Bush Squares Off with Bolivia and Venezuela over Hemispheric Model
25/05/2006
- Opinión
George W. Bush has come out with harsh words for the governments of
Bolivia and Venzeuela. "Let me just put it bluntly - I'm concerned
about the erosion of democracy in the countries you mentioned,'' Bush
said in response to a question put to him about Venezuela and Bolivia.
"I am going to continue to remind our hemisphere that respect for
property rights and human rights is essential for all countries,” he
added.
While Bush’s hostility towards Hugo Chavez of Venezuela is well known,
his critical comments about Bolivia came as somewhat of a surprise,
given that Evo Morales has served only four months as the country’s
first Indian president and has done nothing to thwart the democratic
process. As Bolivian foreign minister David Choquehuanca noted: “We
are creating a participatory democracy and the world knows it. I don’t
understand how the United States can say democracy is eroding...”
Bush’s true agenda is reflected in his call for “respect for property
rights.” A change is taking place in South America as Morales and
Chavez move to exert greater control of their energy resources and
challenge US plans for a hemispheric free trade zone. As the president
of the Bolivian Senate, Santos Ramirez, noted: "Bolivia and Latin
America are no longer the servile democracies that tolerate...poverty
and the surrendering of sovereignty."
Early in May Morales announced that Bolivia would nationalize its
energy resources, particularly its natural gas exports. While no
foreign corporations were expropriated out right, Morales made it clear
that “the looting of our natural resources by foreign enterprises is
over.”
At the same time Morales is moving to reshape the country’s commercial
relations, particularly with Venezuela. This week Hugo Chavez flew to
Bolivia, declaring “we are going to concretize the People’s Trade
Treaty,” an accord that was recently signed between Venezuela, Bolivia
and Cuba. It is openly pitched as an alternative to the US-backed Free
Trade Area of the Americas, a trade zone based on neo-liberal
principles that facilitates the expansion of multinational
corporations.
Bolivia and Venezuela have signed eight different accords dealing with
200 different projects concerning energy, mining, education, sports and
cultural exchanges. Most importantly Venezuela has agreed to invest
over $1 billion to help industrialize Bolivia’s natural gas production,
including the construction of a petrochemical complex.
Venezuela is also providing diesel fuel, which Bolivia does not
produce, in exchange for the sale of soybeans. This comes at an
opportune moment for Bolivia as most of its soy exports have gone to
Colombia which just signed a free trade agreement with the United
States. The US-Colombian accord means that cheap, subsidized US grains
will flood Colombia, driving out Bolivian soybeans.
In Bolivia Morales took Chavez on a visit to Chapare, the semi-tropical
region where he rose to prominence as the leader of the coca growers’
confederation. There they announced their intention to build a factory
to process coca leafs for herbal teas, medicinal products, and
cosmetics. This is certain to arouse the ire of the United States which
for years has pursued a policy of forced eradication of coca in
Chapare, leading to the virtual militarization of the region.
The burgeoning economic alliance between Venezuela and Bolivia also
helps offset the difficulties that have arisen with Brazil and
Argentina over Morales’ determination to exert greater control over
natural gas exports. Both neighboring countries have significant
investments in Bolivia’s gas fields, and both are importing gas for
domestic use at prices well below the world market. At a recent
international gathering of Latin American and European leaders in
Vienna, Austria, Morales and President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva of
Brazil exchanged harsh words over efforts to draft a new accord over
natural gas. While the two leaders formally made up before they left
Austria, there is little doubt that Chavez’ support provides Bolivia
with leverage in its negotiations with its two more powerful neighbors.
Venezuela is also signing a financial accord aimed at bolstering
Bolivia’s banking and monetary system. This is intended to strengthen
Morales’ hand vis-à-vis the United States and international financial
institutions. The Bolivian government at the end of March announced
that it would not solicit any new loans from the International Monetary
Fund. The fund has aroused a great deal of antipathy in recent decades
as it restricted social spending and forced the privatization of state
enterprises, particularly in the tin mining industry.
The visit of Chavez to Bolivia coincides with the opening of the
Exchange Fair, a project of the People’s Trade Treaty between Bolivia,
Venezuela and Cuba. Enterprises from all three countries participated
with the goal of expanding commerce and sharing technical expertise. At
the fair the vice-president of Bolivia, Alvaro Garcia Linera,
criticized the US neo-liberal trade regime, asserting: “It is not
necessary for small producers and entrepreneurs to subordinate
themselves to financial capital…There are other forms of
interdependence, other forms of globalization, other ways to generate
regional exchanges of products, ideas, and necessities.” Garcia Linera
concluded, “Bolivia needs the world, and it will produce for the
world.”
-----
- Roger Burbach is director of the Center for the Study of the
Americas, based in Berkeley, California. He is the co-author, with Jim
Tarbell, of Imperial Overstretch: George W Bush and the Hubris of
Empire, published by Zed Books. He has written extensively on Latin
America and is currently working on a book on the social movements and
the new left in Latin America.
https://www.alainet.org/en/active/11611
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