Is a U.S.-Approved Coup Under
Way in Bolivia?
by Benjamin Dangl
www.alternet.org, September 23,
2008
Bolivian President Evo Morales announces
that a coup d'etat by right-wing regional governors is under way.
On Monday, Sept. 15, Bolivian President
Evo Morales arrived in Santiago, Chile for an emergency meeting
of Latin American leaders that convened to seek a resolution to
the recent conflict in Bolivia. Upon his arrival, Morales said,
"I have come here to explain to the presidents of South America
the civic coup d'etat by governors in some Bolivian states in
recent days. This is a coup in the past few days by the leaders
of some provinces, with the takeover of some institutions, the
sacking and robbery of some government institutions and attempts
to assault the national police and the armed forces."
Morales was arriving from his country,
where the smoke was still rising from a week of right-wing government
opposition violence that left the nation paralyzed, at least 30
people dead, and businesses, government and human rights buildings
destroyed.
During the same week, Morales declared
Philip Goldberg, the U.S. ambassador in Bolivia, a "persona
non grata" for "conspiring against democracy" and
for his ties to the Bolivian opposition. The recent conflict in
Bolivia and the subsequent meeting of presidents raise the questions:
What led to this meltdown? Whose side is the Bolivian military
on? And what does the Bolivian crisis and regional reaction tell
us about the new power bloc of South American nations?
Massacre in Pando
On Sept. 11, in the tropical Bolivian
department of Pando, which borders Brazil and Peru, a thousand
pro-Morales men, women and children were heading toward Cobija,
the department's capital, to protest the right-wing Gov. Leopoldo
Fernández and his thugs' takeover of the city and airport.
According to press reports and eyewitness
accounts, when the protesters arrived at a bridge 7 kilometers
outside the town of Porvenir, they were ambushed by assassins
hired and trained by Fernández. Snipers in the treetops
shot down on the unarmed campesinos. Shirley Segovia, a Porvenir
resident, recalled to Bolpress, "We were killed like pigs,
with machine guns, with rifles, with shotguns, with revolvers.
The campesinos had only brought their teeth, clubs and slingshots,
they didn't bring rifles. After the first shots, some fled to
the river Tahuamanu, but they were followed and shot at."
Others reported being tortured; days later the death toll rose
to 30, with dozens wounded and more than 100 still missing. Roberto
Tito, a farmer who was present at the conflict, said, "This
was a massacre of farmers; this is something that we should not
allow."
In 2006, Fernández, who denies
orchestrating this violence, was denounced by then Government
Minister Alicia Muñoz, who said the governor was training
at least 100 paramilitaries as a "citizen's protection"
force. These paramilitaries are believed to have participated
in the massacre. Fernández is one of the opposition governors
who form part of the National Democratic Council (CONALDE), an
organization that includes governors from Santa Cruz, Beni, Pando,
Tarija and Chuquisaca and who are organizing for departmental
autonomy against the Morales government and his administration's
redistribution of land and natural gas wealth, and other socialistic
policies.
After the massacre, Morales declared a
state of siege in Pando and sent in the military, and by Sept.
15 a tense peace had reportedly returned to the region. Morales
also called for the arrest of Fernández, who fled across
the border into rural Brazil. (Fernández has since been
arrested and taken to the Bolivian capital.)
This massacre took place just weeks after
an Aug. 10 national recall vote invigorated Morales' mandate:
He won 67 percent support nationwide, showing that his staunch,
violent opponents are clearly in the minority. In Pando, Morales
won 53 percent of the vote, an increase of 32 percent from the
21 percent he received from Pando residents during the presidential
election in 2005.
A few key political developments led to
this recent increase in regional tension. On Aug. 28, Morales
announced a presidential decree establishing a Dec. 7 referendum
on the constitution, which was rewritten and passed in a constituent
assembly in December 2007. On Sept. 2 of this year, the electoral
court said it opposed the referendum because it had to first be
passed by Congress and the opposition-controlled Senate. The debate
revived existing conflicts, and opposition leaders began to block
major roads and seized an airport in Cobija on Sept. 5.
