Posted on 03/07/2005 8:58:23 AM PST by robowombat
Caudillos to Communism
While weve been so preoccupied with the Middle East and terrorism,
China has really seized the
strategic initiative in Latin America.
William R. Hawkins, U.S. Business and Industry Council
In todays global geopolitical theater many stages and acts are running simultaneously. While the audience is held mostly spellbound by center stagethe Mideast and terrorism with all of its high dramaalmost unnoticed, but barely less important, are the strategic acts playing out on other stages: Russia and the former Soviet Union, North Korea, Central Asia, African genocide and AIDS, China and Latin America. Of considerable importance is Latin America, a knife poised at the soft underbelly of one of the main actors on center stage: the United States.
In 19th-century wars of independence, strong leaders rose to power whose commanding legacies persist to this day in every nation of South America and into Central America and the Caribbean. These strongmen embodied the best (and worst) of large landowners, generals, and beguiling charm, all rolled into one, and they were called caudillos. One of the greatest caudillos was Simon Bolivar (1783-1830), called El Liberator, and the George Washington of South America, who led the nations of Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Panama and Venezuela to independence from Spain. Bolivar still commands vastly more respect than modern-day oligarchs, Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez, both wannabe caudillos who are in reality just tinhorn communist dictators. But that doesnt stop Castro, and especially Chavez, from falsely hitching their wagons to Bolivars star to further their own goals of uniting Latin America into a single anti-U.S. communist bloc.
Sadly, and not without some basis, most Latin Americans categorize U.S. involvement in their affairs as either commercial opportunism (e.g., corporate banana empires) or militaristic imperialism (such as Nicaragua and the Iran-Contras or Colombias ongoing drug wars), punctuated by long periods of outright neglect. This sets the Latin American stage for anti-U.S. sentiment in a region of massive poverty and which, with the exception of Chile, has never known real democracy, and where doors open to anyone promising to alleviate miseryChe Guevara, Castro, Chavez or Red China. Preoccupied at center stage, most U.S. citizens are ignorant of developing political threats in Latin America, but ignorance is perilous. Heres a rundown of the political state of affairs in various Latin American nations highlighting the need for concern.
Venezuela: Hugo Chavez originally came to power by military coup although polls today indicate he is supported by less than one-third of the countrys population. Chavez, whose personal hero is Fidel Castro, and who visited and praised Saddam Hussein, now rules Venezuela, which is the U.S.s second most important oil provider. He has nationalized Venezuelan oil and many other companies and put them under direct government control.
In September 2001, Major Juan Diaz Castillo, Chavezs former pilot and Air Force Operations Chief, who defected, said Chavez used the Venezuelan Air Force to send humanitarian aid to the Taliban, he wanted to send troops to help the Taliban but couldnt circumvent U.S. blockades, and he donated large amounts of money to al Qaeda. Intelligence indicates the Chavez regime may also be protecting and training thousands of Colombian and Arab terrorists, including members of Hezbollah. Margarita Island marks the key location for these terrorist operations and funding.
Chavez rules by near martial law, Cuban intelligence officers train his security and intelligence forces and operate key naval facilities, and Venezuelas government is permeated with Cuban intelligence personnel. Chavez has hired hundreds of Cuban teachers to insert anti-American, pro-socialist propaganda into the educational system. Analysts warn that Chavezs plans for Venezuela bear an uncanny resemblance to Castros blueprint to turn Chile into a Marxist state in the 1960s-70s, when Castro sent thousands of Cuban paramilitaries there to assist Allende.
In January 2003, Major Diaz gave critical insight about Chavez to interviewer J.R. Nyquist: Hugo Chavez is working to form a bloc of countries to fight the U.S. For Hugo Chavez the U.S. is the enemy. And he is convinced that by forming a bloc of countries he can attack the U.S. in various ways. One way would be an economic attack. And on top of this he is not only looking for an alliance with a bloc of countries but also an alliance with terrorist groups because this will give him a direct way to attack the U.S. He sees in the terrorists a force with a defined intention to attack the U.S.
Major Diaz also said, We have proof that Chavez has aided the Colombian [narco-] guerrillas in a big way. Hugo Chavezs aspiration is that the guerrillas will soon take power in Colombia and join the anti-U.S. Latin American bloc. Diaz also said that Venezuelas march toward communism is only a revolution of a minority not a revolution of the people. This offers scant comfort, as thats the historic pattern for how all Communists have grabbed power. The U.S. and Latinos need to awake to the reality that Hugo Chavez is no liberator or caudillo, but a ruthless emerging communist dictator bent on destruction of the U.S. in league with worldwide terrorists.
