The New U.S. Political Intervention in Latin America
Promoting Polyarchy
17/02/2006
- Opinión
As the 2006 presidential electoral cycle gets underway in Latin America, the
U.S. government has stepped up its political intervention in the region under
the rubric of “promoting democracy.” For much of the 20th century, as is well
known, Washington sponsored and promoted military dictatorships and
authoritarian regimes throughout Latin America and the Third World as its
preferred method of maintaining international control in the face of mass
struggles against the prevailing social and economic inequalities and highly
restricted political systems. But Washington abruptly switched tracks in the
mid-1980s and began to “promote democracy” in Latin America and around the
world.
The shift from promoting dictatorships to promoting “democracy” coincides
with the rise of the neoliberal economic project. Not only are these two
linked, but what Washington refers to as “democracy” has become a functional
imperative of capitalist globalization. A new transnational elite
constructed and imposed a paradigm of “free markets and democracy” that
became so hegemonic in the 1980s and 1990s. The promotion of “free markets
and democracy” is intended to make the world both available and safe for
global capitalism by creating the most propitious conditions around the world
for the unfettered operation of the new global production and financial
system. One part of global restructuring was the so-called "Washington
consensus," or neo-liberalism. But this transnational agenda has an
explicitly political component. If the economic component is to make the
world available to capital, the political component is to make it safe for
capital by shifting the mode of political domination from dictatorship to
polyarchy. This endeavor involves the development of new political
institutions and forms of transnational social control intended to achieve a
more stable and predictable world environment for transnational corporate
investors.
When transnational elites talk about “democracy promotion,” what they really
mean is the promotion of polyarchy. This refers to a system in which a small
group actually rules, and mass participation in decision making is confined
to choosing leaders in elections that are carefully managed by competing
elites. This, of course, is the system in place in the United States. The
concept of polyarchy is an outgrowth of elitism theories that developed early
in the twentieth century to counter the classic definition of democracy as
power or rule (cratos) by the people (demos). Building on earlier elitism
theory that argued for an “enlightened” elite to rule on behalf of ignorant
and unpredictable masses, a new polyarchic redefinition of democracy
developed within U.S. academic circles closely tied to the policymaking
community. U.S. policymakers often cite the redefinition of democracy put
forward by Joseph Schumpeter in his 1942 classic study, Capitalism, Socialism
and Democracy.” Schumpeter argued for “another theory” of democracy as
“institutional arrangements” for elites to acquire power “by means of a
competitive struggle for the people’s vote.” “Democracy means only that the
people have the opportunity of accepting or refusing the men who are to rule
them,” explained Schumpeter. It is this conception that has guided U.S.
foreign policy.
This type of "low-intensity democracy" does not involve power (cratos) of the
people (demos), much less an end to class domination or to substantive
inequality that is growing exponentially under the global economy. Polyarchy
is promoted in order to co-opt, neutralize and redirect mass popular
democratic movements—to relieve pressure from subordinate classes for more
fundamental political, social and economic change. The crisis of elite rule
that developed throughout the underdeveloped world in the 1970s and 1980s was
resolved – momentarily - through transitions to polyarchies—the so-called
“democratic revolution.” At stake was what type of social order—nascent
global capitalism or some popular alternative—would emerge. While masses
pushed for a deeper popular democratization, emergent transnationalized
fractions of local elites, backed by the political and ideological power of
the global economy, often counted on the direct political and military
intervention of the United States and other transnational forces.
In Latin America during the 1980s and 1990s, alliances of local and global
elites were able to hijack and redirect mass democratization movements, to
undercut popular demands for more fundamental change in the social order. In
this way, the outcome of mass movements against the brutal regimes that ruled
the continent involved a change in the political system, while leaving intact
fundamentally unjust socioeconomic structures. The new polyarchic civilian
elites emerging from controlled transitions set about to integrate (or
reintegrate) their countries into the new global capitalism through a massive
neo-liberal restructuring. Transnational elites and their local counterparts
hope that polyarchy will provide a more efficient, viable, and durable form
for the political management of socioeconomic dictatorship in the age of
global capitalism. Nonetheless, neo-liberal states have been wracked by
internal conflicts brought about by the contradictions of the global system.