The days leading up to the Sept. 11 massacre
in Pando were full of anti-government protesters ransacking businesses
and human rights organizations across the country. On Sept. 10,
an explosion reportedly set off by opposition groups disrupted
the flow of gas lines to Brazil from Tarija, Bolivia.
U.S. Ambassadors Expelled
Following these tumultuous events, Morales
demanded that Goldberg, the US. ambassador, leave the country.
"Without fear of anyone, without fear of the empire, today
before you, before the Bolivian people, I declare the ambassador
of the United States persona non grata," Morales said. "The
ambassador of the United States is conspiring against democracy
and wants Bolivia to break apart."
The announcement came after a private
meeting Goldberg had with the right-wing governor of Santa Cruz
on Aug. 25, and a later visit to the opposition governor of Chuquisaca.
Throughout Goldberg's time as ambassador, which began in 2006,
the Morales government has accused him of orchestrating U.S. funding
and support to opposition groups in the eastern part of the country.
(See the February 2008 The Progressive magazine article "Undermining
Bolivia" for more information on Washington's destabilization
efforts in Bolivia.) Before coming to Bolivia, Goldberg worked
as an ambassador in Kosovo from 2004 to 2006 and consular in Colombia.
At a press conference that Goldberg held in La Paz before leaving
for the United States, he said: "I want to say that all the
accusations made against me, against my embassy ... against my
country and against my people are entirely false and unjustified."
Following the U.S. ambassador's expulsion
from Bolivia, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced that
the U.S. ambassador in his country had to leave: "He has
72 hours, from this moment, the Yankee ambassador in Caracas,
to leave Venezuela." The United States responded by asking
the ambassadors of Venezuela and Bolivia to leave the United States.
This all took place during a tense few months in U.S.-Latin American
relations in which the U.S. Navy reinstated its Fourth Fleet in
the Caribbean after decades of inactivity. Chavez announced joint
exercises with Russia in the Caribbean, and Bolivia strengthened
its ties with Iran.
On Sept. 15 in Santiago, Chile, the nine
presidents within the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR),
including Argentina, Ecuador, Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Chile
and even Colombia, a close U.S. ally, met to come to a resolution
on the Bolivian crisis. This organization is one of the newest
in a series of regional networks that are making increasingly
collaborative political and economic decisions throughout South
America. All of the leaders backed Morales, condemned the opposition's
violent tactics and emphasized that they won't recognize separatists
in the country.
Bolivian Military Alliances
Though the threat of a "civic coup
d'etat" Morales spoke about in Santiago still looms, the
Bolivian military is unlikely to back the government opposition.
I asked Kathryn Ledebur, a human rights specialist and director
of the Andean Information Network in Cochabamba, Bolivia if the
military might side with the opposition to overthrow Morales.
Lebedur said, "No way, they are in a tough bind, and CONALDE
is trying to set Morales up, drive a wedge between him and the
military. But in spite of their frustrations, they (the military)
have received more materially and in terms of a positive discourse
from the Morales government than any other civilian one, and that
makes a huge difference."
"CONALDE has intentionally created
a messy catch-22 for the Morales administration, a tense, provocative,
violent situation, in some cases targeting the security forces,"
Ledebur explained. "If Morales orders repression, or there
are clear-cut violent acts by the security forces, his legitimacy
as a socially conscious president erodes. But if the security
forces don't (act), as they didn't for a long time, the vandalism
escalates, and the military and police get humiliated and attacked
-- which in the long term erodes what, at least for the armed
forces, had been a mutually beneficial marriage of convenience,
with friction along the way."
This past June the Andean Information
Network released a report analyzing the Bolivian Armed Forces'
growing mission in the country under Morales. According to this
report, part of the military's support stems from the fact that
Morales has given the military popular and lucrative jobs such
as "enforcing customs regulations and confiscating contraband
at the borders, including authorization to arrest offenders."