Brazil: President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva is at best a far left socialist whose heroes are Fidel Castro, Saddam Hussein and Hugo Chavez. On the day he took office, da Silva embraced an axis of good running through Brazil, Venezuela and Cuba. Ryan Mauro reports that da Silva placed Trotskyites, Communist Party officials, and open radicals in power in high places as Cabinet ministers, government officials and advisors, and throughout the government, intelligence, and military. Da Silvas foreign policy chief, Marco Aurelio Garcia, is a communist and founder and director of the Sao Paulo Forum, a group that actively supports terrorism.
Argentina: The Pew Research Center says that anti-Americanism is the highest in Argentina of any Latin American country, at 73%. In the wake of its severe political and economic crisis and financial collapse, far left candidate Nestor Kirchner, favored by Castro, da Silva and Chavez, became president in May 2003. His election fit well into plans for the Cubanization of Latin America and gave an immediate boost to similar movements in Uruguay, Bolivia and Peru.
Ecuador: Lucio Gutierrez became president shortly after da Silva in Brazil and praises Chavez and Castro. He was a militant member of the Marxist left Peronist Party.
Bolivia: It appears that Evo Morales of the leftist MAS (Movement Toward Socialism) Party may be the next president.
Peru & Uruguay: Both Perus Alejandro Toledo and Uruguays Tabare Vazquez are leftist.
Colombia: A significant portion of the country is controlled by FARC, communist narco-terrorists who supply most of the drugs used on the streets of America.
Panama: Following U.S. withdrawal from the Panama Canal Zone, Hutchison Whampoaa Hong Kong-based Chinese front company for the PLA (Peoples Liberation Army) and Beijings Communist Partyleased and now controls the ports on both ends of the Panama Canal. Panamas population is only 2 million, but it now has 40,000 legal Chinese residents and 150,000 illegal Chinese residents. Chinese Triads (organized crime) have a foothold in many Panamanian companies and Panama is close to becoming a de facto Chinese puppet. China-Cuba agreements mean far left radicals in Panama, loyal to Castro, could gain power.
Chile: Since the 1970s a U.S. ally and the only free and democratic country in South America. However, Chiles new president, Ricardo Lagos, is a militant socialist who was Chiles ambassador to the Soviet Union under Marxist Allendes government from 1970-73.
Mexico: Nowhere does corruption run more rampant than Mexico. And despite his apparent friendship with the U.S., President Vicente Fox has formed a strategic alliance with Brazils da Silva. The Mexican government infrastructure is made up largely of socialists, who exert real control, and a radial leftist, Lopez Obrador, may become Mexicos next president. Obrador is currently Mexico City mayor, has an approval rating of 80%, and the Washington Post describes him as a Mexican version of Brazils da Silva.
Haiti: The country is in chaos and the stage is set for the return of Marxist Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Nicaragua: The communist Sandanistas are back in power.
Terrorism in Latin America: Its believed about 20,000 Lebanese Muslims live in the frontier area where Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina meet, and that it is a Hezbollah terrorist operational base. Al Qaeda, the Party of Islamic Unification, the Egyptian branch of Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas are also reported in the area. Muslims are spreading into Chile, Ecuador and Venezuela. Ryan Mauro reports: The Sao Paulo Forum in December 2001 was attended by Fidel Castro, da Silva, Daniel Ortega (former communist dictator of Nicaragua), and representatives from the Communist Parties of Argentina, Peru, Cuba, Chile, Colombia, Uruguay and Venezuela; the ELN and FARC terrorist rebels of Colombia; Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement of Peru; and according to some sources, Middle Eastern terrorist groups. The chief of the Latin American division of the Iraqi Baath Party, as well as representatives of Venezuela, Brazil, Syria, Libya, Iran, North Korea and Cuba attended. Other regular attendees include representatives of Nicaraguas Sandinistas, El Salvadors FMLN, Irish Republican Army, Basque ETA, and PFLP-GC.
The China Factor: In November 2004, Chinese President Hu Jintao conducted a two-week tour of Latin America and concluded several major trade agreements and over 400 business deals with several emerging leftist governments. Chinas rapidly industrializing economy needs massive natural resources, and Latin America is natural resources rich. China is capital rich, and Hu Jintao promised to spend over $100 billion in the next decade on Latin American infrastructure, natural resources and trade and investment deals, including oil. Politically, it appears business agreements between communist Chinas state capitalism and dysfunctional, left-leaning, anti-U.S. governments in Latin America are marriages made in Marxist utopia. China has now been granted observer status at the OAS (Organization of American States), and is likely to conclude a bilateral trade deal with Chile (formerly the staunchest U.S. ally in Latin America) by the end of 2005.
The Domino Theory: In The New American magazine (Jan 24), William F. Jasper reminds readers of The Domino Theory that was central to the Vietnam War. It was believed that If the West didnt oppose the Communist forces backed by Moscow and Beijing, the theory went, the countries of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam would fall to Communism, one by one, in quick succession. Millions of people would be slaughtered, and whole nations would be turned into concentration camps. The Asian nations in the region that didnt fall to overt Communist takeover would come under Red Chinas dominance, nonetheless. The liberal intelligentsia sneered at such simplistic and paranoid notions. They were wrong, of coursefatally horribly wrong. The simplistic theory proved to be fact. Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam did fall like dominoes. Millions were slaughtered, and the survivors were enslaved in concentration camps. The rest of Asia has come under Chinas economic and military dominance. The implications of The Domino Theory for Latin America ought to be glaringly obvious. Judging from events, it appears the dominos have already begun to fall.