Modus Operandi of the New Political Intervention
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s Washington first developed novel mechanisms of
political intervention as it launched “democracy promotion” programs around
the world. Political intervention programs have increasingly brought
together an array of governmental and non-governmental organizations, think
tanks, financial institutions, multilateral agencies, and private
corporations from the United States, Europe, and elsewhere. In 1980, the
United States and the European Union each spent $20 million on “democracy”-
related foreign aid. By 2001 this had risen to $571 million and $392
million, respectively. In 2003 the EU spent $3.5 billion while the United
States was expected to spend a total of $2 billion for the 2006 fiscal year
for polyarchy promotion.
U.S.-organized political intervention programs conducted under the rubric of
“democracy promotion” involve several tiers of policy design, funding,
operational activity, and influence. The first involves the highest levels
of the U.S. state apparatus - the White House, the State Department, the
Pentagon, the CIA, and certain other state branches. It is at this level
that the overall need to undertake political intervention through “democracy
promotion” in particular countries and regions is identified as one component
of overall policy towards the country or region in question, to be
synchronized with military, economic, diplomatic and other dimensions.
In the second tier, the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) and
several other branches of the State Department are allocated hundreds of
millions of dollars, which they dole out, either directly or via the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) and other agencies such as the U.S. Institute
for Peace (USIP), to a series of ostensibly “private” U.S. organizations that
are in reality closely tied to the policymaking establishment and aligned
with U.S. foreign policy. The NED was created in 1983 as a central organ, or
clearinghouse, for new forms of “democratic” political intervention abroad.
Prior to the creation of the NED, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had
routinely provided funding and guidance for political parties, business
councils, trade unions, student and civic groups in the countries in which
the U.S. intervened. In the 1980s a significant portion of these programs
were shifted from the CIA to the AID and the NED and made many times more
sophisticated than the often-crude operations of the CIA.
The organizations that receive AID and NED funds include, among others (the
list is extensive): the National Republican Institute for International
Affairs (NRI, also known as the International Republican Institute, or IRI)
and the National Democractic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), which
are officially the “foreign policy arms” of the U.S. Republican and the
Democratic parties, respectively; the International Foundation for Electoral
Systems (IFES); the Center for Democracy (CFD), the Center for International
Private Enterprise (CIPE); and the Free Trade Union Institute (FTUI), and
International Labor Solidarity. The boards of directors of these
organizations include representatives from the highest levels of the U.S.
foreign policy and political establishment and representatives from the
transnational corporate world. U.S. universities, private contractors,
organic intellectuals and other “democracy” experts may also be tapped. All
these organizations and actors coalesce into a complex and multi-leveled U.S.
political intervention network.
In the third tier, these U.S. organizations provide “grants” to a host of
organizations in the intervened country itself. These grants include
financing, guidance, “advice” and political sponsorship. These organizations
may be previously existing and are penetrated through “democracy promotion”
programs and incorporated in new ways into U.S. foreign policy designs. Or
they may be created entirely from scratch. These organizations include local
political parties and coalitions, trade unions, business councils, media
outlets, professional and civic associations, student and women’s groups,
peasant leagues, human rights groups, and so on. Local groups brought into
U.S. “democracy promotion” programs are held up as “independent” and “non-
partisan” but in reality they become internal agents of the transnational
agenda.
The interventionist network seeks to penetrate and capture civil society in
the intervened country through local groups that have been brought into the
fold. A veritable army of U.S. and international NGO’s and “technical
advisors,” “consultants,” and “experts” conduct programs to “strengthen
political parties and civil society,” “civil education,” and “leadership
development” and “media training” workshops, and so on. These “democracy
promotion” activities seek to cultivate local political and civic leaders
with a political and civic action capacity. Under U.S. sponsorship, these
groups typically come together into a “civic front” with interlocking boards
of directors. They support one another and synchronize their political
activities and discourse.
In the overall strategy, Washington hopes to create through its “democracy
promotion” programs “agents of influence” - local political and civic leaders
who are expected to generate ideological conformity with the elite social
order under construction, to promote the neo-liberal outlook, and to advocate
for policies that integrate the intervened country into global capitalism.
These agents are further expected to compete with, and eclipse, more popular-
oriented, independent, progressive or radical groups and individuals who may
have a distinct agenda for their country.
