The following text
is an excerpt from a talk given by Subcomandante
Insurgente Marcos to the International Civil
Commission of Human Rights Observation in La
Realidad, Chiapas on November 20, 1999. The
outline for the talk was published in Letters
5.1 and 5.2 in November of the same year, with
the titles "Chiapas: the War: 1, Between the
Satellite and the Microscope, the Other's Gaze,"
and 2, "The Machinery of Ethnocide." Any
similarity to the conditions of the current war
is purely coincidental. Published in Spanish in
La Jornada, Tuesday, October 23, 2001.
The
Restructuring of War
As we see it,
there are several constants in the so-called
world wars, in the First World War, in the
Second, and in what we call the Third and
Fourth.
One of these
constants is the conquest of territories and
their reorganization. If you consult a map of
the world you can see that there were changes at
the end of all of the world wars, not only in
the conquest of territories, but in the forms of
organization. After the First World War, there
was a new world map, after the Second World War,
there was another world map.
At the end of
what we venture to call the "Third World War,"
and which others call the Cold War, a conquest
of territories and a reorganization took place.
It can, broadly speaking, be situated in the
late 80's, with the collapse of the socialist
camp of the Soviet Union, and, by the early
90's, what we call the Fourth World War can be
discerned.
Another constant
is the destruction of the enemy. Such was the
case with nazism in the second World War, and,
in the Third, with all that had been known as
the USSR and the socialist camp as an option to
the capitalist world.
The third
constant is the administration of conquest. At
the moment at which the conquest of territories
is achieved, it is necessary to administer them,
so that the winnings can be disbursed to the
force which won. We use the term 'conquest"
quite a bit, because we are experts in this.
Those States, which previously called themselves
national, have always tried to conquer the
Indian peoples. Despite those constants, there
are a series of variables which change from one
world war to another: strategy, the actors, or
the parties, the armaments used and, lastly, the
tactics. Although the latter change, the former
are present and can be applied in order to
understand one war and another.
The Third World
War, or the Cold War, lasted from 1946 (or, if
you wish, from the bombing of Hiroshima in 1945)
until 1985-1990. It was a large world war made
up of many local wars. As in all the others, at
the end there was a conquest of territories
which destroyed an enemy. Second act, it moved
to the administration of the conquest and the
reorganization of territories. The actors in
this world war were: one, the two superpowers,
the United States and the Soviet Union and their
respective satellites; two, the majority of the
European countries; three, Latin America,
Africa, parts of Asia and Oceana. The peripheral
countries revolved around the US or the USSR, as
it suited them. After the superpowers and the
peripherals were the spectators and victims, or,
that is, the rest of the world. The two
superpowers did not always fight face to face.
They often did so through other countries. While
the large industrialized nations joined with one
of the two blocs, the rest of the countries and
of the population appeared as spectators or as
victims. What characterized this war was: one,
the arms orientation and, two, local wars. In
the nuclear war, the two superpowers competed in
order to see how many times they could destroy
the world. The method of convincing the enemy
was to present it with a very large force. At
the same time, local wars were taking place
everywhere in which the superpowers were
involved.
The result, as
we all know, was the defeat and destruction of
the USSR, and the victory of the US, around
which the great majority of countries have now
come together. This is when what we call the
"Fourth World War" broke out. And here a problem
arose. The product of the previous war should
have been a unipolar world - one single nation
which dominated a world where there were no
rivals - but, in order to make itself effective,
this unipolar world would have to reach what is
known as "globalization." The world must be
conceived as a large conquered territory with an
enemy destroyed. It was necessary to administer
this new world, and, therefore, to globalize it.
They turned, then, to information technology,
which, in the development of humanity, is as
important as the invention of the steam engine.
Computers allow one to be anywhere
simultaneously. There are no longer any borders
or constraints of time or geography. It is
thanks to computers that the process of
globalization began. Separations, differences,
Nation States, all eroded, and the world became
what is called, realistically, the global
village.
The concept on
which globalization is based is what we call
"neoliberalism," a new religion which is going
to permit this process to be carried out. With
this Fourth World War, once again, territories
are being conquered, enemies are being destroyed
and the conquest of these territories is being
administered.
