United States and Latin America. A harvest of defeats
12/01/2004
- Opinión
2003 was a year plagued with setbacks and failures for
Washington, particularly in Latin America. The empire's
economic and financial instability, its "war against
terrorism" and the obvious breakdown of the neo-liberal
model have each exposed gaps in its continental hegemony.
Bogged down in Middle East policy, where it could not
impose its Route Map or secure a peaceful future for Iraq;
with an internal situation barely contained by the rhetoric
of war and by permanently appealing to people's sense of
fear – taking the population hostage in its imperial
ambitions; with financial difficulties illustrated by the
dollar's loss of credibility; - throughout 2003 the White
House could only contemplate a series of failures in Latin
America. These include the derailment of the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) summit, the formation of a group led by
Brazil who derailed the FTAA planned by Washington, the
consolidation of Hugo Chávez's government and Néstor
Kirchner's firm refusal to submit to the demands of the
IMF.
A weakened economy
Every day, hundreds of pages are written about the Bush
administration's problems in the Middle East. The
difficulties facing its economy are much less evident, in
particular its finances, despite the euphoria created by
economic growth registered throughout the year.
Some of these difficulties arose from the bursting of the
speculative bubble, whose media exposure gave rise to some
notorious scandals -such as that of the Halliburton company
linked to vice-president Dick Cheney-, dragging millions
of investors into ruin. Or the financial manipulation of
mutual funds which was detrimental to a section of the 95
million people who trusted them with their pensions.
However, beyond these specific cases, the US has
accumulated a monumental current account deficit of over
$500 thousand million. In view of the imperial policy,
this deficit is a structural matter; the way its reduction
has been tackled during Bush's leadership has been to
devalue the dollar. "The major reason for the fall of the
dollar is the massive and unsustainable current account
deficit. With the dollar's lower value, the US makes its
products more competitive on the international market and
also reduces the rate of imports. The dollar must fall
more than 5% in 2004 and continue falling in 2005", said
Farid Abolfathi, director of the consultancy firm Global
Insight when speaking to Folha de Sao Paulo on Sunday 21st
December.
But the solution to the deficit leads to even more serious
problems: the flight of capital. In 2000, international
investors bought $175 thousand million worth of US shares,
whereas up to October 2003 only $15 thousand million worth
were acquired. Ian Grummer, director of London's Mellon
Financial bank signalled that "US investors are questioning
the importance of having dollar-based assets" and are
exponentially increasing the purchase of overseas assets.
In effect, to October 2003, Americans bought only 1.5
billion worth of dollars in foreign shares, compared with
$66 billion in 2002.
The lack of confidence in the dollar is affecting the
traditional allies of the superpower. Since the 11th Sept,
Arab countries have withdrawn half of the $700 billion that
they had invested in the US; the former ally Saudi Arabia
is at the head of the stampede, having withdrawn some $200
billion.
As things stand, alarm signals about the dollar have been
well and truly installed on the international financial
market and are already visible for all to see. Saudi
Arabia and other countries of OPEC are exerting pressure
for the value and trade of oil to take place in euros, not
dollars. If this is successful (many say that it's not
imminent, but only a question of time) it would lead to a
dramatic change in the global economic landscape, sealing
the end of US hegemony.
Their own backyard in a mess
This adverse global scenario for the US has been aggravated
by the convergence of political and social processes
throughout 2003 that mark a turning point in the
relationship between Latin America and Washington.
At the beginning of the year, the Venezuelan government
faced a strong opposition offensive which threatened to
bring it down; meanwhile the state oil company (PDVSA) was
at the centre of the dispute, with a strike that was deemed
irresolvable. But Chávez put up firm resistance and his
government came out of it stronger. On January 1, Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva took the presidency in Brazil and on
the 15th of the same month, Colonel Lucio Gutiérrez came to
power in Ecuador. Both were the result of long-term social
and political changes, although each president has since
opted for a different path vis-à-vis Washington.
In February a police strike broke out in Bolivia,
forerunner of the state collapse which struck seven months
later. In May, Carlos Menem, the continent's champion for
neo-liberalism, had to withdraw from the second round in
the election, faced with imminent defeat. The arrival of
Kirchner in the Casa Rosada signified a 180 degree turn in
Argentina's international policy, burying the neo-liberal
policies of the previous decade. At the end of April,
Paraguayans elected Nicanor Duarte as president, who from
the first moment distanced himself from the model,
committed to MERCOSUR and promised to fight certain endemic
problems in the country such as corruption, thereby
breaking with the style and international alignments of
former governments.