Promoting Polyarchy in Latin America
Latin America has been a laboratory for polyarchy promotion. By the late
1970s, authoritarian regimes there faced an intractable crisis. Mass popular
movements for democracy and human rights threatened to bring down the whole
elite-based social order, along with the dictatorships—as happened in
Nicaragua in 1979, and looked likely to occur in Haiti, El Salvador,
Guatemala and elsewhere. This threat from below, combined with the inability
of the authoritarian regimes to manage the dislocations and adjustments of
globalization, generated intra-elite conflicts that unravelled the ruling
power blocs.
The United States launched “democracy promotion” along with other
interventions during mass struggles against authoritarian regimes and for
popular democratization. The challenge of this “preemptive reform” was to
remove dictatorships so as to prevent deeper change. U.S. intervention
synchronized political aid programs with covert and direct military
operations, economic aid or sanctions, formal diplomacy, government-to-
government programs, and so on. These programs helped place in power local
sections of the transnational elite that swept to power in country after
country, and who have integrated their respective nation-states into the new
global order. The same elite groups that benefit from capitalist
globalization also came in this way to control key political institutions.
In the 1990s and the 21st century U.S. policy has aimed to “consolidate
democracy” through broad “democratic aid” and other government-to-government
and multilateral programs.
The cases of Chile, Nicaragua, Panama, Haiti, Venezuela, and Bolivia, among
others, demonstrate these patterns. In Chile, the United States, after
orchestrating the 1973 overthrow of the Allende government, backed the
Pinochet dictatorship until 1985, when, in response to a growing protest
movement, Washington abruptly shifted support to the elite opposition and
began to promote a transition. It pressured the regime to open up and to
transfer power to civilian elites and simultaneously implemented political
intervention programs, through the AID and the NED, to organize and guide the
coalition that ran against Pinochet in the 1988 plebiscite and in the 1990
general elections. U.S. political intervention was key to achieving unity
among a splintered elite opposition, in eclipsing popular opposition, and in
assuring elite hegemony over the anti-dictatorial movement between 1985 and
1987 when this hegemony was in dispute. From 1987 to 1990, U.S. intervention
also was important in consolidating a reconstituted elite and in securing the
commitment of much of that elite to the process—begun under Pinochet—of far-
reaching neoliberal restructuring and integration into the global economy.
In Nicaragua, the United States supported the Somoza family dictatorship for
nearly five decades. The Sandinista government that came to power in the
1979 revolution became the target of a massive U.S. destabilization campaign.
Then, in 1987, the objective of this campaign changed dramatically, from a
military overthrow of the Sandinistas by an externally based
counterrevolutionary movement to new forms of polyarchy promotion supporting
an internal, moderate opposition. This opposition, organized and trained
through large-scale U.S. political intervention programs, operated through
peaceful, non-coercive means in civil society to undermine Sandinista
hegemony. The shift from hard-line destabilization to polyarchy promotion
culminated in the 1990 electoral defeat of the Sandinistas, a conservative
restoration and installation of a polyarchic political system, reinsertion of
Nicaragua into the global economy and far-reaching neoliberal restructuring.
In Panama, as in Nicaragua, military aggression was combined with political
intervention to achieve a polyarchic outcome. The rise to power of Manuel
Noriega, an unpopular CIA asset and close U.S. ally, following Torrijos’
death in 1981 opening a period of crisis and instability. Washington
continued its support for the Noriega regime, despite its practice of
electoral fraud and mass repression, until a combination of conjunctural
geopolitical concerns and the broader shift to its new, worldwide strategy
led to a decision to overthrow it. The destabilization campaign included
economic sanctions, coercive diplomacy, psychological operations and finally,
a direct, military invasion in 1989. The campaign also involved a
multimillion dollar political intervention program to create a “democratic
opposition” by bringing together “modernizing” groups from within the
oligarchy tied to international banking and trade. Through the invasion this
“modernized” sector was placed in power—literally. Despite ongoing social
conflict and an internally divided elite, neoliberal reform proceeded apace
in the 1990s.
