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from the January edition of Zmagazine
By Erica Thompson
International
observers have denounced recent activities of the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) and the National Endowment for
Democracy (NED) as designed to overthrow democratically elected
presidents Evo Morales of Bolivia and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. A
similar strategy is underway to undermine the electoral process in El
Salvador by striking fear and confusion into voters before legislative
and presidential elections in 2009.
Since
November 2007, El Salvador's leftist party, the FMLN (Farabundo Martí
National Liberation Front), has been consistently polling at a 12-14
point advantage for upcoming legislative, municipal, and presidential
elections—ahead of the right-wing ARENA (National Republican Alliance)
party's presidential candidate and former national civilian police
director, Rodrigo Avila, who has peaked at around 38 percent by
conservative estimates.
Because an FMLN victory could deal a profound
loss to Washington and Wall Street by countering attempts to increase
the corporate privatization of land and public services, business media
and government officials have stepped up attempts to defeat them in the
press and behind the scenes.
In
a recent address to the American Enterprise Institute, Salvadoran
Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta implored the U.S. government to
intervene in the elections on ARENA's behalf. In addition,
international press reports have propagated ridiculous claims of a
mounting "terrorist conspiracy" between the FMLN, the FARC in Colombia,
and Hugo Chavez. Wall Street Journal editor Mary Anastasía
O'Grady has complained that if the FMLN wins, foreign investors will
suffer. Indeed, several countries that participated in the 18th
IBERO-American Summit in October agreed that corporate privatization
has failed the majority of people in Latin America. Presidents in
Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Paraguay, and Guatemala
are proposing increased regulation and oversight of corporate
expansion. An FMLN victory in El Salvador promises further movement in
this direction.
FMLN
candidate Mauricio Funes has said that an FMLN administration would
work to oppose biofuel production and the current profit structure for
mining projects in favor of spurring agricultural development. "We have
to improve agricultural production. Over the past 19 years of ARENA
government, the infrastructure for food production has been neglected
and dismantled. It is essential and a priority to allot land use for
food production and the harvesting of vegetables and staple grains.
This is what the people need. We cannot allow ourselves the luxury of
allotting areas of land for biofuel production because we are not going
to work to feed machines; we have to work to feed human beings."
In its
attempt to confuse and ultimately sabotage the FMLN's campaign,
right-wing Venezuelan-based pro-U.S. media organization Fuerza
Solidaria has released a set of television ads and door-to-door
leaflets that assail potential voters with the usual dose of
misinformation and scare tactics that accompany every electoral
campaign in El Salvador. Designed to suppress votes for the FMLN, one
of the ads portrays Funes and the FMLN party as an out-of-touch,
antiquated relic rather than a political manifestation of the
Salvadoran peoples' historic, and ongoing, broad-based resistance to
foreign exploitation. Simplistic "flow chart" arrows on the ad imply
that an FMLN-led government would sacrifice remittance money from the
U.S. to be a puppet for Chavez's "anti-American expansion project." The
intended message is clear and has been the preferred threat of the
immigrant-bashing Bush administration to Salvadorans on both sides of
the border: those who support the FMLN are against the U.S. If the FMLN
wins the election, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will
begin massively deporting Salvadorans and the U.S. will cut off
remittances.
USAID, NED, and Fuerza Solidaria—with the help
of corporate-owned media and the U.S. government—have been a major
motor behind anti-democratic political strategies in Venezuela and
Bolivia since 2001. In April 2002, the United States utilized the NED
to channel funds to private organizations that were running covert
propaganda campaigns in support of a failed coup in Venezuela, which
detained President Chavez and recognized the short-lived, pro-U.S.
government. According to the New York Times, the NED
"funneled more than $877,000 into Venezuelan opposition groups in the
weeks and months before the unsuccessful coup attempt."
