Washington’s Two Track Policy to Latin America
Marines to Central America and Diplomats to Cuba
By James PetrasEveryone, from political pundits in
Washington to the Pope in Rome, including most journalists in the mass media and
in the alternative press, have focused on the US moves toward ending the
economic blockade of Cuba and gradually opening diplomatic relations. Talk is
rife of a ‘major shift’ in US policy toward Latin America with the emphasis on
diplomacy and reconciliation. Even most progressive writers and journals have
ceased writing about US imperialism.
However, there is mounting evidence that Washington’s
negotiations with Cuba are merely one part of a two-track policy. There is
clearly a major US build-up in Latin America, with increasing reliance on
‘military platforms’, designed to launch direct military interventions in
strategic countries.
Moreover, US policymakers are actively involved in promoting
‘client’ opposition parties, movements and personalities to destabilize
independent governments and are intent on re-imposing US domination.
In this essay we will start our discussion with the origins
and unfolding of this ‘two track’ policy, its current manifestations, and
projections into the future. We will conclude by evaluating the possibilities of
re-establishing US imperial domination in the region.
Origins of the Two Track Policy
Washington’s pursuit of a ‘two-track policy’, based on
combining ‘reformist policies’ toward some political formations, while working
to overthrow other regimes and movements by force and military intervention, was
practiced by the early Kennedy Administration following the Cuban revolution.
Kennedy announced a vast new economic program of aid, loans and investments –
dubbed the ‘Alliance for Progress’ – to promote development and social reform in
Latin American countries willing to align with the US. At the same time the
Kennedy regime escalated US military aid and joint exercises in the region.
Kennedy sponsored a large contingent of Special Forces – ‘Green Berets’ – to
engage in counter-insurgency warfare. The ‘Alliance for Progress’ was designed
to counter the mass appeal of the social-revolutionary changes underway in Cuba
with its own program of ‘social reform’. While Kennedy promoted watered-down
reforms in Latin America, he launched the ‘secret’ CIA (Bay of Pigs) invasion of
Cuba in 1961and naval blockade in 1962 (the so-called ‘missile crises’). The
two-track policy ended up sacrificing social reforms and strengthening military
repression. By the mid-1970’s the ‘two-tracks’ became one force. The US invaded
the Dominican Republic in 1965. It backed a series of military coups throughout
the region, effectively isolating Cuba. As a result, Latin America’s labor force
experienced nearly a quarter century of declining living standards.
By the 1980s US client-dictators had lost their usefulness and
Washington once again took up a dual strategy: On one track, the White House
wholeheartedly backed their military-client rulers’ neo-liberal agenda and
sponsored them as junior partners in Washington’s regional hegemony. On the
other track, they promoted a shift to highly controlled electoral politics,
which they described as a ‘democratic transition’, in order to ‘decompress’ mass
social pressures against its military clients. Washington secured the
introduction of elections and promoted client politicians willing to continue
the neo-liberal socio-economic framework established by the military regimes.
By the turn of the new century, the cumulative grievances of
thirty years of repressive rule, regressive neo-liberal socio-economic policies
and the denationalization and privatization of the national patrimony had caused
an explosion of mass social discontent. This led to the overthrow and electoral
defeat of Washington’s neo-liberal client regimes.
Throughout most of Latin America, mass movements were
demanding a break with US-centered ‘integration’ programs. Overt
anti-imperialism grew and intensified. The period saw the emergence of numerous
center-left governments in Venezuela, Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia, Brazil,
Uruguay, Paraguay, Honduras and Nicaragua. Beyond the regime changes, world
economic forces had altered: growing Asian markets, their demand for Latin
American raw materials and the global rise of commodity prices helped to
stimulate the development of Latin American-centered regional organizations –
outside of Washington’s control.
Washington was still embedded in its 25 year ‘single-track’
policy of backing civil-military authoritarian and imposing neo-liberal policies
and was unable to respond and present a reform alternative to the
anti-imperialist, center-left challenge to its dominance. Instead, Washington
worked to reverse the new party- power configuration. Its overseas agencies, the
Agency for International Development (AID), the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)
and embassies worked to destabilize the new governments in Bolivia, Ecuador,
Venezuela, Paraguay and Honduras. The US ‘single-track’ of intervention and
destabilization failed throughout the first decade of the new century (with the
exception of Honduras and Paraguay.
In the end Washington remained politically isolated. Its
integration schemes were rejected. Its market shares in Latin America declined.
