Bolivia coup led by Christian fascist
paramilitary leader and millionaire – with foreign
support
Bolivian coup leader Luis Fernando Camacho is a
far-right multi-millionaire who arose from fascist
movements in the Santa Cruz region, where the US has
encouraged separatism. He has courted support from
Colombia, Brazil, and the Venezuelan opposition.
By Max Blumenthal and Ben Norton
November 12, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - When Luis Fernando
Camacho stormed into Bolivia’s abandoned
presidential palace in the hours after President Evo
Morales’s sudden November 10 resignation, he
revealed to the world a side of the country that
stood at stark odds with the plurinational spirit
its deposed socialist and Indigenous leader had put
forward.
With a Bible in
one hand and a national flag in the other, Camacho
bowed his head in prayer above the presidential
seal, fulfilling his vow to purge his country’s
Native heritage from government and “return God to
the burned palace.”
“Pachamama will
never return to the palace,” he said, referring to
the Andean Mother Earth spirit. “Bolivia belongs to
Christ.”
Bolivia’s extreme
right-wing opposition had overthrown leftist
President Evo Morales that day, following demands by
the country’s military leadership that he step
down.
Virtually unknown outside his country, where he
had never won a democratic election, Camacho stepped
into the void. He is
a powerful multi-millionaire named in the Panama
Papers, and an ultra-conservative Christian
fundamentalist groomed by a fascist paramilitary
notorious for its racist violence, with a base in
Bolivia’s wealthy separatist region of Santa Cruz.
Camacho hails
from a family of corporate elites who have long
profited from Bolivia’s plentiful natural gas
reserves. And his family lost part of its wealth
when Morales nationalized the country’s resources,
in order to fund his vast social programs — which
cut poverty by 42 percent and extreme poverty by
60 percent.
In the lead-up to the coup, Camacho met with
leaders from right-wing governments in the region to
discuss their plans to destabilize Morales. Two
months before the putsch,
he
tweeted gratitude: “Thank you Colombia! Thank
you Venezuela!” he exclaimed, tipping his hat to
Juan Guaido’s coup operation. He also recognized
the far-right government of Jair Bolsonaro,
declaring, “Thank you Brazil!”
Camacho had spent years leading an overtly
fascist separatist organization called the
Unión Juvenil
Cruceñista. The Grayzone edited the following
clips from a promotional historical documentary that
the group posted on its own
social media accounts:
The rich oligarch leader of Bolivia's right-wing coup, Luis Fernando Camacho, was the leader of an explicitly fascist paramilitary group.
While Camacho and
his far-right forces served as the muscle behind the
coup, their political allies waited to reap the
benefits.
The presidential
candidate Bolivia’s opposition had fielded in the
October election, Carlos Mesa, is a “pro-business”
privatizer with extensive ties to Washington. US
government cables published by WikiLeaks reveal that
he regularly corresponded with American officials in
their efforts to destabilize Morales.
Mesa is currently
listed as an expert at the Inter-American Dialogue,
a DC-based think tank funded by the US government’s
soft-power arm
USAID,
various oil giants, and a host of multi-national
corporations active in Latin America.
Evo Morales, a
former farmer who rose to prominence in social
movements before becoming the leader of the powerful
grassroots political party Movement Toward Socialism
(MAS), was Bolivia’s first Indigenous leader. Wildly
popular in the country’s substantial Native and
peasant communities, he won numerous elections and
democratic referenda over a 13-year period, often in
landslides.
On October 20,
Morales won re-election by more than 600,000 votes,
giving him just above the 10 percent margin needed
to defeat opposition presidential candidate Mesa in
the first round.
Experts who did a
statistical analysis of Bolivia’s publicly available
voting data found
no evidence of irregularities or fraud. But the
opposition claimed otherwise, and took to the
streets in weeks of protests and riots.
The events that
precipitated the resignation of Morales were
indisputably violent. Right-wing opposition gangs
attacked numerous elected politicians from the
ruling leftist MAS party. They then ransacked the
home of President Morales, while burning down the
houses of several other top officials. The family
members of some politicians were kidnapped and held
hostage until they resigned. A female socialist
mayor was
publicly tortured by a mob.
