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Latin America in Revolt:
Rice on Four-Country Tour As Leftist Victories Sweep Region
In the last five years, uprisings have overthrown governments in
Ecuador, Peru, Argentina and Bolivia. In Brazil, Chile and
Venezuela governments have been elected on anti-neo-liberal
platforms. In Uruguay, leftist president Tabare Vazquez was
recently elected. And much to the dismay of the Bush
administration, one of his first moves after being sworn into
office was to restore full diplomatic relations with Cuba.
Left-wing forces are considered to have a serious chance in
upcoming presidential elections in Mexico, Nicaragua and Peru.
Broadcast - 04/29/05
We begin by taking a look at a country that Condeleezza Rice is
not visiting - and that is Venezuela. Relations have been bitter
between the two countries since the U.S tacitly supported the 2002
coup that briefly ousted Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez. And in
recent weeks there has been rising tensions. Last Sunday, Chavez
ended a 35-year military cooperation agreement with the U.S and
ordered out four American military instructors that he accused of
fomenting unrest inside the country. And the New York Times has
reported that the Bush administration is considering funneling
more money to foundations, business and political groups opposed
to Chavez's government.
- Kimberly Stanton, Deputy Director of the Washington
Office on Latin America
- Greg Wilpert, journalist and sociologist living in
Venezuela. He joins us the line from Caracas.
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, on Tuesday, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice began a five-day tour of Latin America. By the
end of her trip, she will have visited Brazil, Colombia, Chile and
El Salvador. Rice has billed her tour as an effort to, (quote),
“bolster democracy and alleviate poverty.” This is the
Secretary speaking Wednesday in Brazil.
CONDOLEEZZA RICE: Our world is moving toward greater
freedom and democracy, and President Bush has outlined the
charge of our times. Those of us who are on the right side of
freedom's divide have an obligation to those who are still on
the wrong side of that divide.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Condoleezza Rice speaking from
Brazil. The Bush administration's worried about several countries
in Latin America moving increasingly towards the left. In recent
weeks, popular protests in Ecuador forced out that country's
president, Lucio Gutierrez. Gutierrez took office in January 2003,
as a populist anti-corruption reformer, but soon angered many
Ecuadorians by adopting economic austerity measures, drawn up by
the International Monetary Fund. Gutierrez is the latest on the
long list of neoliberal Latin American politicians thrown out of
office in elections or by popular revolt.
JUAN GONZALEZ: During the last five years, uprisings
have overthrown governments in Ecuador, Peru, Argentina and
Bolivia. In Brazil, Chile and Venezuela, governments have been
elected on anti-neoliberal platforms. In Uruguay, leftist
president Tabaré Vázquez was recently elected, and much to the
dismay of the Bush administration, one of his first moves after
being sworn into office was to restore full diplomatic relations
with Cuba. Left wing forces are considered to have a serious
chance in upcoming presidential elections in Mexico, Nicaragua and
Peru. And yesterday in Colombia, Rice defended the United States
government’s more than $3 billion in military assistance to aid
that country's efforts to counter cocaine production and to stop
the left wing insurgency.
AMY GOODMAN: We're going to turn now to Kimberly
Stanton, Deputy Director of the Washington Office on Latin
America. First, though, we're going to take a look at a country
Condoleezza Rice is not visiting but seems to be the focus of much
of this trip, and that's Venezuela. Relations have been bitter
between the U.S. and Venezuela since the U.S. tacitly supported
the 2002 coup that briefly ousted Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez. In recent weeks, there have been rising tensions. Last
Sunday, Chavez ended a 35-year military cooperation agreement with
the U.S. and ordered out four American military instructors he
accused of fomenting unrest inside the country. And the New
York Times has reported the Bush administration is considering
funneling more money to foundations, business, and political
groups opposed to Chavez's government. We welcome you to Democracy
now!, Kimberly Stanton.
KIMBERLY STANTON: Thank you. It’s a pleasure to be
with you.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about Venezuela and how it
fits into this trip, not on the itinerary of the Secretary of
State?
KIMBERLY STANTON: No, it's not on the itinerary but it
seems to have been a topic of conversation pretty much everywhere,
both in questions she has received, but clearly with governments
and, I think, in particular with Brazil. I expect with Chile, as
well. She's looking for allies in a somewhat quiet, not that quiet
effort, I think, to try to isolate Chavez from other Latin
American countries, to try to set him apart as not being
consistent with the kind of democracy or the kind of economic
policy the United States would like to see. She's not getting much
positive response. President Lula has been very clear that Brazil
sees Chavez and sees Venezuela as a sovereign country. Even on the
issue -- the new controversial issue of arms purchases by
Venezuela, Brazil is saying that countries have certainly a right
to defend themselves, a right to maintain the armament for their
armed forces. Even Colombia, which has had some tense moments with
Venezuela lately, Foreign Minister Carolina Barco explicitly said
that they recognize the right of Venezuela to defend themselves.