Washington not only lost its automatic majority in the Organization of American
States (OAS), but it became a distinct minority.
Washington’s ‘single track’ policy of relying on the ‘stick’
and holding back on the ‘carrot’ was based on several considerations: The Bush
and Obama regimes were deeply influenced by the US’s twenty-five year domination
of the region (1975-2000) and the notion that the uprisings and political
changes in Latin America in the subsequent decade were ephemeral, vulnerable and
easily reversed. Moreover, Washington, accustomed to over a century of economic
domination of markets, resources and labor, took for granted that its hegemony
was unalterable. The White House failed to recognize the power of China’s
growing share of the Latin American market. The State Department ignored the
capacity of Latin American governments to integrate their markets and exclude
the US.
US State Department officials never moved beyond the
discredited neo-liberal doctrine that they had successfully promoted in the
1990s. The White House failed to adopt a ‘reformist’ turn to counter the appeal
of radical reformers like Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan President. This was most
evident in the Caribbean and the Andean countries where President Chavez
launched his two ‘alliances for progress’: Petro-Caribe (Venezuela’s program of
supplying cheap, heavily subsidized, fuel to poor Central American and Caribbean
countries and heating oil to poor neighborhoods in the US) and ALBA (Chavez’
political-economic union of Andean states, plus Cuba and Nicaragua, designed to
promote regional political solidarity and economic ties.) Both programs were
heavily financed by Caracas. Washington failed to come up with a successful
alternative plan.
Unable to win diplomatically or in the ‘battle of ideas’,
Washington resorted to the ‘big stick’ and sought to disrupt Venezuela’s
regional economic program rather than compete with Chavez’ generous and
beneficial aid packages. The US’ ‘spoiler tactics’ backfired: In 2009, the Obama
regime backed a military coup in Honduras, ousting the elected liberal reformist
President Zelaya and installed a bloody tyrant, a throwback to the 1970s when
the US-backed Chilean coup brought General Pinochet to power. Secretary of State
Hilary Clinton, in an act of pure political buffoonery, refused to call Zelaya’s
violent ouster a coup and moved swiftly to recognize the dictatorship. No other
government backed the US in its Honduras policy. There was universal
condemnation of the coup, highlighting Washington’s isolation.
Repeatedly, Washington tried to use its ‘hegemonic card’ but
it was roundly outvoted at regional meetings. At the Summit of the Americas in
2010, Latin American countries overrode US objections and voted to invite Cuba
to its next meeting, defying a 50-year old US veto. The US was left alone in its
opposition.
The position of Washington was further weakened by the
decade-long commodity boom (spurred by China’s voracious demand for agro-mineral
products). The ‘mega-cycle’ undermined US Treasury and State Department’s
anticipation of a price collapse. In previous cycles, commodity ‘busts’ had
forced center-left governments to run to the US controlled International
Monetary Fund (IMF) for highly conditioned balance of payment loans, which the
White House used to impose its neo-liberal policies and political dominance. The
‘mega-cycle’ generated rising revenues and incomes. This gave the center-left
governments enormous leverage to avoid the ‘debt traps’ and to marginalize the
IMF. This virtually eliminated US-imposed conditionality and allowed Latin
governments to pursue populist-nationalist policies. These policies decreased
poverty and unemployment. Washington played the ‘crisis card’ and lost.
Nevertheless Washington continued working with extreme right-wing opposition
groups to destabilize the progressive governments, in the hope that ‘come the
crash’, Washington’s proxies would ‘waltz right in’ and take over.
The Re-Introduction of the ‘Two Track’ Policy
After a decade and a half of hard knocks, repeated failures of
its ‘big stick’ policies, rejection of US-centered integration schemes and
multiple resounding defeats of its client-politicians at the ballot box,
Washington finally began to ‘rethink’ its ‘one track’ policy and tentatively
explore a limited ‘two track’ approach.
The ‘two-tracks’, however, encompass polarities clearly marked
by the recent past. While the Obama regime opened negotiations and moved toward
establishing relations with Cuba, it escalated the military threats toward
Venezuela by absurdly labeling Caracas as a ‘national security threat to the
US.’
Washington had woken up to the fact that its bellicose policy
toward Cuba had been universally rejected and had left the US isolated from
Latin America. The Obama regime decided to claim some ‘reformist credentials’ by
showcasing its opening to Cuba. The ‘opening to Cuba’ is really part of a wider
policy of a more active political intervention in Latin America. Washington will
take full advantage of the increased vulnerability of the center-left
governments as the commodity mega-cycle comes to an end and prices collapse.