The problem is,
what territories are being conquered and
reorganized, and who is the enemy? Given that
the previous enemy has disappeared, we are
saying that humanity is now the enemy. The
Fourth World War is destroying humanity as
globalization is universalizing the market, and
everything human which opposes the logic of the
market is an enemy and must be destroyed. In
this sense, we are all the enemy to be
vanquished: indigenous, non-indigenous, human
rights observers, teachers, intellectuals,
artists. Anyone who believes themselves to be
free and is not.
This Fourth
World War uses what we call "destruction."
Territories are destroyed and depopulated. At
the point at which war is waged, land must be
destroyed, turned into desert. Not out of a zeal
for destruction, but in order to rebuild and
reorder it. What is the primary problem
confronted by this unipolar world in globalizing
itself? Nation States, resistances, cultures,
each nation's means of relating, that which
makes them different. How is it possible for the
village to be global and for everyone to be
equal if there are so many differences? When we
say that it is necessary to destroy Nation
States and to turn them into deserts, it does
not mean doing away with the people, but with
the peoples' ways of being. After destroying,
one must rebuild. Rebuild the territories and
give them another place. The place which the
laws of the market determine. This is what is
driving globalization.
The first
obstacle is the Nation States: they must be
attacked and destroyed. Everything which makes a
State "national" must be destroyed: language,
culture, economy, its political life and its
social fabric. If national languages are no
longer of use, they must be destroyed, and a new
language must be promoted. Contrary to what one
might think, it is not English, but computers.
All languages must be made the same, translated
into computer language, even English. All
cultural aspects that make a French person
French, an Italian Italian, a Dane Danish, a
Mexican Mexican, must be destroyed, because they
are barriers which prevent them from entering
the globalized market. It is no longer a
question of making one market for the French,
and another for the English or the Italians.
There must be one single market, in which the
same person can consume the same product in any
part of the world, and where the same person
acts like a citizen of the world, and no longer
as a citizen of a Nation State.
That means that
cultural history, the history of tradition,
clashes with this process and is the enemy of
the Fourth World War. This is especially serious
in Europe where there are nations with great
traditions. The cultural framework of the
French, the Italians, the English, the Germans,
the Spanish, etcetera - everything which cannot
be translated into computer and market terms -
are an impediment to this globalization. Goods
are now going to circulate through information
channels, and everything else must be destroyed
or set aside. Nation States have their own
economic structures and what is called "national
bourgeoisie" - capitalists with national
headquarters and with national profits. This can
no longer exist: if the economy is decided at a
global level, the economic policies of Nation
States which try to protect capital are an enemy
which must be defeated. The Free Trade Treaty,
and the one which led to the European Union, the
Euro, are symptoms that the economy is being
globalized, although in the beginning it was
about regional globalization, like in the case
of Europe. Nation States construct their
political relationships, but now political
relationships are of no use. I am not
characterizing them as good or bad. The problem
is that these political relationships are an
impediment to the realization of the laws of the
market. The national political class is old, it
is no longer useful, it has to be changed. They
try to remember, they try to remember, even if
it is the name of one single statesman in
Europe. They simply cannot. The most important
figures in the Europe of the Euro are people
like the president of the Bundesbank, a banker.
What he says is going to determine the policies
of the different presidents or prime ministers
inflicted on the countries of Europe.
If the social
fabric is broken, the old relationships of
solidarity which make coexistence possible in a
Nation State also break down. That is why
campaigns against homosexuals and lesbians,
against immigrants, or the campaigns of
xenophobia, are encouraged. Everything which
previously maintained a certain equilibrium has
to be broken at the point at which this world
war attacks a Nation State and transforms it
into something else.
It is about
homogenizing, of making everyone equal, and of
hegemonizing a lifestyle. It is global life. Its
greatest diversion should be the computer, its
work should be the computer, its value as a
human being should be the number of credit
cards, one's purchasing capacity, one's
productive capacity. The case of the teachers is
quite clear. The one who has the most knowledge
or who is the wisest is no longer valuable. Now
the one who produces the most research is
valuable, and that is how his salary, his
grants, his place in the university, are
decided.
This has a lot
to do with the United States model. It also so
happens, however, that this Fourth World War
produces an opposite effect, which we call
"fragmentation." The world is, paradoxically,
not becoming one, it is breaking up into many
pieces. Although it is assumed that the citizen
is being made equal, differences as differences
are emerging: homosexuals and lesbians, young
people, immigrants. Nation States are
functioning as a large State, the anonymous
State-land-society which divides us into many
pieces.
