, the war on democracy in Latin America has Chávez as its main target. It is not difficult to understand why. One of Chávez's first acts was to revitalise the oil producers' organisation Opec and force the oil price to record levels. At the same time he reduced the price of oil for the poorest countries in the Caribbean region and central America, and used Venezuela's new wealth to pay off debt, notably Argentina's, and, in effect, expelled the International Monetary Fund from a continent over which it once ruled. He has cut poverty by half - while GDP has risen dramatically. Above all, he gave poor people the confidence to believe that their lives would improve.
The irony is that, unlike Fidel Castro in Cuba, he presented no real threat to the well-off, who have grown richer under his presidency. What he has demonstrated is that a social democracy can prosper and reach out to its poor with genuine welfare, and without the extremes of "neo liberalism" - a decidedly unradical notion once embraced by the British Labour Party. Those ordinary Vene zuelans who abstained during last year's constitutional referendum were protesting that a "moderate" social democracy was not enough while the bureaucrats remained corrupt and the sewers overflowed.
Across the border in Colombia, the US has made Venezuela's neighbour the Israel of Latin America. Under "Plan Colombia", more than $6bn in arms, planes, special forces, mercenaries and logistics have been showered on some of the most murderous people on earth: the inheritors of Pinochet's Chile and the other juntas that terrorised Latin America for a generation, their various gestapos trained at the School of the Americas in Georgia. "We not only taught them how to torture," a former American trainer told me, "we taught them how to kill, murder, eliminate." That remains true of Colombia, where government-inspired mass terror has been documented by Amnesty, Human Rights Watch and many others. In a study of 31,656 extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances between 1996 and 2006, the Colombian Commission of Jurists found that 46 per cent had been murdered by right-wing death squads and 14 per cent by Farc guerrillas. The para militaries were responsible for most of the three million victims of internal displacement. This misery is a product of Plan Colombia's pseudo "war on drugs", whose real purpose has been to eliminate the Farc. To that goal has now been added a war of attrition on the new popular democracies, especially Venezuela.
US special forces "advise" the Colombian military to cross the border into Venezuela and murder and kidnap its citizens and infiltrate paramilitaries, and so test the loyalty of the Venezuelan armed forces. The model is the CIA-run Contra campaign in Honduras in the 1980s that brought down the reformist government in Nicaragua. The defeat of the Farc is now seen as a prelude to an all-out attack on Venezuela if the Vene zuelan elite - reinvigorated by its narrow referendum victory last year - broadens its base in state and local government elections in November.
America's man and Colombia's Pinochet is President Álvaro Uribe. In 1991, a declassified report by the US Defence Intelligence Agency revealed the then Senator Uribe as having "worked for the Medellín Cartel" as a "close personal friend" of the cartel's drugs baron, Pablo Escobar. To date, 62 of his political allies have been investigated for close collaboration with paramilitaries. A feature of his rule has been the fate of journalists who have illuminated his shadows. Last year, four leading journalists received death threats after criticising Uribe. Since 2002, at least 31 journalists have been assassinated in Colombia. Uribe's other habit is smearing trade unions and human rights workers as "collaborators with the Farc". This marks them. Colombia's death squads, wrote Jenny Pearce, author of the acclaimed Under the Eagle: US Intervention in Central America and the Caribbean (1982), "are increasingly active, confident that the president has been so successful in rallying the country against the Farc that little attention will shift to their atrocities".
Uribe was personally championed by Tony Blair, reflecting Britain's long-standing, mostly secret role in Latin America. "Counter-insurgency assistance" to the Colombian military, up to its neck in death-squad alliances, includes training by the SAS of units such as the High Mountain Battalions, condemned repeatedly for atrocities. On 8 March, Colombian officers were invited by the Foreign Office to a "counter-insurgency seminar" at the Wilton Park conference centre in southern England. Rarely has the Foreign Office so brazenly paraded the killers it mentors.
The western media's role follows earlier models, such as the campaigns that cleared the way for the dismemberment of Yugoslavia and the credibility given to lies about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. The softening-up for an attack on Venezuela is well under way, with the repetition of similar lies and smears.