The squalid US-backed fanatics of the Bolivian right ransack the house of the country’s elected president, Evo Morales. And the havoc is just beginning. Let no one call them “pro-democracy.” pic.twitter.com/rwwvOSAEaA
Following the
forced departure of Morales, coup leaders arrested
the president and vice president of the government’s
electoral body, and forced the organization’s other
officials to resign. Camacho’s followers proceeded
to
burn Wiphala flags that symbolized the country’s
Indigenous population and the plurinational vision
of Morales.
The Organization
of American States, a pro-US organization
founded by Washington during the Cold War as an
alliance of right-wing anti-communist countries in
Latin America, helped rubber stamp the Bolivian
coup. It called for new elections, claiming there
were numerous irregularities in the October 20 vote,
without citing any evidence. Then the OAS remained
silent as Morales was overthrown by his military and
his party’s officials were attacked and violently
forced to resign.
The day after, the Donald Trump
White House enthusiastically praised the coup,
trumpeting it as a “significant moment for
democracy,” and a “strong signal to the illegitimate
regimes in Venezuela and Nicaragua.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Emerging from the shadows to lead a violent
far-right putsch
While Carlos Mesa
timidly condemned the opposition’s violence, Camacho
egged it on, ignoring calls for an international
audit of the election and emphasizing his maximalist
demand to purge all supporters of Morales from
government. He was the true face of the opposition,
concealed for months behind the moderate figure of
Mesa.
A 40-year-old
multi-millionaire businessman from the separatist
stronghold of Santa Cruz, Camacho has never run for
office. Like Venezuelan coup leader Juan Guaidó,
whom more than 80 percent of Venezuelans had never
heard of until the US government anointed him as
supposed “president,” Camacho was an obscure figure
until the coup attempt in Bolivia hit its stride.
He first created
his Twitter account on May 27,
2019. For months, his tweets
went ignored, generating no more than three or four
retweets and likes. Before the election, Camacho did
not have a Wikipedia article, and there were few
media profiles on him in Spanish- or
English-language media.
Camacho issued a
call for a strike on July 9, posting videos
on Twitter that got just over 20 views.
The goal of the strike was to try to force the
resignation of Bolivian government’s electoral organ
the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE). In other
words, Camacho was pressuring the government’s
electoral authorities to step down more than three
months before the presidential election.
It was not until
after the election that Camacho was thrust into the
limelight and transformed into a celebrity by
corporate media conglomerates like the local
right-wing network Unitel,Telemundo,
andCNN en Español.
All of a sudden,
Camacho’s tweets calling for Morales to resign were
lighting up withthousands of
retweets.
The coup machinery had been activated.
Mainstream
outlets like the New York Times and Reuters followed
by anointing the unelected Camacho as the “leader”
of Bolivia’s opposition. But even as he lapped up
international attention, key portions of the
far-right activist’s background were omitted.
Left unmentioned
were Camacho’s deep and well-established connections
to Christian extremist paramilitaries notorious for
racist violence and local business cartels, as well
as the right-wing governments across the region.
It was in the
fascist paramilitaries and separatist atmosphere of
Santa Cruz where Camacho’s politics were formed, and
where the ideological contours of the coup had been
defined.
Cadre of a Francoist-style
fascist paramilitary
Luis Fernando
Camacho was groomed by the Unión Juvenil Cruceñista,
or Santa Cruz Youth Union (UJC), a fascist
paramilitary organization that has been linked to
assassination plots against Morales. The group is
notorious for assaulting leftists, Indigenous
peasants, and journalists, all while espousing a
deeply racist, homophobic ideology.
Since Morales
entered office in 2006, the UJC has campaigned to
separate from a country its members believed had
been overtaken by a Satanic Indigenous mass.
Even the US
embassy in Bolivia has described
UJC members as “racist” and “militant,” noting that
they “have frequently attacked pro-MAS/government
people and installations.”
