Why They Hate Bush in Chile
23/11/2004
- Opinión
Fifty thousand demonstrators greeted George Bush on his arrival
in Santiago Chile for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) summit meeting of twenty-one Pacific Rim nations. The
largest and most militant demonstration since the dictatorship
of General August Pinochet, the protestors called for an end to
neo-liberal free trade agreements like those advanced by the
APEC leaders. The demonstrators carried banners proclaiming "No
to the dictatorship of the market" and asserted that trade
accords drive workers and peasants into a "race to the bottom."
The ire of many protestors centered on Bush and the war in Iraq.
Chants of "Terrorist Bush," and " Bush, Fascist, Thief, Murder!"
rang through the air. While the demonstrations were
overwhelmingly peaceful, groups of anarchists, punks and others
broke away from the main march to vandalize a McDonald's
restaurant and corporate stores. About 200 people were arrested
and over 25 injured.
Bush, on his first trip outside the United States since the
elections, found another unwanted answer to the question he
posed in the aftermath of 9/11: "Why do they hate us?" It is
certainly not for "our freedoms" as Bush inanely asserts. Aside
from the war in Iraq, many protestors in Chile are deeply
hostile because the United States backed a military coup on
September 11, 1973 that took away their freedoms. It deposed the
democratically elected government of Salvador Allende and marked
the beginning of a seventeen year dictatorship. One banner
stated: "US Terrorist State: The First September 11." A common
refrain of demonstrators who want no further US meddling in
their affairs proclaimed: "Bush, listen, Chile is not for sale."
More than three thousand people perished in the aftermath of the
coup, another 35,000 were imprisoned and tortured. With the
acquiescence of the CIA and the cooperation of military regimes
in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay, the Pinochet
dictatorship set up an international terrorist network,
Operation Condor, that targeted opponents throughout the world.
Prior to the attack on the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, the
most sensational terrorist act in Washington D.C. took place in
1976 when Orlando Letelier, a leading Chilean opponent of the
Pinochet regime, died when a bomb was detonated in his car just
blocks from the White House. A young assistant, Ronnie Moffit,
was killed along with him.
Even when Pinochet gave up the presidential sash in 1990, he
continued to dominate the country's politics as commander-in-
chief of the military. The United States orchestrated a
controlled "transition" in which a coalition of political
parties took office on a centrist platform and followed the
authoritarian constitution drawn up by Pinochet. The Communist
party and other militant organizations on the left that had
backed Allende were excluded.
This austere civilian order was shaken by Pinochet's arrest in
London in 1998 for crimes against humanity. Returned to Chile in
March 2000 for alleged health reasons, the quiescent Chilean
judicial system finally turned on Pinochet and became
prosecuting him for his crimes. The Chilean political
establishment, now headed by President Ricardo Lagos, sought to
defuse tensions with the business community and right wing
backers of Pinochet by pressuring the judges and medical
examiners to get him off the hook, this time because he
supposedly had "light dementia."
Events of the past year however have shaken the inertness of the
Chilean political system. In a lengthy interview with a Miami
television station, Pinochet insisted that the left owed him an
apology for trying to get rid of him. This interview, in which
he was evidently coherent the entire time, undermined his claim
of suffering from dementia and led to the filing of new charges
against him, this time for his role in Operation Condor.
It appears that Chile is at long last prepared to confront the
crimes of the dictatorship as never before. Earlier this month
an official commission backed by human rights organizations
presented a report to President Lagos detailing the abuses and
torture committed against prisoners from 1973 to 1990. Then just
this past week the Supreme Court of Chile ruled that a clause in
Pinochet's constitution that exempted many members of his secret
police from prosecution was invalid and superseded by
international law.
Nation-wide municipal elections at the end of October have also
given momentum to the progressive forces in Chile. The ruling
centrist parties decisively defeated the right wing parties
while a left coalition led by the Communist and Humanist parties
garnered almost 10 percent of the vote, the most since the days
of Allende.
To oppose the right wing parties in the presidential election,
the ruling coalition appears to be giving the nod to one of its
more progressive leaders, Michelle Bachelet, who served in
Lagos' cabinet. Her father, an Air Force General, was one of the
few military officials who whole-heardetedly supported Salvador
Allende, heading up the country's food distribution system as
the right wing tried to orchestrate a crisis by hoarding or
reducing food supplies.
The left is also putting forth a dynamic candidate for
president, Tomas Moulian. A radical sociologist who is rector of
a university, Moulian is a talented speaker who will mince no
words in going after the ruling parties as well as the right
wing for their politics of complacency and the failure to deal
with the workers and impoverished in Chile who are victims of
globalization.
As the demonstrators greeting Bush showed, there is clearly a
mass base for a new politics in Chile. Simultaneous with the
APEC summit, 7,500 people attended workshops and seminars
sponsored by the Chilean Social Forum. The main theme of the
forum as well as the organizing slogan of the demonstration was
"Another World is Possible." The forum called on Chilean
society to "carry on a debate of democratic ideas, related to
unequal social relations, issues of gender, sustainable
development, and alternatives to globalization."
Bush spent much of his time in Santiago trying to bludgeon the
other twenty heads of state into endorsing his war-mongering
schemes for going after North Korea and Iran for their alleged
weapons of mass destruction. There is indeed a Chilean
alternative to Bush: it is to pursue former dictators and the
real terrorists by using international law and building a global
international criminal system that will be based on an
egalitarian economic system that empowers people at the grass
roots to build their own future.
* Roger Burbach is the author of "The Pinochet Affair: State
Terrorism and Global Justice. He also co-authored with Jim
Tarbell "Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the Hubris of
Empire. To order the books see: www.globalalternatives.org.
Special thanks to Elias Padilla for his reporting assistance and
to Paul Cantor for his editorial comments.
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/110921
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