If you look at a
world map of this period - the end of the Third
World War - and analyze the last eight years, a
restructuring took place, most especially - but
not only - in Europe. Where there was once one
nation, now there are many nations. The world
map has been fragmented. This is the paradoxical
effect that is taking place because of this
Fourth World War. Instead of being globalized,
the world is fragmenting, and, instead of this
mechanism hegemonizing and homogenizing, more
and more differences are appearing.
Globalization and neoliberalism are making the
world an archipelago. And it must be given a
market logic. These fragments must be organized
into a common denominator. It is what we call
"financial bomb."
At the same time
that differences appear, the differences are
multiplied. Each young person has his group, his
way of thinking, such as punks and skinheads.
All of which are in every country. Now the
different are not only different, but their
differences are multiplied and they seek their
own identity. The Fourth World War is obviously
not offering them a mirror that allows them to
see themselves with a common denominator. It is
offering them a broken mirror. As long as it has
control of the archipelago - of human beings -
the powers are not going to be very upset.
The world is
breaking into many pieces, large and small.
There are no longer continents in the sense that
I would be a European, African or American. What
the globalization of neoliberalism is offering
is a network built by financial capital, or, if
you would prefer, by financial powers. If there
is a crisis in this node, the rest of the
network will cushion the effects. If there is
prosperity in a country, it does not produce the
effect of prosperity in other countries. It is,
thus, a network which does not function. What
they told us about the size of the world was a
lie, a speech repeated by the leaders of Latin
America, whether Menem, Fujimori, Zedillo, or
others leaders of compromised moral character.
In fact what is happening is that the network
has made Nation States much more vulnerable. It
is useless for a country to struggle to
construct an equilibrium and its own destiny as
a nation. Everything depends on what happens in
a bank in Japan, or what the mafia in Russia or
a speculator in Sydney does. In one way or
another, Nation States are not saved, they are
permanently condemned. When a Nation State
agrees to join this network - because there is
no other choice, because they force it, or out
of conviction - it is signing its death
certificate.
In short, what
this great market wants is to turn all of these
islands into commercial centers, not nations.
One can go from one country to another and find
the same products. There is no longer any
difference. In Paris or in San Cristóbal de las
Casas you can consume the same thing. If you are
in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, you can
simultaneously be in Paris getting the news. It
is the end of Nation States. And not just that:
it is the end of the human beings who make them
up. What matters is the law of the market, and
that is what establishes how much you produce,
how much you are worth, how much you buy, how
much you are worth. Dignity, resistance,
solidarity all disturb. Everything which
prevents a human being from turning into a
producing and purchasing machine is an enemy,
and it must be destroyed. That is why we are
saying that the human species is the enemy for
the Fourth World War. It is not destroying it
physically, but it is destroying its humanness.
Paradoxically,
by destroying Nation States, dignity, resistance
and solidarity are built anew. There are no ties
stronger, more solid, than those which exist
between different groups: between homosexuals,
between lesbians, between young people, between
migrants. This war, then, goes on to also attack
those who are different. That is what those
campaigns are owing to, so strong in Europe and
in the United States, against the different,
because they are dark, speak another language or
have another culture. The means of cultivating
xenophobia in what remains of the Nation States
is to make threats: "These Turkish migrants want
to take away your job." "These Mexican
immigrants came to rape, they came to steal,
they came to sow bad habits." Nation States - or
the few of them that remain - delegate to those
new citizens of the world - computers - the role
of getting rid of those immigrants. And that is
when groups like the Ku Klux Klan proliferate,
or persons of such probity as Berlusconi reach
power. They all build their campaigns based on
xenophobia. Hate for the different, persecution
against anything that is different, is
worldwide. But the resistance of anything that
is different is also worldwide. Faced with that
aggression, these differences are multiplied,
they are solidified. This is how it is, I am not
going to characterize it as good or bad, that is
how it is happening.
The
War Is Not Only Military
In strictly
military terms, the Third World War had its
logic. It was, in the first place, a
conventional war, conceptualized in such a way
that, if I put in soldiers, and you put in
soldiers, we confront each other, and whoever is
left alive wins. This took place in a specific
territory which, in the case of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO, forces, and
the Warsaw Pact, was Europe. Starting from a
conventional war, between armies, a military and
weapons oriented path was established.