Washington applauds the fiscal austerity program pursued by Dilma Rousseff’s
regime in Brazil. It wholeheartedly backs newly elected Tabaré Vázquez’s “Broad
Front” regime in Uruguay with its free market policies and structural
adjustment. It publicly supports Chilean President Bachelet’s recent appointment
of center-right Christian Democrats to Cabinet posts to accommodate big
business.
These changes within Latin America provide an ‘opening’ for
Washington to pursue a ‘dual track’ policy: On the one hand Washington is
increasing political and economic pressure and intensifying its propaganda
campaign against ‘state interventionist’ policies and regimes in the immediate
period. On the other hand, the Pentagon is intensifying and escalating its
presence in Central America and its immediate vicinity. The goal is ultimately
to regain leverage over the military command in the rest of the South American
continent.
The Miami Herald (5/10/15) reported that the Obama
Administration had sent 280 US marines to Central America without any specific
mission or pretext. Coming so soon after the Summit of the Americas in Panama
(April 10-11, 2015), this action has great symbolic importance. While the
presence of Cuba at the Summit may have been hailed as a diplomatic victory for
reconciliation within the Americas, the dispatch of hundreds of US marines to
Central America suggests another scenario in the making.
Ironically, at the Summit meeting, the Secretary General of
the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), former Colombian president
(1994-98) Ernesto Samper, called for the US to remove all its military bases
from Latin America, including Guantanamo: “A good point in the new agenda of
relations in Latin America would be the elimination of the US military bases”.
The point of the US ‘opening’ to Cuba is precisely to signal
its greater involvement in Latin America, one that includes a return to more
robust US military intervention. The strategic intent is to restore neo-liberal
client regimes, by ballots or bullets.
Conclusion
Washington’s current adoption of a two-track policy is a
‘cheap version’ of the John F. Kennedy policy of combining the Alliance for
Progress with the Green Berets. However, Obama offers little in the way of
financial support for modernization and reform to complement his drive to
restore neo-liberal dominance.
After a decade and a half of political retreat, diplomatic
isolation and relative loss of military leverage, the Obama regime has taken
over six years to recognize the depth of its isolation. When Assistant Secretary
for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Roberta Jacobson, claimed she was ‘surprised and
disappointed’ when every Latin American country opposed Obama’s claim that
Venezuela represented a ‘national security threat to the United States’, she
exposed just how ignorant and out-of-touch the State Department has become with
regard to Washington’s capacity to influence Latin America in support of its
imperial agenda of intervention.
With the decline and retreat of the center-left, the Obama
regime has been eager to exploit the two-track strategy. As long as the
FARC-President Santos peace talks in Colombia advance, Washington is likely to
recalibrate its military presence in Colombia to emphasize its destabilization
campaign against Venezuela. The State Department will increase diplomatic
overtures to Bolivia. The National Endowment for Democracy will intensify its
intervention in this year’s Argentine elections.
Varied and changing circumstances dictate flexible tactics.
Hovering over Washington’s tactical shifts is an ominous strategic outlook
directed toward increasing military leverage. As the peace negotiations between
the Colombian government and FARC guerrillas advance toward an accord, the
pretext for maintaining seven US military bases and several thousand US military
and Special Forces troops diminishes. However, Colombian President Santos has
given no indication that a ‘peace agreement’ would be conditioned on the
withdrawal of US troops or closing of its bases. In other words, the US Southern
Command would retain a vital military platform and infrastructure capable of
launching attacks against Venezuela, Ecuador, Central America and the Caribbean.
With military bases throughout the region, in Colombia, Cuba (Guantanamo),
Honduras (Soto Cano in Palmerola), Curacao, Aruba and Peru, Washington can
quickly mobilize interventionary forces. Military ties with the armed forces of
Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile ensure continued joint exercises and close
co-ordination of so-called ‘security’ policies in the ‘Southern Cone’ of Latin
America. This strategy is specifically designed to prepare for internal
repression against popular movements, whenever and wherever class struggle
intensifies in Latin America. The two-track policy, in force today, plays out
through political-diplomatic and military strategies.
In the immediate period throughout most of the region,
Washington pursues a policy of political, diplomatic and economic intervention
and pressure. The White House is counting on the ‘right-wing swing’ of former
center-left governments to facilitate the return to power of unabashedly
neo-liberal client-regimes in future elections. This is especially true with
regard to Brazil and Argentina.
