Posted on 05/23/2012 3:39:35 PM PDT by bruinbirdman
One of the most dangerous places in the Western Hemisphere is the city of Warnes, Bolivia, which lies a few kilometers outside the countrys industrial capital of Santa Cruz. There, set back in an open field off a bustling highway, is the new regional defense school of the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas, or ALBAthe eight-member economic and geopolitical bloc founded by Venezuelas Hugo Chavez and Cubas Fidel Castro nearly a decade ago.
Since its launch last spring, the school has become the object of fevered speculation throughout the region concerning its potential role in the indoctrination and training to some of the most radical elements in the Americas. But perhaps the most tangible, and troubling, aspect of the facility is the role now being played there by the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Iran, itself an observer nation in ALBA, is believed to have provided at least some of the seed money for the academy, and no less senior a figure than its Defense Minister, Ahmad Vahidi, presided over the facilitys formal inauguration last May. Latin American officials now estimate that between 50 and 300 trainers from Irans feared clerical army, the Revolutionary Guards, are present in Boliviawith at least some said to be providing indoctrination at the facility.
Irans involvement in the ALBA school serves as a microcosm of the Iranian-Bolivian relationship writ large. Since 2007, when Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad first visited Bolivia, the ties between Tehran and La Paz have deepened dramatically.
Bolivia, for example, is fast emerging as a source of strategic resources for the Islamic Republic. Iran is now rumored to be mining for uranium in no fewer than 11 locations outside of Santa Cruz, close to where the ALBA school is located. Not coincidentally, rumor also has it that the now-infamous Tehran-Caracas air route operated jointly by Conviasa, Venezuelas national airline, and Irans state airline, Iran Air, could be extended to Santa Cruz in the near futurea sure sign of Iranian interest in the area. Additionally, a series of cooperation agreements concluded in 2010 between La Paz and Tehran have made Iran a partner in the mining and exploitation of Bolivias lithium, a key strategic mineral with applications for nuclear weapons development.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, right, and Bolivian President Evo Morales at the presidential palace in Tehran in 2010. (Kaveh Kazemi / Getty Images)
Significantly, the extent of this activityand of Bolivias strategic resource wealth writ largeremains shrouded in mystery. That is because while the mineral deposits of Venezuela, Irans most prominent partner in the region, are comparatively well-known, those of Bolivia are not. This, according to regional observers, makes Bolivia a black box in terms of its resource potentialand consequently its future importance to the Iranian regime.
What is clear is that, at least for the moment, the Islamic Republic has placed considerable value on its burgeoning ties to Bolivia. In exchange for access from the Morales government, Iran has proffered hundreds of millions of dollars in loans to the Bolivian government, agreed to $1 billion-worth of joint commercial and industrial projects, and offered to sell warplanes and helicopters to the Bolivian military. (To date, however, most of these economic overtures have not materialized.)
Irans diplomatic presence in Bolivia has also deepened, with signs that its embassy in La Paz is being expanded under the watchful eye of Bolivias federal police. Bolivia has also become a prominent destination for Irans latest public diplomacy effort, HispanTV. The television channel, a Spanish-language analogue to the regimes influential English-language PressTV, was formally launched with considerable fanfare by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad earlier this year.
Significantly, these contacts could be just the beginning. Over the past several years, Venezuela has served as Irans most stalwart ally in the Americasand its gateway into the region. As part of those ties, Tehran and Caracas have made common cause on everything from Irans nuclear ambitions to a shared opposition to American influence. But that partnership is now in considerable flux.
In a speech last July, Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez officially confirmed what many had already suspected; that he was suffering from an aggressive form of cancer. Although Chavez has struggled to continue governance as normal since then, it is widely understood that his condition is increasingly grave. With Venezuela slated for presidential elections this October, the illnessand Chavez lack of a clear-cut political successorhas raised real questions about the future of his regime, and of the radical Bolivarian revolution that over the past decade has made ideological bedfellows of Tehran and Caracas.
In response, the Iranian regime is stepping up its engagement with other allies in Latin America, as demonstrated by Ahmadinejads very public four-country tour of the region this past January. And because of the sympathetic nature of its regime, as well as its presumed resource wealth, Bolivia figures prominently in Tehrans calculus. Indeed, regional experts now estimate that Bolivia could end up becoming as significant as Venezuela for Iran, both as a source of strategic resources for its widening nuclear program and as a hub for the Iranian regimes expanding asymmetric activities in the Americas.
So far, U.S. officials have paid little attention to Irans engagement with Bolivia, preferring to see it as both nascent and disorganized. It may still be. But there is no mistaking the fact that Irans radical regime sees the anti-American government of Evo Morales as a natural strategic partnerand that it is actively seeking to increase its activities there. It is equally clear, moreover, that Morales has been receptive to Tehrans overtures, and has aided and abetted Irans entry into his country. The results already have strengthened Irans foothold in the Western Hemisphere, and given it access to potentially significant assistance for its nuclear program.
In the process, they also have presented a challenge to U.S. policy. Policymakers in Washington, preoccupied with curbing Irans nuclear ambitions, have not yet formulated a serious strategy to contest and dilute Irans growing global influence, or its presence in the Americas. But Tehrans burgeoning ties to La Paz increasingly have made clear that, if they hope to comprehensively isolate the Iranian regime, they will need to do soand soon.
There are lot’s of ChiComs there already. The Bolivian people are good and too worried about feeding their kids to be very political, but if Evo steps out of line they will do the Mussolini.
Has 0bama apologized to Bolivia yet?
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