We are going to
look at the details a bit more. This [he shows a
rifle], for example, is a semi-automatic weapon,
and it's called an AR-15 automatic rifle. They
manufactured it for the Vietnam conflict, and it
can be taken apart very easily [he disarms it],
there it is. When they made it, the Americans
were thinking about a conventional war scenario,
that is, large military contingents which
confronted each other. "We'll collect a lot of
soldiers, we'll advance, and in the end someone
will have to be left." At the same time, the
Warsaw Pact was developing the Kalashnikov
automatic rifle, which is commonly called the
AK-47, a weapon with a lot of firing volume at
short range, up to 400 meters. The Soviet
concept involved large waves of troops: a
mountain of soldiers would advance, firing, and,
if they died, a second and a third wave would
arrive. The one who had the most soldiers would
win.
The Americans
then thought: "The old Garand rifle from the
Second World War isn't of any use anymore. Now
we need a weapon that has a lot of short-range
firing power." They took out the AR-15 and
tested it in Vietnam. The problem was that it
broke down, it didn't work. When they attacked
the Viet Cong, the mechanism remained open, and
when they fired it went "click." And it wasn't a
camera, it was a weapon. They tried to solve the
problem with an M16-A1 model. Here the trick is
in the bullets, which are called two different
things. One, the civilian, 2.223 of an inch -
can be bought in any store in the United States.
The other - 5.56 millimeter - is for the
exclusive use of NATO. This is a very fast
bullet and it has a trick to it. In war, the
objective is to see that the enemy has losses,
not deaths, and an army considers itself to have
casualties when a soldier can no longer fight.
The Geneva Convention - an agreement to humanize
war - forbids expanding bullets, because at the
point at which it enters it destroys more, and
it's a lot more lethal than a hard tipped
bullet.
"Given that the
idea is to increase the number of wounded and
decrease the number of dead," - they said - "we
are prohibiting expansive bullets." A shot from
a hard bullet leaves you useless, you're a
casualty now, it doesn't kill you unless it
reaches a vital organ. In order to fulfill the
Geneva Convention and to dupe them, the
Americans created the soft tip bullet which,
when it enters the human body, bends and turns.
The entrance hole is one size, and the exit hole
is much bigger. This bullet is worse than the
expanding one, and it doesn't violate
conventions. Nonetheless, if it gets you in the
arm...it will blow you up. A 162 bullet goes
through you and leaves you wounded, but this one
destroys you. Coincidentally, the Mexican
government has just bought 16,000 of these
bullets.
That is, weapons
are created for precise scenarios. We are going
to assume they don't want to use the nuclear
bomb. What are they going to use? Many soldiers
against many soldiers. And so the NATO and
Warsaw Pact conventional war doctrines were
created.
The second
option was a localized nuclear war, a war with
nuclear weapons, but only in some places and not
in others. There was an agreement between the
two superpowers to not attack each other in
their own lands, and to fight only on neutral
ground. It remains to be said that that this
ground was Europe. That's where the bombs were
going to fall and one would see who would be
left alive in Western Europe and what was then
called Eastern Europe.
The last option
of the Third World War was total nuclear war,
which was a huge business, the business of the
century. The logic of nuclear war is that there
would be no winner. It doesn't matter who fired
first, no matter how quickly he fired, the other
would be able to fire also. The destruction was
mutual, and, from the beginning, this option was
simply renounced. The nature of it came to be
what is called in military diplomatic terms,
"deterrence."
So that the
Soviets wouldn't use nuclear weapons, the
Americans developed many nuclear weapons, and,
so that they wouldn't use nuclear weapons, the
Soviets developed many nuclear weapons, and so
on. They called it IBM (Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile), and they were the rockets
that went from Russia to the United States and
from the United States to Russia. They cost a
fortune, and now they're not useful for
anything. There were also other nuclear weapons
for local use which were the ones they were
going to use in Europe in the case of a
localized nuclear war.