In the wake
of the failed coup, the NED channeled another $53,400 to help create a
U.S. backed organization called Sumate, a group designed to unite,
strengthen, and mobilize opposition to the popularly elected Chavez
government, and which supported Sumate's efforts to disseminate
disinformation. In 2004 the group published fake exit polls that
claimed Chavez lost the referendum recall vote. While their strategies
have mostly failed, the actions of Sumate and NED have effectively cast
doubt on the legitimacy and democratic goals of the Chavez government,
weakening its image internationally.
In Bolivia,
investigative journalists Jeremy Bigwood and Benjamin Dangl's inquiries
through the Freedom of Information Act and one-on-one interviews showed
that the former U.S. embassy there—through USAID and NED—had maintained
close relationships with right-wing opposition groups to "promote
democracy" by undermining President Morales as well. Through these
connections and a USAID Political Party Reform Project, the U.S. has
supported forces that could "serve as a counterweight" to Morales's MAS
(Movement Toward Socialism) party. In response, Morales recently kicked
the U.S. ambassador out of Bolivia. USAID and Fuerza Solidaria were
also exposed for their attempts to influence Bolivia's referendum in
August 2008.
In November 2007, another NED recipient, the
International Republican Institute (IRI), presented Salvadoran
President Tony Saca of the ARENA party with the "Freedom Award" for
promoting U.S. values in El Salvador such as "linking economic growth
with democratic governance and vigorously defending freedom at home and
abroad." Never mind the re-emergence of death squads, unsuccessful
attempts to convict protestors and vendors as "terrorists," and an
unprecedented post-war increase in Salvadoran migration to, and
deportations from, the U.S. during his term. This exercise in elite
back-patting not only unveils the biases of the IRI, which is chaired
by Republican Senator John McCain, but also underscores the U.S.
government's explicit endorsement of the right-wing ARENA party,
another act of intervention and electoral manipulation.
In January
2008 U.S.-based CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El
Salvador) received a familiar warning from the Department of Justice
accusing the group of "acting as a foreign agent" of the FMLN party,
presumably as backlash for its political connections with the leftist
social movement in El Salvador. An identical letter 14 years ago
signaled the beginning of a massive three-year FBI infiltration project
aimed at destroying the organization. When asked to name CISPES's
"conspiratorial allies" past and present, Executive Director Burke
Stansbury responded: "People and popular movements organized to
challenge U.S. sponsored political, economic, and electoral violence
are the ones that get our attention and our commitments. Our government
has designed and rewarded the brutal repression of countless uprisings
in El Salvador, and is still very active in this way." Is the FMLN a
CISPES ally? "Absolutely. We have always maintained political
solidarity with the FMLN and will continue to do so. What is more, we
are committed in every way to challenging U.S. attempts to deny El
Salvador its basic rights as a sovereign country. Elections are only
the tip of the iceberg."
In June the
U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, Charles Glazer, told a CISPES
delegation that the U.S. government's days of interfering in El
Salvador's elections are over. He said that although they did intervene
in the 2004 presidential election, they would not do so again in 2009.
His aide then explained that the delegation "wouldn't have to worry
about fraud this time because the NDI and IRI will be training
[Salvadorans] how to conduct a quick count." One has to wonder what the
embassy's definition of intervention is.
To make the
U.S. government and ARENA party alliance even more transparent,
Ambassador Glazer appeared publicly in early November with the outgoing
Salvadoran president at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, DC.
President Saca was on the campaign trail again—with Salvadoran taxpayer
money—to raise the profile of ARENA with the ironically titled "Peace
and Prosperity" conference. Glazer was at his side, ready to field
questions and concerns.
There is no
doubt that major changes underfoot in the Latin American region have
put Washington on edge. Country after country is electing governments
who represent the majority of people instead of the financial interests
of a few. El Salvador's left appears destined for both an historic
victory at the polls and a new phase of struggle against U.S.
dominance, as USAID and NED have become the faltering empire's new
"diplomatic weapons" of choice.
Z
Erica Thompson works with CISPES in San Salvador.
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