In June Brazil, India and South Africa signed a co-
operation agreement, labelled G3, with the intention of
strengthening relations between southern countries. August
saw a breakdown in the relationship between the Ecuadorian
indigenous movement – Pachakutik – and the Gutiérrez
government, which had allied itself with the IMF and
Washington. This can be considered the White House's only
success of the year in its own backyard.
In September the imperial strategy's greatest fiasco
occurred: the WTO Summit in Cancun ended in failure for the
United States and European Union when agreement could not
be reached on agricultural trade. The other side of the
coin was the resounding success for the anti-globalisation
movement which organized big demonstrations in the Mexican
resort. At the same time, it was a success for the
recently created G20, the alliance of Third World countries
in which Brazil and China played a key role.
On October 17, an impressive uprising by the Bolivian
people brought down the US's strongest ally in the region –
Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada. His successor Carlos Mesa
marked his distance from the former leadership and showed
his disposition to strengthen ties with his Brazilian and
Argentinean neighbours, strengthening MERCOSUR. The
diplomatic intervention of presidents Kirchner and Lula
played an important role in the resolution of the Bolivian
crisis. Over the same period, the two leaders signed the
Buenos Aires Consensus – a strategic alliance between South
America's two biggest countries, which aims to remodel the
region and retard the signature of the FTAA under the
conditions imposed by the US.
The year also witnessed electoral defeats for the two South
American governments closest to Washington. Álvaro Uribe
was defeated in the October regional and municipal
elections by the centre-left alliance "Polo Democrático"
which was able to introduce a wedge between liberals and
conservatives who traditionally share power in Colombia.
At the beginning of December, Jorge Batlle also suffered a
resounding defeat in the referendum to abolish the law
permitting the state oil company to associate with foreign
capital.
FTAA or integration
The set of changes influenced by Latin America's social
movements and left-wing is redrawing the continent's
political map. The new situation was visible at the Miami
ministerial meeting in November, when Lula's proposals were
accepted to "make an FTAA only in areas that are possible
and leave the rest to be fought out within the World Trade
Organisation"
In fact, the FTAA that the US wanted is increasingly
becoming an illusion. This is particularly the case after
the December MERCOSUR summit which took place in
Montevideo, where an agreement was reached between MERCOSUR
and the Community of Andean Nations (CAN); the US is trying
to reach bilateral agreements with several of those
countries as a way of isolating Brazil. On the same lines,
an agreement was also signed in Montevideo by the
Argentinean and Bolivian governments to build a mutual gas
pipeline which will be the principal gas provider in the
south. As such, an alternative has been found to the
project to export Bolivian gas to the US via Chile, which
was the trigger of the Bolivian uprising in October.
However in spite of this collection of failures and
setbacks, US diplomacy is starting to readapt, recognising
that it can't impose its will as it could in days gone by.
Robert Zoellick, US Trade Representative, is doing this by
accepting a "flexible FTAA". It's also a way of buying
time – something which the Bush administration needs
urgently in the run up to November 2004 elections.
It seems clear that the more problems Washington has in the
world, the more possibilities Latin American countries will
have to secure their own space and to negotiate more
advantageous relations with the super-power. This is the
fight against the clock of Brazilian diplomacy, the most
lucid in the region and one of the most skilful in the
Third World, together with China. One should not however
lose sight of the fact that in a situation like this, the
superpower – like all empires in history – relies on two
weapons which it uses with cunning; the eternal division
between Latin American countries and the possibility of co-
opting those it can't neutralise by other routes. In the
next few months, we will see how the continental chess
pieces move. It is notable that the Brazilian government –
who could have buried the FTAA once and for all after the
failure of Cancun – opted to give time to Washington's
hawks, approving the FTAA even though it was a "light"
version.
At the moment in Latin America, not just two but three
versions of integration are in competition with one
another. That of the United States and its allies, who
continue to vie for an FTAA made to measure for
multinationals. That of Venezuela and Cuba who opt for a
strictly Latin American integration, without US
interference. Between the two, is the Brazilian proposal
which wants an integration where the US has a predominant
but not decisive role. This route – which for now most
allies in the region favour – seems to be adapted to the
requirements of the industrial bourgeoisie of Sao Paulo,
who need the US market more than the regional or their own
national market, in order to fulfil their potential growth.
The Argentinean government appears to be unsure, although
it's tending towards the Brazilian proposal. If this is
consolidated, it could once more create an asymmetric
integration, to the detriment of the weakest countries and
the poorest regions. (Translated from Spanish by ALAI.)
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/109080
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