When this phase
began, in 1945, there was a war to be fought
because Europe was divided in two. The military
strategy - we are speaking of the purely
military aspects - was the following: a few
forward positions in front of the enemy line, a
line of permanent logistics, and the mother
country, called the United States or the Soviet
Union. The logistical line supplied the forward
positions. Large airplanes that were in the air
24 hours a day, the B-52 Fortress, carried the
nuclear bombs, and they never had to land. And
there were the pacts. The NATO Pact, the Warsaw
Pact and the SEATO (South East Asia Treaty
Organization) Pact, which is like the NATO of
the Asian countries. The model was put into play
in local wars. Everything had a logic, and it
was logical to fight in Vietnam, which was an
agreed scenario. The local armies and insurgents
were in the role of the forward positions. In
the role of permanent logistics were the lines
of clandestine or legal arms sales, and, in the
role of the mother countries, the two
superpowers. And there was also an agreement
about the places where they had to remain as
spectators. The clearest examples of these local
wars are the dictatorships of Latin America, the
conflicts in Asia, especially Vietnam, and the
wars in Africa. These apparently had absolutely
no logic whatsoever, since the majority of the
time what was going on wasn't understood. But
what was happening was part of this outline of
conventional war.
It was during
this period - and that is important - that the
concept of "total war" was being developed.
Elements which are no longer military enter into
military doctrine. For example, in Vietnam, from
the Tet offensive (1968) until the fall of
Saigon (1975), the media again became a very
important battle front. And so, the idea began
to develop in the military that military power
was not enough. It was necessary to incorporate
others, such as the media. And also that the
enemy could be attacked with economic measures,
with political measures and with diplomacy,
which is the game of the United Nations and of
international organizations. Some countries
create sabotage in order to secure the
condemnation or censuring of others, which is
called "diplomatic war."
All these wars
followed the domino theory. It sounds
ridiculous, but they were like two rivals
playing dominoes with the rest of the
population. One of the opponents would put down
a piece, and the other would try to put his down
in order to cut off the follow-up. It is the
theory of that illustrious individual by the
name of Kissinger, the Secretary of State for
the United States government during the Vietnam
era, who said: "We cannot abandon Vietnam
because it would mean giving up the game of
dominoes in Southeast Asia to the others." And
that is why they did what they did in Vietnam.
It was also
about trying to regain the logic of the Second
World War. For most of the population, it [the
Second World War] had been heroic. There was the
image of the Marines liberating France from the
dictatorship, liberating Italy from the Duce,
liberating Germany from the military, the red
army entering from all sides. The Second World
War was supposedly waged in order to eliminate a
danger for all humanity, that of national
socialism. Thus the local wars attempted, one
way or another, to regain the ideology of "we
are acting in the defense of the free world."
But now Moscow was in the role of national
socialism. And Moscow, for its part, did the
same thing: both superpowers tried to use the
argument of "democracy" and the "free world", as
each of them conceived it.
Afterwards came
the Fourth World War, which destroyed everything
from before, because the world is no longer the
same, and the same strategy cannot be applied.
The concept of "total war" was developed
further: it is not only a war on all fronts, it
is a war which can be anywhere, a total war in
which the entire world is at stake. "Total war"
means: at any moment, in any place, under any
circumstances. The idea of fighting for one
place in particular no longer exists. Now the
fight can take place at any moment. There is no
longer the concept of escalation of the conflict
with threats, the taking of positions and
attempts to reposition oneself. At any moment
and in any circumstances, a conflict can arise.
It can be domestic problem, it can be a dictator
and everything which the last wars of the last
five years have been, from Kosovo to the Persian
Gulf War. The entire military routine of the
Cold War has, thus, been destroyed.
It is not
possible to make war, in the Fourth World War,
under the criteria of the Third, because now I
have to fight any place, I don't know where I'm
going to have to fight, nor do I know when, I
have to act rapidly, I don't even know what
circumstances I'm going to have to prosecute
this war. In order to resolve the problem, the
military first developed the "rapid deployment"
war. An example would be the Persian Gulf War, a
war which involved a great accumulation of
military force in a short period of time, a
large military action in a short period of time,
the conquering of territories and withdrawal.
The invasion of Panama would be another example
of rapid deployment. There is, in fact, a NATO
contingent which is called "rapid intervention
force." Rapid deployment is a large mass of
military force which throws itself against the
enemy and which makes no distinction between a
children's hospital and a chemical weapons
factory. That is what happened in Iraq: the
smart bombs were quite stupid, they made no
distinctions. And that's where they remained,
because they realized that this is quite
expensive, and it contributes very little. In
Iraq they made an entire deployment, but there
was no conquest of territory. There were the
problems of the local protests, there were the
international human rights observers.