In Haiti, the U.S. sustained the Duvalier dictatorship at the same time as it
promoted a development model in the 1960s and 1970s which inserted the country
into the emergent global economy as an export-assembly platform. But Haiti
became submerged in a national power vacuum and a cauldron of turmoil between
1986 and 1990 as the poor majority mobilized against the dictatorship and
against the tiny elite that scrambled to maintain control after Baby Doc’s
departure. During this period, the U.S. introduced a massive "democracy
promotion" program to cultivate a polyarchic elite and place it in power
through U.S.-organized elections. The liberation theologist Jean-Bertrand
Aristide won the 1990 elections but Aristide was overthrown in a 1991 military
coup that had the tacit support of Washington. Aristide returned to office as
a lame-duck president through a U.S. invasion in September 1994, having agreed
as a condition that he implement a neo-liberal program and open space for the
elite. From 1994 to 2004 the NED and the AID provided support for a slew of
elite civic and political organizations who mounted opposition to Aristide’s
Lavalas party. Aristide was again ousted in February 2004, this time directly
by U.S. marines on the heels of an uprising led by former Duvalierists
paramilitaries and conservative political groups. He was replaced by the exact
same collection of elites that had been cultivated by U.S. political
intervention programs since the 1980s.
Venezuela had a polyarchic political system in place since the 1958 pact of
Punto Fijo. But the exhaustion of the political and economic model that
emerged from that pact led to a crisis of the polyarchic system during the
1980s and 1990s. This crisis of oligarchic power could not be contained as
the popular classes began to make their own political protagonism felt, from
the 1989 Caracazo and on. This political protagonism eventually coalesced
around the rise of Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian government. The objective
of the U.S.-transnational project in Venezuela, hence, was to salvage
oligarchic power, modernize it, and try to identify and groom new groups
among the elite who could reincorporate the popular classes into an elite
hegemony and implement neo-liberalism. But this project could not be
implemented. What took place instead was the rise of a popular project
contrary to the interests of the transnational elite and their local
counterparts. The Bolivarian project had broken with elitist hegemony in
Venezuela and the primordial U.S. objective became to restore it. This is
the context in which U.S. strategists turned to “democracy promotion” in
Venezuela.
As is well known, the NED dramatically expanded its programs in Venezuela
since Hugo Chavez was elected to power in 1998. NED and related AID programs
for the anti-Chavista forces have been broadly documented, and include, among
others: assistance for these forces to develop media strategies; regular
trips to Washington for opposition politicians, business people, and trade
unionists; new disbursements for the CTV; a series of workshops for
opposition groups; and financing for numerous anti-Chavista groups. The NED
doled out almost one million dollars in the period preceeding the 2002 coup
d’etat to the groups that were involved in the abortive putsch, while the
Bush administration gave tacit support to the coup. With the collapse of the
coup and the subsequent failure of the anti-Chavista forces to win the August
2005 referendum, Washington has turned to a strategy of ongoing attrition,
involving a strategic shift from a “war of maneuver” that has sought the
quick removal of the Chavez government (coup d’etat, business strikes,
referendum) to an extended “war of position.” The effort now is to regroup
the opposition forces and to develop plans for the November 2006 elections
and beyond, without passing up any opportunity to weaken and destabilize the
government on an ongoing basis. For these purposes “democracy promotion”
programs have been vastly expanded and now involve tens of millions of
dollars.
In Bolivia, polyarchy promotion programs were relatively small-scale until
the indigenous uprising that drove President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada from
power in October 2003. From that point on, millions of dollars poured in to
fund and organize discredited traditional political parties, support
compliant (“moderate”) indigenous leaders that could counter more radical
ones, and to develop civic organizations under elite control to compete with
militant social movements. One objective of these programs was to
depoliticize the issue of natural gas and defuse popular demands for
nationalization of natural resources. The AID’s Office of Transition
Initiatives (OTI) spent no less than $11.8 million for these purposes during
2004 and 2005. One U.S. Embassy cable from La Paz explained that one of the
objectives was to “help build moderate, pro-democratic political parties that
can serve as a counterweight to the radical MAS or its successors.” Now that
the MAS and Evo Morales has come to power despite U.S. political
intervention, Washington can be expected to develop a destabilization program
that will be predicated on “democracy promotion.”
Recently, the State Department declared that the four priorities for
“democracy promotion” in Latin America in 2006 are Venezuela, Bolivia,
Ecuador, and Peru. Latin America's polyarchic regimes face growing crises of
legitimacy and governability. As the winds of change push Latin America to
the left, these novel modalities of U.S. intervention can be expected to play
an ever more prominent role in U.S. strategy for the region.
------------------
William I. Robinson is professor of sociology, global studies, and Latin
American studies at the University of California-Santa Barbara. He was
formerly an investigative journalist in Latin America and a consultant for
the Nicaraguan government.
https://www.alainet.org/fr/node/114369?language=es
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