After journalist
Benjamin Dangl visited with UJC
members
in 2007, he described them as the “brass knuckles”
of the Santa Cruz separatist movement. “The Unión
Juvenil has been known to beat and whip campesinos
marching for gas nationalization, throw rocks at
students organizing against autonomy, toss molotov
cocktails at the state television station, and
brutally assault members of the landless movement
struggling against land monopolies,” Dangl wrote.
“When we have to
defend our culture by force, we will,” a UJC leader
told Dangl. “The defense of liberty is more
important than life.”
Camacho was
elected as vice president of the UJC in 2002, when
he was just 23 years old. He left the organization
two years later to build his family’s business
empire and rise through the ranks of the Pro-Santa
Cruz Committee. It was in that organization that he
was taken under the wing of one of the separatist
movement’s most powerful figures, a
Bolivian-Croatian oligarch named Branko Marinkovic.
In August,
Camacho tweeted a photo with his “great friend,”
Marinkovic. This friendship was crucial to
establishing the rightist activist’s credentials and
forging the basis of the coup that would take form
three months later.
Hoy cumple años un gran líder cruceño y expresidente del Comité pro Santa Cruz pero todo un gran amigo, Branko Marinkovic, quien entregó todo, su libertad y su vida, por su pueblo. pic.twitter.com/uVzNrgH2pI
Camacho’s Croatian godfather and
separatist powerbroker
Branko Marinkovic
is a major landowner who ramped up his support for
the right-wing opposition after some of his land was
nationalized by the Evo Morales government. As
chairman of the Pro-Santa Cruz Committee, he oversaw
the operations of the main engine of separatism in
Bolivia.
In a 2008 letter
to Marinkovic, the International Federation for
Human Rights denounced
the committee as an “actor and promoter of racism
and violence in Bolivia.”
The human rights
group added that it “condemn[ed] the attitude and
secessionist, unionist and racist discourses as well
as the calls for military disobedience of which the
Pro-Santa Cruz Civic Committee for is one of the
main promoters.”
In 2013,
journalist Matt Kennard reported
that the US government was working closely with the
Pro-Santa Cruz Committee to encourage the
balkanization of Bolivia and to undermine Morales.
“What they [the US] put across was how they could
strengthen channels of communication,” the vice
president of the committee told Kennard. “The
embassy said that they would help us in our
communication work and they have a series of
publications where they were putting forward their
ideas.”
In a 2008 profile
on Marinkovic, the New York Times
acknowledged the extremist undercurrents of the
Santa Cruz separatist movement the oligarch presided
over. It described the area as “a bastion of openly
xenophobic groups like the Bolivian Socialist
Falange, whose hand-in-air salute draws inspiration
from the fascist Falange of the former Spanish
dictator Franco.”
The Bolivian
Socialist Falange was a fascist group that provided
safe haven to Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie during
the Cold War. A former Gestapo torture expert,
Barbie was repurposed by the CIA through its
Operation Condor program to help exterminate
communism across the continent. (Despite its
antiquated name, like the German National
Socialists, this far-right extremist group was
violently anti-leftist, committed to killing
socialists.)
The Bolivian
Falange came into power in 1971 when its leader,
Gen. Hugo Banzer Suarez, ousted
the leftist government of Gen. Juan Jose Torres
Gonzales. The government of Gonzales had infuriated
business leaders by nationalizing industries and
antagonized Washington by ousting the Peace Corps,
which it viewed as an instrument of CIA penetration.
The Nixon administration immediately welcomed Banzer
with open arms and courted him as a key bulwark
against the spread of socialism in the region. (An
especially ironic
1973 dispatch appears on Wikileaks showing
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger thanking Banzer
for congratulating him on his Nobel Peace Prize).
The movement’s
putschist legacy persevered during the Morales era
through organizations like the UJC and figures such
as Marinkovic and Camacho.
The Times noted
that Marinkovic also supported the activities of the
UJC, describing the fascist group as “a
quasi-independent arm of the committee led by Mr.
Marinkovic.” A member of the UJC board told the US
newspaper of record in an interview, “We will
protect Branko with our own lives.”
Marinkovic has
espoused the kind of Christian nationalist rhetoric
familiar to the far-right organizations of Santa
Cruz, calling, for instance, for a “crusade
for the truth”
and insisting that God is on his side.