The ‘political-diplomatic track’ is evident in Washington’s
moves to re-establish relations with Bolivia and to strengthen allies elsewhere
in order to leverage favorable policies in Ecuador, Nicaragua and Cuba.
Washington proposes to offer diplomatic and trade agreements in exchange for a
‘toning down’ of anti-imperialist criticism and weakening the ‘Chavez-era’
programs of regional integration.
The ‘two-track approach’, as applied to Venezuela, has a more
overt military component than elsewhere. Washington will continue to subsidize
violent paramilitary border crossings from Colombia. It will continue to
encourage domestic terrorist sabotage of the power grid and food distribution
system. The strategic goal is to erode the electoral base of the Maduro
government, in preparation for the legislative elections in the fall of 2015.
When it comes to Venezuela, Washington is pursuing a ‘four step’ strategy:
(1) Indirect violent intervention to erode the electoral
support of the government
(2) Large-scale financing of the electoral campaign of the
legislative opposition to secure a majority in Congress
(3) A massive media campaign in favor of a Congressional vote
for a referendum impeaching the President
(4) A large-scale financial, political and media campaign to
secure a majority vote for impeachment by referendum.
In the likelihood of a close vote, the Pentagon would prepare
a rapid military intervention with its domestic collaborators – seeking a
‘Honduras-style’ overthrow of Maduro.
The strategic and tactical weakness of the two-track policy is
the absence of any sustained and comprehensive economic aid, trade and
investment program that would attract and hold middle class voters. Washington
is counting more on the negative effects of the crisis to restore its
neo-liberal clients. The problem with this approach is that the pro-US forces
can only promise a return to orthodox austerity programs, reversing social and
public welfare programs , while making large-scale economic concessions to major
foreign investors and bankers. The implementation of such regressive programs
are going to ignite and intensify class, community-based and ethnic conflicts.
The ‘electoral transition’ strategy of the US is a temporary
expedient, in light of the highly unpopular economic policies, which it would
surely implement. The complete absence of any substantial US socio-economic aid
to cushion the adverse effects on working families means that the US
client-electoral victories will not last long. That is why and where the US
strategic military build-up comes into play: The success of track-one, the
pursuit of political-diplomatic tactics, will inevitably polarize Latin American
society and heighten prospects for class struggle. Washington hopes that it will
have its political-military client-allies ready to respond with violent
repression. Direct intervention and heightened domestic repression will come
into play to secure US dominance.
The ‘two-track strategy’ will, once again, evolve into a
‘one-track strategy’ designed to return Latin America as a satellite region,
ripe for pillage by extractive multi-nationals and financial speculators.
As we have seen over the past decade and a half, ‘one-track
policies’ lead to social upheavals. And the next time around the results may go
far beyond progressive center-left regimes toward truly social-revolutionary
governments!
Epilogue
US empire-builders have clearly demonstrated throughout the
world their inability to intervene and produce stable, prosperous and productive
client states (Iraq and Libya are prime examples). There is no reason to
believe, even if the US ‘two-track policy’ leads to temporary electoral
victories, that Washington’s efforts to restore dominance will succeed in Latin
America, least of all because its strategy lacks any mechanism for economic aid
and social reforms that could maintain a pro-US elite in power. For example, how
could the US possibly offset China’s $50 billion aid package to Brazil – except
through violence and repression.
It is important to analyze how the rise of China, Russia,
strong regional markets and new centers of finance have severely weakened the
efforts by client regimes to realign with the US. Military coups and free
markets are no longer guaranteed formulas for success in Latin America: Their
past failures are too recent to forget.
Finally the ‘financialization’ of the US economy, what even
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) describes as the negative impact of ‘too
much finance’ (Financial Times, 5/13/15, p 4), means that the US cannot
allocate capital resources to develop productive activity in Latin America. The
imperial state can only serve as a violent debt collector for its banks in the
context of large-scale unemployment. Financial and extractive imperialism is a
politico-economic cocktail for detonating social revolution on a continent-wide
basis – far beyond the capacity of the US marines to prevent or suppress.
James Petras is a Bartle Professor
(Emeritus) of Sociology at Binghamton University, New York. Latest book: “The
New Extractivism. A Post-Neoliberal Development Model or Imperialism of the
Twenty-First Century?” Henry Veltmeyer and James Petras. Zed Books.
http://petras.lahaine.org/
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