Cocaine trail
On 3 February, the Observer devoted two pages to claims that Chávez was colluding in the Colombian drugs trade. Similarly to the paper's notorious bogus scares linking Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda, the Observer's headline read, "Revealed: Chávez role in cocaine trail to Europe". Allegations were unsubstantiated; hearsay uncorroborated. No source was identified. Indeed, the reporter, clearly trying to cover himself, wrote: "No source I spoke to accused Chávez himself of having a direct role in Colombia's giant drug trafficking business."
In fact, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime has reported that Venezuela is fully participating in international anti-drugs programmes and in 2005 seized the third-highest amount of cocaine in the world. Even the Foreign Office minister Kim Howells has referred to "Venezuela's tre mendous co-operation".
The drugs smear has recently been reinforced with reports that Chávez has an "increasingly public alliance [with] the Farc" (see "Dangerous liaisons", New Statesman, 14 April). Again, there is "no evidence", says the secretary general of the Organisation of American States. At Uribe's request, and backed by the French government, Chávez played a mediating role in seeking the release of hostages held by the Farc. On 1 March, the negotiations were betrayed by Uribe who, with US logistical assistance, fired missiles at a camp in Ecuador, killing Raú Reyes, the Farc's highest-level negotiator. An "email" recovered from Reyes's laptop is said by the Colombian military to show that the Farc has received $300m from Chávez. The allegation is fake. The actual document refers only to Chávez in relation to the hostage exchange. And on 14 April, Chávez angrily criticised the Farc. "If I were a guerrilla," he said, "I wouldn't have the need to hold a woman, a man who aren't soldiers. Free the civilians!"
However, these fantasies have lethal purpose. On 10 March, the Bush administration announced that it had begun the process of placing Venezuela's popular democracy on a list of "terrorist states", along with North Korea, Syria, Cuba, Sudan and Iran, the last of which is currently awaiting attack by the world's leading terrorist state.
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90 comments
are you a police officer? you seem to be a bit of a facist
HarryAL promotes himself as a British intelligentwebdesigner, trained in Bombay, now living in Japan and in a former life taught English to the Venuzualean peasantry. If only the Japanese bit were true, he would be tucked up in bed in Tokyo just now.
Chavézismo is a contradictory phenomenon, a radical nationalist movement with solid military support - like Castroism after the revolution but without the USSR to push it towards full nationalization, or Allende's movement but with the military on board. As a petty bourgeois nationalist movement it is faced with a choice between dumping the bourgeoisie or dumping the popular masses (the proletariat and the rural and urban poor). What it can't do is build a society in its own image.
So far the most dramatic actions have been taken against the US-tainted bourgeoisie (oil first and foremost), leading to the coup and the threats from Colombia, as well as massive popular support. But the refusal to take the land and the media (above all) into national ownership with no delay has weakened popular support and strengthened both the bourgeoisie and the land-owners who are ready to provide a fifth column for US-Colombian intervention.
In the face of these threats, and given the weakness so far of the backing from sympathetic but hogtied countries with "left-leaning" governments, the Chávez regime will need to decide pretty soon which of the great classes of society to hitch its waggon to, cos if it doesn't, it will be ground to a pulp between them (and probably by the bourgeoisie and imperialism.
It's a transitional regime and the sooner it realizes this in practice, the better!
"No kidding! Well then, it's amazing then that youre completely unable to debate my points, isnt it?! "
You don't debate AL you just rant and name call. You make statements that cannot be proved or disproved and then expect everybody to agree with your conclusions. If you disagree with your conclusions you label them "unintelligent" . A sure sign of a closed mind
"You mean taking "another wild guess" at my background, dont you? You already morinically "
It is a good idea if you are going to call somebody a moron, you know how to spell the word.
"suggested that my "relatives enjoyed killing a few peasants and working them to death."
Sorry but if the cap fits
"A bit of a habit, is it knave, to take a wild guess at someone's family background in order to avoid admitting the fact that you arent knowledgeable enough to debate the subject in question? Ill give you a clue: No one in my family has ever been dumb enough to join the military."