The oligarch’s
family hails from Croatia, where he has dual
citizenship. Marinkovic has long been dogged by
rumors that his family members were involved in the
country’s powerful fascist Ustashe movement.
The Ustashe
collaborated openly with Nazi German occupiers
during World War Two. Their successors returned to
power after Croatia declared independence from the
former Yugoslavia – a former socialist country that
was intentionally
balkanized in a NATO war, much in the same way
that Marinkovic hoped Bolivia would be.
be.
Marinkovic denies that his family was part of the
Ustashe. He claimed in an interview with the New
York Times that his father fought against the Nazis.
But even some of his sympathizers are skeptical.
A Balkan analyst
from the private intelligence firm Stratfor, which
works closely with the US government and is
popularly known as the “shadow
CIA,” produced a rough
background profile onMarinkovic,
speculating, “Still don’t know his full story, but I
would bet a lot of $$$ that this dude’s parents are
1st gen (his name is too Slavic) and that they were
Ustashe (read: Nazi) sympathizers fleeing Tito’s
Communists after WWI.”
The Stratfor
analyst excerpted a
2006 article by journalist Christian Parenti,
who had visited Marinkovic at his ranch in Santa
Cruz. Evo Morales’ “land reform could lead to civil
war,” Marinkovic warned Parenti in the
Texas-accented English he picked up while studying
at the University of Texas, Houston.
Today, Marinkovic
is an ardent supporter of Brazil’s far-right leader
Jair Bolsonaro,
whose only complaint about Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet was that he “didn’t
kill enough.”
Marinkovic is
also a public admirer of Venezuela’s far-right
opposition. “Todos
somos Leopoldo”
— “we are all Leopoldo,” he tweeted in support of
Leopoldo López, who has been involved in numerous
coup attempts against Venezuela’s elected leftist
government.
While Marinkovic
denied any role in armed militant activity in his
interview with Parenti, he was accused in 2008 of
playing a central role in an attempt to assassinate
Morales and his Movement Toward Socialism party
allies.
He told the New
York Times less than two years before the plot
developed, “If there is no legitimate international
mediation in our crisis, there is going to be
confrontation. And unfortunately, it is going to be
bloody and painful for all Bolivians.”
An assassination plot links Bolivia’s
right to international fascists
In April 2009, a
special unit of the Bolivian security services
barged into a luxury hotel room and cut down three
men who were said to be involved in a plot to kill
Evo Morales. Two others remained on the loose. Four
of the alleged conspirators had Hungarian or
Croatian roots and ties to rightist politics in
eastern Europe, while another was a right-wing
Irishman,
Michael Dwyer, who had only arrived in Santa
Cruz six months before.
The ringleader of
the group was said to be a former leftist journalist
named Eduardo Rosza-Flores who had turned to fascism
and belonged to Opus Dei, the traditionalist
Catholic cult that emerged under the dictatorship of
Spain’s Francisco Franco. In fact, the
codename Rosza-Flores assumed in the
assassination plot was “Franco,” after the late
Generalissimo.
During the 1990s,
Rosza fought on behalf of the Croatian First
International Platoon, or the PIV, in the war to
separate from Yugoslavia. A Croatian journalist told
Time that the “PIV was a notorious group: 95% of
them had criminal histories, many were part of
Nazi and fascist groups, from Germany to
Ireland.”
By 2009, Rosza
returned home to Bolivia to crusade on behalf of
another separatist movement in Santa Cruz. And it
was there that he was killed in a luxury hotel with
no apparent source of income and a massive stockpile
of guns.
The government
later released photos of Rosza and a co-conspirator
posing with their weapons. Publication of emails
between the ringleader and Istvan Belovai,
a former Hungarian military intelligence officer who
served as a double agent for the CIA, cemented the
perception that Washington had a hand in the
operation.
Marinkovic was
subsequently charged
with providing $200,000 to the plotters. The
Bolivian-Croatian oligarch initially fled to the
United States, where he was given asylum, then
relocated to Brazil,
where he lives today. He denied any involvement in
the plan to kill Morales.
