It is common among many of us nowadays to
see the US invasion and occupation of Iraq as signalling an entirely new
phase in world history. We see it as an example of a new rampant and
raging imperialism. The sole superpower has abandoned any pretence at
legality, and will proceed to do exactly what it wants anywhere it wants
because of its greater military strength. And many of us have also felt
that this effectively constitutes a new conjuncture in international
capitalism, one in which multilateralism will become less significant,
and forms of control will become more overt and more oppressive.
But recently, a friend from Central America, visiting Asia, provided a
slightly different perspective. Alejandro Bendana from Nicaragua worked
for the Sandinista government in a high capacity; he has subsequently
been involved in progressive political and social activism within
Nicaragua, in what has often been a largely hostile environment.
Alejandro pointed out that for those living in
Central and South America, this supposedly 'new' aggressive attitude of
the United States is nothing new at all. For most of that continent, any
attempt at political and economic change is (and has been for a century
now) a constant balancing act between how much can be achieved
internally and the extent of toleration of the administration in
Washington.
Nicaragua, for example, was invaded five
times in the past century. And many countries of that region have been
invaded, if not periodically, then at least sufficiently often to keep
the memory and perception of immanent invasion constantly alive. The
cases of open and less open intervention of the US are only too numerous
across the continent: Chile during the Allende regime; Panama; Grenada;
all the dictators and disgusting army rulers who were openly propped up
by the US to serve their own interests. The amazing fact about the
government in Cuba is that it has somehow managed to survive despite
these incredible odds, and despite the overt and covert attempts of the
US administration to destroy it.
After the Second World War, over more than two decades, the United
States has intervened militarily somewhere in the world every nine
months. This apparent hyperactivity all over the world, and especially
in the western hemisphere, was only brought to a temporary halt by the
Vietnam war. At first this war concentrated the mind and energies of the
US government, so that it was not really in a position to engage in too
many other places. Then, when it became apparent that despite the
bombing and continued aggression in that peasant society, the US would
not win that war, and when it was forced to engage in peace talks from
the early 1970s, this acted as a disincentive for further military
exploits for a time.
But that period of relatively subdued military interventionism now seems
to be at an end. We are now back to business as usual, in terms of
active involvement of the US government in destabilizing regimes in
other countries, and using force when other means do not seem to work to
its satisfaction.
In that sense, said Alejandro, what we have observed in the recent past,
in Afghanistan and now in Iraq, may simply represent the 'Central
Americanization' of the rest of the world. There is a generation in Asia
that was born after the end of the Vietnam war which does not have the
same direct sense of the US as imperialist, and which is only now being
exposed to what every Central American has known for some time.
If this is indeed the case, and continuity is more important than change
in the context of US imperialism today, then it is important for us to
learn what our Central American friends and comrades may have to tell us
about their own experience.
The first point, Alejandro emphasized, is just how difficult it is to
work towards progressive and socialist changes, and to ensure the
survival of democratic institutions and processes. The capacity of the
US administration for malevolence cannot be underestimated, he said. It
is not just the use of force and open and violent aggression to ensure
its own interests, which serves as a threat and a warning to others. It
is also the continuous use of all levers of power and the cynical
manipulation of even normal discontent, to subvert democratic and
socialist experiments. The use of the media, for example, has become one
of the potent instruments of control, subversion and manipulation of
political processes.
The second point, however, is that despite this very depressing overall
context, progressive alternatives are still possible, and some regimes
manage to survive. Cuba is the most outstanding example; but currently,
even the regime of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela has managed to survive the
most recent attempt by the US, using rightwing elements within the
country, to destabilize it through the oil strike.
Third, even across this region that is Uncle Sam's backyard and that has
been for so long the object of its domination, there are growing
indications of dissent and popular demands for democratic and socialist
alternatives which require defying the US. The overwhelming victory of
the Workers' Party candidate Lula in the Brazilian election; the
victories of other progressive candidates elsewhere in the continent;
the growing recognition of the demands of indigenous populations in
Ecuador, Peru, Colombia and elsewhere-all point to the substantial shift
in politics.
In this context, said Alejandro ironically, the progressive movements in
Latin America may be even relieved that the US has shifted its attention
elsewhere and is now too busy to try and exercise the same degree of
relentless control over the politics and economics of the region.
Meanwhile, the dissenting movements in Asia will find much to learn from
their Latin American counterparts.
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