They had to
withdraw. Vietnam had already taught them that,
in these instances, it is not prudent to insist:
"No, we can't do this now," they said. They then
moved on to the strategy of "projection of
force." "Better to have forward positions in
North American military bases all over the
world, accumulating a great continental force
which, in a matter of hours or days, will have
the capacity to put in military units any place
in the world." And they can, in fact, put in a
division of four or five thousand men in the
most distant point in the planet in four days,
and more, constantly more.
But the
projection of force has the problem of being
based on local soldiers, or, rather, on US
soldiers. They believe that, if the conflict is
not resolved rapidly, the body bags, the dead,
will begin arriving, like in Vietnam, and this
could provoke many domestic protests in North
America, or in whichever country. In order to
avoid those problems, they abandoned the
projection of force, making - let us be clear -
mercantile calculations. They did not make
calculations about the destruction of the human
forces, or the natural ones, but of publicity
and image. And so the war of projection was
abandoned, and they went on to a model of war
with local soldiers, more international help,
more of a supranational body. Now it was not
about sending soldiers, but of fighting by means
of the soldiers who were there, helping them
according to the basis of the conflict, and not
using the model of a nation which declares war,
but of a supranational body like the UN or NATO.
The ones doing the dirty work are the local
soldiers, and the ones in the newspapers are the
Americans and the international support. This is
the model. Protesting no longer works: it is not
a war of the United States government. It's a
war by NATO, and, besides, NATO is merely doing
the favor of helping the UN.
Throughout the
entire world, the restructuring of armies is so
that they can confront a local conflict with
international support under supranational cover,
and under the disguise of humanitarian war. It
has to do with saving the population from a
genocide by killing it. And that is what
happened in Kosovo. Milosevich waged a war
against humanity: "If we confront Milosevich, we
are defending humanity." That is the argument
the NATO generals used and which brought so many
problems to the European left: opposing NATO
bombings implied supporting Milosevich, better,
then, to support the NATO bombings. And
Milosevich, you know, was armed by the United
States. The military conception - which is what
is now at play - is that the entirety of the
world - whether Sri Lanka or any other country,
the most distant one can think of - is now the
backyard, because the globalized world produces
simultaneity. And that is the problem: in this
globalized world, anything that happens any
place affects the new international order. The
world is no longer the world, it's a village,
and everything is very close. Therefore the
great policemen of the world - especially the
United States - have the right to intervene
anywhere, at any time, under any circumstances.
They can consider anything as a threat to their
domestic security. They can easily decide that
the indigenous uprising in Chiapas threatens the
domestic security of North America, or the
Tamils in Sri Lanka, or whatever you want. Any
movement - and not necessarily armed - anyplace
can be considered a threat to domestic security.
What is that has
happened? The old strategies and old concepts of
making war have collapsed. Let us see.
"Theatre of
operations" is the military term for indicating
the place where the war is going to occur. In
the Third World War, Europe was the theatre of
operations. Now it is not known where it is
going to break out, it could be any place, it is
no longer certain that it is going to be in
Europe. Military doctrine moves from what is
called "system" to what they call "versatility."
"I have to be ready to do anything at any
moment. A plan is no longer sufficient: now I
need many plans, not just to construct a
response to particular incidents, but to
construct many military responses to specific
incidents." This is where information technology
intervenes. This change leads to moving from the
systematic, the inflexible, the rigid, to the
versatile, to that which can change from one
moment to the next. And that is going to define
the entire new military doctrine of armies, of
military corps and of soldiers. This will be one
element in the Fourth World War. The other will
be the movement from "containment strategy" to
that of "drawing out" or "extension": now it is
not just about conquering territory, containing
the enemy, now it is about prolonging the
conflict to what they call "non-war acts." In
the case of Chiapas, this has to do with taking
out and putting in governments and municipal
presidents, with human rights, with the media,
etcetera.
Included in the
new military conception is an intensification of
the conquest of territory. This means that it is
necessary to not only be concerned about the
EZLN and its military force, but also about the
church, the NGOs, international observers, the
press, civilians, etcetera. There are no longer
civilians and neutrals. The entire world is part
of the conflict.
This implies
that national armies are of no use, because they
no longer have to defend Nation States. If there
are no Nation States, what are they going to
defend? Under the new doctrine, national armies
go on to play the role of local police. The case
of Mexico is quite clear: the Mexican Army is
doing more and more police work, like the fight
against drug trafficking, or this new body
against organized crime which is called the
Federal Preventative Police and which is made up
of military personnel. It is about national
armies turning into local police in the manner
of a US comic book: a Super Cop, a Super Police.