As journalist
Matt Kennard reported, there was another thread that
tied the plot to the US: the alleged participation
of an NGO leader named Hugo Achá Melgar.
“Rozsa didn’t
come here by himself, they brought him,” the
Bolivian government’s lead investigator told
Kennard. “Hugo Achá Melgar brought him.”
The Human Rights Foundation destabilizes
Bolivia
Achá was not just
the head of any run-of-the-mill NGO. He had founded
the Bolivian subsidiary of the Human Rights
Foundation (HRF), an international right-wing outfit
that is known for hosting a “school for revolution”
for activists seeking regime change in states
targeted by the US government.
HRF is run by
Thor Halvorssen Jr., the son of the late
Venezuelan oligarch and CIA asset Thor Halvorssen
Hellum. The first cousin of the veteran Venezuelan
coup plotter Leopoldo Lopez, Halvorssen was a former
college Republican activist who crusaded against
political correctness and other familiar right-wing
hobgoblins.
After a brief career as a firebrand right-wing
film producer, in which he oversaw a scandalous
“anti-environmentalist” documentary financed by
a mining corporation,
Halvorssen rebranded
as a promoter of liberalism and the enemy of global
authoritarianism. He launched the HRF with
grants from right-wing billionaires like Peter
Thiel, conservative foundations, and NGOs including
Amnesty International. The group has since been at
the forefront of training activists for
insurrectionary activity from Hong Kong to the
Middle East to Latin America.
Though Achá was
granted asylum in the US, the HRF has continued
pushing regime change in Bolivia. As Wyatt Reed
reported for The
Grayzone,
HRF “freedom fellow” Jhanisse Vaca Daza helped
trigger the initial stage of the coup by blaming
Morales for the Amazon fires that consumed parts of
Bolivia in August, mobilizing international protests
against him.
At the time, Daza
posed as an “environmental activist” and student of
non-violence who articulated her concerns in
moderate-seeming calls for more international aid to
Bolivia. Through her NGO, Rios de Pie, she helped
launch the #SOSBolivia hashtag, which signaled the
imminent foreign-backed regime-change operation.
Courting
the regional right, prepping the coup
While HRF’s Daza
rallied protests outside Bolivian embassies in
Europe and the US, Fernando Camacho remained behind
the scenes, lobbying right-wing governments in the
region to bless the coming coup.
In May,
Camacho met with Colombia’s far-right President Ivan
Duque. Camacho was helping to spearhead regional
efforts at undermining the legitimacy of Evo
Morales’ presidency at the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights, seeking to block his candidacy in the
October election.
That same month,
the rightist Bolivian agitator also met with Ernesto
Araújo,
the chancellor of Jair Bolsonaro’s
ultra-conservative administration in Brazil. Through
the meeting, Camacho successfully secured
Bolsonaro’s backing for regime change in Bolivia.
This November 10,
Araújo enthusiastically endorsed the ouster of
Morales, declaring that “Brazil will support the
democratic and constitutional transition” in the
country.
Then in August,
two months before Bolivia’s presidential election,
Camacho held court with officials from Venezuela’s
US-appointed coup regime. These included
Gustavo Tarre, Guaido’s faux Venezuelan OAS
ambassador, who formerly worked at the right-wing
Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
think tank in Washington.
After the
meeting, Camacho tweeted gratitude to the Venezuelan
coup-mongers, as well as to
Colombia and Brazil.
No vamos a parar hasta tener una democracia real! Seguimos avanzando!
Vamos sumando apoyo... ahora lo hace Venezuela...Gracias a Dios.. hay esperanza!
Mesa and Camacho: a
marriage of capitalist convenience
Back in Bolivia,
Carlos Mesa occupied the spotlight as the
opposition’s presidential candidate.
His erudite image
and centrist policy proposals put him in a seemingly
alternate political universe from fire-breathing
rightists like Camacho and Marinkovic. For them, he
was a convenient front man and acceptable candidate
who promised to defend their economic interests.
“It might be that
he is not my favorite, but I’m going to vote for
him, because I don’t want Evo,” Marinkovic told a
right-wing Argentine newspaper
five days before the election.