The AIN report explains that "traditionally, military officers
look forward to border postings as 'the most profitable part'
of their careers." In addition, "under the Morales government,
the armed forces are in charge of baking subsidized bread (the
regular price has gone up 270 percent in the past year) as well
as passing out bonuses to schoolchildren and senior citizens."
Improved wages among some officials and better equipment have
also kept the military on Morales' side.
The AIN report also stated that the Bolivian
military institution "will continue to categorically reject
aggressive regional autonomy initiatives or threats of secession
as risks to both national sovereignty and the budget they receive
from the national government." As one high-ranking officer
explained to AIN, "The only way the military would even remotely
consider a coup, is if they took away most of our budget; at the
core, we're really a bunch of bureaucrats."
U.S. Influence in a Changing South America
The current crisis in Bolivia and the
ongoing diplomatic drama between the United States and Latin America
says a lot about the future of the region and its cooperative
handling of economic and political questions. In an interview
via e-mail, Raúl Zibechi, a Uruguayan journalist, professor
and political analyst who writes regularly for the Americas Program,
said he believes the expulsion of U.S. ambassadors, and the regional
leaders' response to the conflict in Bolivia, "is the manifestation
of the fact that the USA can no longer impose its will on Latin
America, and very concretely in South America." He says there
are two reasons for this change: "the birth of a regional
power that seeks to be a global player, such as Brazil, a capitalist
power but with different interests from the USA; and the existence
of governments born of the heat of the resistance of social movements
in countries that are large producers of hydrocarbons, as in Venezuela,
Bolivia and perhaps Ecuador."
Zibechi emphasized Bolivia's importance
as the leading supplier of gas to Argentina and Brazil, and how
this contributes to the support Morales receives from these nations.
"Brazil has big stakes in much of Bolivia, and it already
announced that it would not permit a destabilization of the country,"
Zibechi explained. "The key alliance in the region is between
Brazil and Argentina. They have problems, but in this topic they
are very united."
Back in Santiago, Chile, after six hours
of talks between the nine South American presidents, the UNASUR
group issued a statement that expressed its "their full and
firm support for the constitutional government of President Evo
Morales, whose mandate was ratified by a big majority." In
the statement, the leaders "warn that our respective government
energetically reject and will not recognize any situation that
attempts a civil coup and the rupture of institutional order and
which could compromise the territorial integrity of the Republic
of Bolivia." They also decided to send a commission to Bolivia
to investigate the killings in Pando.
Though working to overthrow leftist governments
is unfortunately nothing new in South America, region-wide cooperation
between left-leaning governments, without the presence of the
United States, is new. As Morales and other regional leaders forge
ahead with progressive policies, there may be no turning back
for this changing continent -- regardless of the challenges posed
by the Bolivian opposition. The geopolitical map of the hemisphere
is being redrawn, in large part by the new alliances between South
American nations, and the region's increased resistance to Washington's
political and economic interference.
The economic and agricultural powerhouse
of Brazil is a key part of this new regional defiance and independence.
"In Brazil, the right wing in the parliament questions very
strongly the (U.S. Navy's) Fourth Fleet because they say it is
to control the new oil fields in Brazil," Zibechi explained.
"In Brazil, things don't depend just on Lula being in the
government. Brazil has autonomous politics that go beyond who
governs. ... Because of this, imperial policy is to overthrow
Chavez and Evo before there are changes in these countries that
are so profound that they no longer depend on who is governing."
In Bolivia, much still depends on what
happens on the ground, outside of the presidential meetings and
negotiations. The opposition has lifted its road blockades for
now, and meetings between the government and representatives from
the opposition continue. Meanwhile, many of Bolivia's social organizations
and unions have pledged their support for Morales and against
the right wing. On Sept. 15 thousands of workers, families and
students marched in La Paz, the nation's capital, against the
massacre in Pando and the right's violence. "We are against
the massacre of campesinos which has taken place in Pando,"
Edgar Patanta, the leader of the Regional Workers' Center, said.
"We will not permit the repetition of these acts. We will
defend democracy and life as we have in the past."
Bolivia watch
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