Are you sure, I,m sure Uncle Pedro hasn't put away his jackboots and electrodes
"Who would want to do something as stupid as that?! Leave it to the uneducated boneheads, I say. Let them get their legs blown off for a few piddly little islands and to make thatcher happy while paying them a few bucks an hour. No one smart would ever do anything like that"
You are probably right on that one. I come from a family that has served their country. From WW1 to the present day. In 1939-45 my grandad fought as a desert rat against your soulmates to his undying shame.
"
"Antileft you are using hearsay not facts and the opinions of others."
No, knave, youre using hearsay and the opinions of others. It's you who gets all your information from magazines and the internet. Im using my own experiences living and working in Colombia and Venezuela. How, may I ask, could you possibly have more first hand experience of the situation than me? You havent even been to latin america, have you? I bet you havent even been to the third world. Youre just an armchair leftie living in a rich capitalist country, enjoying your country's success while moaning about it online. Study a little about the situation before you attempt to debate it, or better yet do something else, preferably something less intellectually challenging.
"Allegations were unsubstantiated; hearsay uncorroborated. No source was identified."
An interesting quote here from Pilger. Also from Pilger:
"Take higher education. At the taxpayer-funded elite "public" Venezuelan Central University, more than 90 per cent of the students come from the upper and "middle" classes. These and other elite students have been infiltrated by CIA-linked groups and, in defending their privilege, have been lauded by foreign liberals."
And the source? Whoops, forgot to mention it- a bit like the observer. (I love the term "elite students", by the way. Very objective, classy, serious journalism here.)
"He has cut poverty by half."
Source of this highly dubious fact? Whoops... Forgot to mention that one too (the source is most probably the government or someone quoting the government, because most Venezuelans wouldnt believe it).
"US special forces "advise" the Colombian military to cross the border into Venezuela and murder and kidnap its citizens and infiltrate paramilitaries, and so test the loyalty of the Venezuelan armed forces."
Source of this very serious allegation which is important enough to warrant an entire article in itself? Nevermind... A bit hypocritical, dont you think, Pilger?
This article is the reason the verb "to pilger" exists (see wikipedia). Keep pilgering, pilger.
"How, may I ask, could you possibly have more first hand experience of the situation than me? You havent even been to latin america, have you? I bet you havent even been to the third world."
Typical nonsense from Harryantileft. Yet again, I can only stand back and marvel at the sheer arrogance of the man, particularly when he has absolutely nothing to be arrogant about.
Yes, you should "stand back", because, as Ive shown countless times with you Cybertiger, youre clearly not bright enough to debate my points. Better yet- you could try yahoo chat. It's less intellectually challenging. Take Knave here with you.
hey AL, start getting your news from more credible sources that dont have an agenda. you have been sucked in by the mass propoganda machine that is the MSM. probably a pampered spoilt little brat who has never experienced hard times like many people in the 3rd world. you arent antileft, you are anti poor!
"probably a pampered spoilt little brat who has never experienced hard times like many people in the 3rd world"
Harryantileft would certainly be a the bottom of the heap in a true meritocracy.
The US, through the CIA, has destabilized nearly every duely elected government in Central & S. America, Africa & Central Asia.
In the post-WWII era, the US/CIA has killed or overthrown 37 duely elected leaders of Central & S. America. In Africa as in Latin America, the US/CIA has destabilized, armed and/or overthrown elected governments in EVERY NATION that produces OIL/GAS.
In every nation of the World with Natural Resources the US WANTS, the CIA has ORGANIZED, TRAINED, ARMED & FINANCED
the overthrow & DEATH of elected national leaders. The latest example of this PRIMATIVE
behavior is BOLIVIA where the CIA & USAID are funneling funds to the MESTIZOS to overthrow th Indiginous Leadership & PRIVATIZE the OIL & GAS.
What is COMMON about the US role in South & Central America, Africa, the Middle East & Central Asia is the use of the CIA in trying to STEAL their OIL/GAS, OVERTHROW their existing or elected government or - failing that, fomenting CHAOS ('Sectarian Violence').
It's high time Americans forced their leaders to cease being the main TERRORIST NATION in the world and devote themselves to restoring America's greatness!