When the army in the former Yugoslavia was
reorganized, it had to turn into a local police
force, and NATO is going to be its Super Cop,
its senior partner in political terms. The star
is the supranational body, in this case NATO or
the US army, and the extras are the local
armies.
But national
armies were built on the basis of a doctrine of
"national security." If there are enemies or
dangers to the security of a nation, their work
is to maintain security, sometimes against an
external enemy, sometimes against destabilizing
domestic enemies. This is the doctrine of the
Third World War or Cold War. Under these
assumptions, national armies develop a national
conscious which now makes it difficult to turn
them into police friends of the Super Police.
Thus the doctrine of national security must now
be transformed into "national stability." The
point is no longer defending the nation. Since
the main enemy of national stability is drug
trafficking, and drug trafficking is
international, national armies which operate
under the banner of national stability accept
international aid or international interference
from other countries.
The problem of
again reordering national armies exists at the
world level. Now we go down to America, and from
there to Latin America. The process is a bit
similar to that which took place in Europe and
which was seen in the Kosovo war with NATO. In
the case of Latin America, there is the
Organization of American States, the OAS, with
the Hemispheric Defense System. According to the
former president of Argentina, Menem, all the
countries of Latin America are threatened and we
need to unite, destroying the national
consciences of the armies, and to make a great
army under the doctrine of a hemispheric defense
system, using the argument of drug trafficking.
Given that what is at stake is versatility - or
the capacity to make war at any moment, in any
place and under any circumstances - rehearsals
begin. The few bastions of national defense
which still exist must be destroyed by this
hemispheric system. If it was Kosovo in Europe,
in Latin America it is Colombia and Chiapas. How
is this system of hemispheric defense
constructed? In two ways. In Colombia, where the
threat of drug trafficking is present, the
government is asking for everyone's help: "We
have to intervene because drug trafficking not
only affects Colombia, but the entire
continent." In the case of Chiapas, the concept
of total war is applied. Everyone is a part,
there are no neutrals, you are either an ally or
you are an enemy.
The
New Conquest
In the
fragmentation process - turning the entire world
into an archipelago - financial power wants to
build a new shopping center which will have
tourism and natural resources in Chiapas, Belize
and Guatemala.
Apart from being
full of oil and uranium, the problem is that it
is full of indigenous. And the indigenous, in
addition to not speaking Spanish, do not want
credit cards, they do not produce, they are
involved in planting maize, beans, chile,
coffee, and they think about dancing to a
marimba rather than using a computer. They are
neither consumers nor producers. They are
superfluous. And everything that is superfluous
is expendable. But they do not want to go, and
they do not want to stop being indigenous. There
is more: their struggle is not to take over
power. There struggle is to be recognized as
Indian peoples, that their right to exist is
recognized, without having to turn into other
people.
But the problem
is that here, in the land that is at war, in
zapatista territory, are the main indigenous
cultures, there are the languages and the
largest oil deposits. There are the seven Indian
peoples who participate in the EZLN, Tzeltal,
Tzotzil, Tojolabal, Chol, Zoque, Mam and
mestizos. This is the map of Chiapas:
communities with an indigenous population and
with oil, uranium and precious wood. For
neoliberalism everything is merchandise, it is
sold, it is exploited. And these indigenous come
to say no, that the land is mother, it is the
depository of culture, that history lives here,
and the dead live here. Absolutely absurd things
that cannot be entered on any computer and which
are not listed on a stock exchange. And there is
no way to convince them to be good, to learn to
think right, they simply do not want to. They
even rose up in arms. This is why - we say -
that the Mexican government does not want to
make peace: it is because they want to do away
with this enemy and turn this land to desert,
afterwards reorganizing it and setting it to
operate as a huge shopping center, a Mall in the
Mexican Southeast. The EZLN supports the Indian
peoples, and is, in this way, an enemy, but not
the main one. It is not enough to sort things
out with the EZLN, even worse if sorting things
out with the EZLN means renouncing this land,
because that will mean peace in Chiapas, it will
mean renouncing the conquest of a land rich in
oil, in precious woods and uranium. This is why
they have not done so and are not going to do
so.