Indeed, it was
Camacho’s practical financial interests that
appeared to have necessitated his support for Mesa.
The Camacho family
has formed a natural gas cartel in Santa Cruz. As
the Bolivian outlet Primera Linea
reported,
Luis Fernando Camacho’s father, Jose Luis, was the
owner of a company called Sergas that distributed
gas in the city; his uncle, Enrique, controlled
Socre, the company that ran the local gas production
facilities; and his cousin, Cristian, controls
another local gas distributor called Controgas.
According to
Primera Linea, the Camacho family was using the
Pro-Santa Cruz Committee as a political weapon to
install Carlos Mesa into power and ensure the
restoration of their business empire.
Mesa has a
well-documented history of advancing the goals of
transnational companies at the expense of his own
country’s population. The neoliberal politician and
media personality served as vice president when the
US-backed President Gonzalo “Goni” Sanchez de Lozada
provoked mass protests with his 2003 plan to
allow a consortium of multinational corporations to
export the country’s natural gas to the US through a
Chilean port.
Bolivia’s
US-trained security forces met the ferocious
protests with
brutal repression. After presiding over
the killing of 70 unarmed protesters, Sanchez de
Lozada fled to Miami and was succeeded by Mesa.
By 2005, Mesa was
also
ousted by huge demonstrations spurred by his
protection of privatized natural gas companies. With
his demise, the election of Morales and the rise of
the socialist and rural Indigenous movements behind
him were just beyond the horizon.
US government cables released by WikiLeaks show
that, after his ouster, Mesa continued regular
correspondence with American officials. A
2008 memo from the US embassy in Bolivia
revealed that Washington was conspiring with
opposition politicians in the lead-up to the 2009
presidential election, hoping to undermine and
ultimately unseat Morales.
The memo noted that Mesa had met with the chargé
d’affaires of the US embassy, and had privately told
them he planned to run for president. The cable
recalled: “Mesa told us his party will be
ideologically similar to a social democratic party
and that he hoped to strengthen ties with the
Democratic party. ‘We have nothing against the
Republican party, and have in fact gotten support
from IRI (International Republican Institute) in the
past, but we think we share more ideology with the
Democrats,’ he added.”
Today, Mesa serves
as an in-house “expert”
at the Inter-American Dialogue, a neoliberal
Washington-based think tank focused on Latin
America. One of the Dialogue’s top donors is the US
Agency for International Development (USAID), the
State Department subsidiary that was exposed in
classified diplomatic cables published on Wikileaks
for strategically directing millions of dollars
to opposition groups including those “opposed to Evo
Morales’ vision for indigenous communities.”
Other top
funders of the Dialogue include oil titans like
Chevron and ExxonMobil; Bechtel, which inspired the
initial protests against the administration in which
Mesa served; the Inter-American Development Bank,
which has forcefully opposed Morales’
socialist-oriented policies; and the Organization of
American States (OAS), which helped delegitimize the
Morales’s re-election victory with dubious claims of
irregular vote counts.
Finishing the job
When Carlos Mesa
touched off nationwide protests in October by
accusing the Evo Morales government of committing
electoral fraud, the right-wing firebrand hailed by
his followers as “Macho Camacho” emerged from the
shadows. Behind him was the hardcore separatist
shock force that he led in Santa Cruz.
Mesa faded into
the distance as Camacho emerged as the authentic
face of the coup, rallying his forces with the
uncompromising rhetoric and fascist symbology that
defined the Unión Juvenil Cruceñista paramilitary.
As he declared
victory over Morales, Camacho exhorted his followers
to“finish the
job, let’s get the elections going, let’s start
judging the government criminals, let’s put them in
jail.”
Back in Washington, meanwhile, the Trump
administration released an
official statement celebrating Bolivia’s coup,
declaring that “Morales’s departure preserves
democracy.”
Max Blumenthal is an
award-winning journalist and author, and the founder
and editor of The Grayzone.
Ben Norton is a journalist, writer, and
filmmaker, and the assistant editor of The Grayzone.
This article was originally published by "GrayZone"
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