So, this is a situation where Chavez's rhetoric has been
unfortunate and more inflammatory than constructive, but the U.S.
government's response has been also of a kind. And rather than
working multilaterally to provide the sort of regional and
sub-regional security assurances needed to calm down the
situation, we seem to be -- she seems to be looking for support
for further isolation. Not going to -- it's not a policy that's
going to work.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, in terms of the Venezuela
situation, hasn't actually the Venezuelan government been able to
develop closer ties with many Latin American countries by
utilizing its oil, signing preferential treaties or arrangements
with several other countries in terms of supplying them oil and
thus cementing closer ties within the region vis-à-vis the United
States?
KIMBERLY STANTON: Absolutely. Venezuela has strong ties.
It sells -- it has a policy of being willing to sell oil below
market prices to its sister countries in the region, and from an
– And there's tremendous commerce between Venezuela and
Colombia, for example, and with Brazil. So from an interest-based
perspective, Latin American countries also don't have any reason
or any desire to be drawn in between a debate or a fight between
the U.S. and Venezuela.
AMY GOODMAN: We are joined right now by Greg Wilpert in
Caracas, Venezuela. We'd like to get the latest there, Greg -- we
welcome you to Democracy now! -- about, well, the trip that
Condoleezza Rice is not taking to Venezuela, but the impact in
Caracas right now.
GREG WILPERT: Well, hi. The impact has been generally
that every time that Condoleezza Rice criticizes Chavez, his
popularity goes up within Venezuela, and probably also to some
extent within the rest of Latin America. I mean, it's pretty much
a transparent move, what Condoleezza Rice is trying to do is to
isolate Venezuela with respect to the rest of Latin America. But
just as a recent New York Times article pointed out, it's
almost the opposite that is happening, that in that process, the
U.S. is isolating itself with respect to the rest of Latin
America. I mean, Chavez has been signing all kinds of trade
agreements and cooperation agreements with every country in Latin
America, and he has been really pushing hard for the integration
of Latin America. So, the isolation of Venezuela is very, very far
from happening.
JUAN GONZALEZ: I'd like to ask Kimberly Stanton, the
situation in Mexico, this whole development of virtually all of
the major Latin American countries electing populist governments,
there's basically two major exceptions at this point, Colombia and
Mexico, but yet the situation in Mexico seems to be reaching a
crisis point in terms -- and a possibility that if you do have a
progressive or leftist president elected in Mexico, the entire
region will essentially begin to spiral out of U.S. control?
KIMBERLY STANTON: Well, there's a couple of points
there. I actually -- I think it is likely that Mexico may well end
up electing the current Mayor of Mexico City in its next round of
elections, and in some ways -- well, many ways, the current
government has actually made that more likely by a not very
sophisticated effort to prevent him from running, through a series
of judicial challenges that have now caused a crisis in the
country. But I think the larger question is why should the U.S.
fear the election of left-leaning leaders. This is a reaction of
people making use of democratic institutions and looking for a
different response, a different policy response, a different
policy orientation after 20 years of experience with what one
would normally get called more right of center especially
neoliberal economic policies and without seeing many results.
Democracy is a system in which political parties alternate in
power. Leaders alternate in power. Orientations, political
orientations alternate. It's part of the normal give and take. It
has happened in the United States. It’s happened in Europe. It's
happened any place where democracy works. So I think the shift to
the left in Latin America is a reflection of the failure on the
economic and social policy side to respond to deeply felt needs
that unfortunately current economic policies are not helping to
redress. But I don't see any reason why, given that leaders are
being elevated through elections and through popular participatory
processes, why the United States should treat this as a threat or
a concern. It seems to me it's a reflection, a very healthy
reflection, of the consolidation of democracy, to have popular
unrest channeled through democratic institutions and not through
insurgencies.
AMY GOODMAN: Greg Wilpert in Caracas, journalist and
sociologist, what about the accusations that Venezuela is arming
the F.A.R.C. In Colombia?
GREG WILPERT: Well, there's been absolutely no evidence
that any arms have gone from Venezuela, at least from the
government, to the F.A.R.C. This is an accusation that has been
around since the beginning, since Chavez has been first elected,
but nobody has ever presented any concrete proof of it. Actually,
that specific accusation hasn't been made as often as, for lack of
proof, as the accusation that Chavez is providing them other forms
of support, whether it's money or a safe haven within Venezuela.
But even those accusations are pretty hollow. I mean, certainly,
there are a lot of border crossings where F.A.R.C., but also A.U.C.,
the paramilitaries and also even Colombian official military come
across the Venezuelan border. But that's exactly the point that
Venezuela is trying to prevent actually with the arms purchases
that it is making. It's buying patrol boats, it’s buying patrol
airplanes. And It's buying small weapons. It hasn't made any major
purchases in almost 20 years. So all of their weapons are
basically antiquated, and actually 20 years ago, they made much
larger purchases, long before Chavez ever got elected, and the
U.S. government didn't say a thing, mainly because it bought
almost all of its weapons from the U.S. This time it's going to
Russia and to China and to Brazil to buy these other weapons and
so, of course, the U.S. government is up in arms, literally, to --
because it's not getting the benefits, plus it's trying to use it
as a wedge between -- to isolate Venezuela. But as I said before,
that's not -- probably not going to happen.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Greg, speaking of arms, the arm of oil.