Strategic Implications: Whoever controls the Panama Canalthats now Chinahas a chokehold on a huge portion of global commerce (200 million tons of cargo pass through the canal each year). Anti-U.S. Venezuela, the U.S.s second most important oil provider, wants to conclude oil supply agreements with thirsty China. If so, delivery should not be a problem, as China now controls the Panama Canal through which the oil would transit, but that means critical U.S. oil supplies could be diverted.
Brazil, now closely allied with Red China, is a nuclear-capable nation. China and Brazil have a joint space venture with two satellites already in orbit, thus the potential clearly exists to develop nuclear missile delivery systems.
Its been reported that terrorists are among illegal immigrants crossing the U.S. southern border. In view of all the above, control of U.S. borders is a growing and strategic issue central to U.S. homeland security. U.S. citizens are probably faced with both increased danger from terrorists and more Big Brother controls.
Clearly, the global geopolitical theater has stages where monumental historical performances are unfolding largely unnoticed. Center stage could shift dramatically at some point to the western hemisphere. Hopefully the U.S. will wake up to the danger in its own backyard before a fatal surprise collapses the set.
Clearly, the global geopolitical theater has stages where monumental historical performances are unfolding largely unnoticed. Center stage could shift dramatically at some point to the western hemisphere. Hopefully the U.S. will wake up to the danger in its own backyard before a fatal surprise collapses the set.
Unfortunately USAID has turned a blind eye to these problems and Jimmy Carter supports these dictators.
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Russia, China, France, and Germany are not friendly powers. Britain and Italy are friendly, but both are one election cycle away from turning against us. Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Australia are probably reliable, as is Israel. Judging from this article, the Chinese are clearly taking advantage of our deteriorating position in Latin America. It would not surprise me if France and Germany followed suit.
A hostile Latin America would likely force the United States to withdraw from the Middle East, leaving that part of the world open to Islamic extremism, and renewed Russian, German, and French influence. It would force the East Asian democracies to become nuclear powers to counterbalance China.
One hopes President Bush and Secretary of State Rice will act vigorously on this danger.
Rehabilitate Ollie North. I'm not joking! And this time, we do it right. Also, we need about 10 Schools of the Americas. Firstly, it will cause all the Lefties who protest it to be overloaded, and secondly, it will give us several sets of Contras. Oh, and finally, bake the operation of Contra orgs right into the visible defense budget - it works, if done completely with full follow through.
MEXICO, March 6 (RIA Novosti, Mikhail Belyat) - The 9th Seminar of leftist and Marxist parties, organized by the Labor party of Mexico, is under way in the capital of Mexico. The main topic of discussions during the seminar is the opposition toward neo-Liberalism and globalism policies promoted by the United States.
Representatives of 70 leftist parties and movements, from socialist and centrist to radical Marxist, participate in the work of the seminar. Delegates from Communist parties of Russia, Germany, China, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, North Korea, representatives of Frente Amplio, which brought Tabare Vazquez, the first president-socialist, to power in Uruguay, the Palestine Liberation Organisation and Latin American movements fighting against the governments of their countries gathered in Mexico.
The leftist meeting is aimed at consolidating their efforts against neo-liberal models of economy and policy of globalism imposed on the world by the United States, the participants believe.
In an interview with RIA Novosti, Russian delegate, State Duma deputy (KPRF) Anatoly Lokot stated, " In our opinion, the global leftist center is located in Latin America at present. Liberal reforms of the beginning of the 1990s and the followed economic crises sobered up the peoples of the continent and forced them to search for new ways of development. A member of the Labor party has been elected president of Brazil, a supporter and a follower of Che Guevara - in Argentine, a staunch opponent of US globalism - in Venezuela. The socialist Cuba continues to maintain strong positions in Latin America. We believe socialist parties of Asia, primarily China, and leftist movements of Latin America can constitute a nucleus of international opposition toward the American model of world order," Mr. Lokot stated.
"Russia's Communist party is regarded here as a force that can consolidate leftist movements. Our colleagues respect our opinion and welcome our presence at any important event. Together with other parties we participate in organization of annual leftist seminars," underlined Anatoly Lokot.
Sounds like a fine bunch of fun-loving fellows. :-)
The leftist meeting is aimed at consolidating their efforts against neo-liberal models of economy and policy of globalism imposed on the world by the United States, the participants believe.
At this point in time I'm not too thrilled with the U.S. government either.
What the heck is a neo-liberal, anyway?
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