Evo Morales Is Now A US Target
By Stephen Lendman
05/03/06 "ICH"
-- --
The May 2 Wall Street Journal had a feature front page story
headlined "Bolivia Seizes Natural-Gas Fields In a Show of Energy
Nationalism." That alone signals a call to arms that's backed up
strongly in the copy that follows.
The Journal began its heated rhetoric claiming Evo Morales has
been "emboldened by Hugo Chavez's moves against private oil
companies" and on May 1 (symbolically on May Day celebrating
working people around the world including in the US in a big way
for the first time) nationalized the country's largest natural
gas field, San Alberto, and ordered the army to "take control of
it and the country's other fields." It went on to explain that
it ordered foreign oil companies to relinquish control of the
fields, accept "much tougher operating terms or leave the
country."
Bolivian law is clear that the state owns the resources in the
country. Up to now it's allowed foreign investors to operate the
fields and take the majority share of production from them to
sell for their gain. Last year, however, Bolivia raised the
state's take to an effective 50% of production by increasing
taxes and royalties. Yesterday the government went further by
declaring the state owns the gas once it's been extracted and
that the companies operating in the two largest fields would
only get 18% of the production for themselves.
Translating the Journal's Message Including What They Failed to
Explain
A little translation is in order. What the Journal didn't
explain and never would is that those "tougher operating terms"
are simply Bolivia's right as an independent nation (and all
other nations as well) to get the majority benefits from its own
natural resources and that foreign investors are there sharing
in them only because the country allowed them to. But instead of
being grateful, the Journal makes clear, without stating it,
that the investors are greedy and want the lion's share and on
their terms.
What's also left unsaid or unsatisfactorily explained is
nationalization does not mean expropriation. Evo Morales has
made it clear that foreign investors will not lose the rights to
their investments. What they will lose once Morales' plan is
implemented (he's giving them six months to comply) is their
unfair share of the profits and benefits they never had a right
to have in the first place. Under the Morales plan, a new
contract will be made between the government and foreign
investors guaranteeing that the people of Bolivia will receive
the majority of benefits from its own resources while at the
same time foreign investors will receive their fare share but no
more than that. It also means the government alone now will
decide the terms of revenue sharing and tax obligations due
rather than Big Oil dictating them with the long shadow of the
US looming in the background, which is still the case, of
course.
The Journal then became more inflammatory as it has in its past
and recent railings against Hugo Chavez. It claimed high energy
prices have sparked a resurgent wave of nationalism from Caracas
to Moscow. Of course, it forgot to mention the one country above
all others where so-called nationalism and protectionism is a
national religion - the US. Here where I live, no outside
investors are allowed in (especially from developing nations) to
profit except on the ironclad rules we set, take it or leave it.
So by US imperial rules (the only ones, no others allowed),
what's good for us is not acceptable or allowed for anyone else
because we said so.
The Journal went on to say Morales is mimicking measures against
Big Oil by "Mr. Chavez" (he happens to be the President and
should be addressed that way), and that Morales and Chavez are
"both playing a game of chicken with foreign oil companies." It
also couldn't resist raising the specter of Fidel Castro and the
fact that Chavez and Morales signed a free trade accord over the
past weekend with the man the imperial US hates most.
There's more to this story as well which the Journal points out
into their long article. The leading Peruvian candidate, Ollanta
Humala, in the upcoming presidential runoff election against US
choice by default Alan Garcia, has also called for
nationalization of the country's natural gas and mining
resources. And Evo Morales has made it clear he intends to
nationalize Bolivia's other natural resources likely beginning
with its forests and mines. Further, to cap off a growing US
Latin American nightmare, last month Equador passed a law
designed to cut the windfall profits of foreign crude producers
(including US based Occidental Petroleum) by giving the
government (meaning the people) 50% of oil company profits
whenever the international oil market exceeds the prices
established in existing contracts.
What These Developments Mean for the US and How It's Likely to
Respond
There certainly is trouble for the US in Latin America and in
the oil patch there as well as in Iraq, Iran, Nigeria and who
knows where else it may spread. So what can we make of all this,
and what's most likely to happen going forward. The US is now
spending hundreds of billions of dollars trying to hold on to
the oil treasure it stole by invading Iraq. It's also made it
clear it has designs on those same resources in neighboring Iran
and may attack that country using nuclear weapons. And if that
isn't enough on one plate to digest, it faces a dilemma in
Venezuela it's tried unsuccessfully three times to solve.
Venezuela has even greater hydrocarbon reserves than Iraq or
Iran (possibly the largest in the world even above Saudi
Arabia's) and is led by a courageous man unwilling to surrender
his nation's sovereignty (or its resources) to its imperial
northern neighbor demanding it and them. And now the heavenly
virus of the desire to be truly independent is beginning to
spread to Bolivia, Peru if Hamala wins the runoff election,
hopefully Equador and significant opposition groups outside the
governments in other countries as well like Nigeria and Nepal.
These nations, or opposition groups in them, are demanding
equity and justice for their people, and are beginning to raise
their heads and demand the rights they're entitled to. If they
all get them, that's bad news for the US and the dominant
corporate interests here that profit handsomely by exploiting
the resources of underdeveloped nations and its cheap labor as
well. Hugo Chavez and Evo Morales know this and have spoken out
and acted courageously against these longtime abuses in defense
the rights of their own people. But their doing so is
intolerable to the US which will do everything in its power to
reverse the loss of its special privilege.
So what can we expect ahead. I have no doubt whatever, and I've
written about this several times. When the heat is turned up
against US interests, this country won't go quietly into the
night. The plans are well underway now for a fourth attempt to
oust Hugo Chavez that may include assassinations and possibly an
armed assault by US invading forces. Last Sunday VHeadline
published a commentary/review I wrote about Noam Chomsky's new
book Failed States. In an email I received from Chomsky on April
29 he updated the views he stated in his new book and gave a
blunt assessment of what may be in prospect which I'll quote
again here: he said he "wouldn't be surprised to see
(US inspired) secessionist movements in the oil producing areas
in Iran, Venezuela and Bolivia, all in areas that are accessible
to US military force and alienated from the governments, with
the US then moving in to 'defend' them and blasting the rest of
the country if necessary."
I share that view although I'm not privy to what hostile plans
my government has in mind. I'll only state my strong belief that
something big is planned to oust President Chavez (and now maybe
Evo Morales as well) that will only become apparent once the
fireworks begin. Today's feature article in the Wall Street
Journal only strengthens my view.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog address at
sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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