Apparently the increase in the price of oil on the world
market has only strengthened President Chavez's ability to
implement many of his social programs and to assist other Latin
American neighbors. Could you talk about that a little bit?
GREG WILPERT: Yeah. I mean, the oil income has gone up
tremendously in the last couple of years, in the last two years,
and it has, of course, had a tremendous impact on the Venezuelan
economy, which grew 17%, I think it was, last year, which was one
of the highest rates of any country in the world, actually. Of
course, that was after the oil -- the coup and the oil strike and
so on. But so now Chavez has been using that, essentially to fund
the social programs, and there's been really quite effective in
the sense that a tremendous number of Venezuelans are benefiting
from them. They have put small community clinics in almost every
single neighborhood throughout Venezuela, and they’ve opened
subsidized food markets also that benefit about -- almost half of
the Venezuelan population now. So, the impact is definitely being
felt of this oil wealth coming to the people, which is something
that hasn't happened in Venezuela also since the last oil boom, at
least, over 20 years ago. So, that's one of the reasons, of
course, that Chavez has become very popular. In addition to the
fact, of course, that people feel like he's -- I mean, the poor of
Venezuela feel like he's the first president to support them.
Which hasn't happened in the -- in actually almost ever. The
previous presidents were always presidents of the middle class,
essentially. And of course, that's also being used now to buy
these weapons, like I said.
AMY GOODMAN: Kimberly Stanton of the Washington Office
on Latin America, a quick question, do you think that Iraq saved
Chavez? That with the U.S. distracted by the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq that this is -- helps to explain what has happened in
Latin America, and then if you could quickly comment on what's
happened in Ecuador?
KIMBERLY STANTON: I don't think that the U.S. was so
distracted by Iraq that it wasn't paying attention to Venezuela,
although it wasn't paying attention perhaps to many other parts of
Latin America. The U.S. has been very clear in its opposition to
Chavez from the beginning. It's important to remember that the way
the Venezuelan opposition first tried to remove him from power was
through a coup attempt. That was followed by the strike that was
just mentioned, which was devastating to the Venezuelan economy.
Only then did the efforts shift to trying to vote him out of
office, and the U.S. agencies have certainly provided plenty of
funding to opposition groups, specifically in an effort to
mobilize people to vote against him in the referendum last fall,
and to continue to build up capacity to eventually push him out of
office. Just before Ms. Rice left for Latin America, unnamed State
Department officials talked about the possibility of an even more
confrontational strategy, and increasing even more the funding
going to these kinds of opposition groups. So I don't think
Venezuela has been off the agenda of the State Department,
although it's been handled in a way that has actually, as your
other guest commented, both strengthens popular support for Mr.
Chavez within Venezuela and has also pushed those national
security concerns onto the agenda for Venezuela. If you look over
the last five or six years, Mr. Chavez hasn't been focused on
defending Venezuela’s security or defending his own security,
per se. It's as a result of the last year, year-and-a-half of
concerted pressure on him and the clear escalation of opposition,
that the security concerns have started to come back onto the
scene. And the event that happened a few months ago where Colombia
went into Venezuela and picked off a F.A.R.C. leader who had been
living pretty openly there and had actually crossed the Colombian
border a number of times and had Colombian immigration stamps in
his passport under his normal name. He clearly could have been
picked up in some other way. When Colombian forces -- when
Colombia paid security forces in Venezuela to pick up this guy and
trans-- who was then transported over the border, and whatnot,
they raised all sorts of concerns both -- or reinforced concerns
of some kind of conspiracy to move into Venezuela and some kind of
fear on Chavez's part that in fact he's far more vulnerable than
he realized. So, I think in short, Venezuela has been on the
agenda, but not in a constructive way, or not as constructive as
it should have been for quite a while. The situation in Ecuador is
another case of –
AMY GOODMAN: Just 30 seconds –
KIMBERLY STANTON: Okay. It's a case of people demanding
the political accountability from their leaders, not getting it
through democratic institutions, and so taking to the streets. So,
another president has, in fact, been voted out of office, Lucio
Gutierrez. But it's important to note that Mr. Gutierrez's removal
was preceded by several months of clearly unconstitutional actions
on his part which didn't awaken very much active or concerted
response, either by the U.S. or even by the O.A.S. There were some
statements by the O.A.S. in the U.N., but not much concern until
he was removed. There's an opportunity in Ecuador now to
reconstitute the institutions, to restructure them and we hope
that the new president will move in that way to try to bring
institutions and popular sentiment more into line and to make the
institutions more functional.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you both for being with us,
Kimberly Stanton, Deputy Director of the Washington Office on
Latin America, WOLA, joining us from Washington, D.C., and Greg
Wilpert, a journalist and sociologist living in Caracas,
Venezuela.
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