Argentina: A Quiet Neoliberal Coup d’Etat in Latin America’s
Southern Cone
By Peter Koenig
December 02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
For the past few weeks
the world has been and still is focussing all attention on Syria,
the NATO-Turkey downing of a Russian SU-24 fighter jet, the bombing
of a Russian airliner over Sinai (224 dead), the alleged ISIS-Daesh
Paris massacre (132), the Islamic terror attack on the Bamako (Mali)
Radisson Blu hotel (27) – plus the endless fear mongering of more
terror in Brussels, Berlin, Rome, Paris, Copenhagen — you name it.
The mainstream media is in over-drive. And the neoliberal European
(non)-Union uses the shock doctrine to cut civil rights and install
police states with ‘temporary’ Martial laws – mind you, they are
basically asked for by the populace – for their protection, they are
made believe.
Absorbed by their own fate and fear, Europeans have
hardly eyes to see beyond their Continent, their sphere of
self-interest. The neoliberal coup d’état in Argentina happened
almost unnoticed. Never mind that it is just about bringing some
42.5 million people (2015 pop. estimate) under Washington’s rule.
Argentina’s general election 2015 ended on Sunday 22
November in a run-off – the first in Argentina’s history – between
Daniel Scioli, the incumbent Governor of Buenos Aires Province, a
Kirchnerite from the ruling Front for Victory Party
(FPV – Frente para la Victoria), and Mauricio Macri, a neoliberal
multi-billionaire and Mayor of Buenos Aires from the right-wing
Cambiemos party.
Against all odds, Macri won with 51.4% against Scioli’s 48.6% – a
margin of 2.8%. A margin small enough no to raise many questions of
fraud.
And here are the odds: Two days before the 25 October
ballot The Guardian polls predicted an 8.5% lead for Scioli (38.41%)
vs. Macri (30.07%). Nevertheless, the 25 October real election
results reduced Scioli’s lead to a mere 2.4% (36.8% vs. 34.4%).
At the end of July, three months before the first
election run, Scioli was leading with a 13.6% margin (38.8% vs.
25.2%). The outcome of the 9 August Primaries left Scioli still with
a more than 12 point lead (36.8% vs 24.7%).
There is definitely something fishy with a
deterioration of a candidate’s lead so crass as to convert an almost
14 point lead into a 3 point loss in 4 months, a 17% percent
difference. This is not a typical pattern of error for pollsters,
nor an indication for a public opinion change, a public that has
benefitted from their government to the extent Argentinians did
within the last 15 years, since the economic collapse in 2001: An
average annual growth of between 6% and 8%, a highly distributive
economic development, helping reducing poverty from 65% in 2002 to
less than 10% in early 2015 and with a massive increase in
countrywide free education and health services, including in rural
areas; not to mention the elimination of foreign debt.
A simple question of logic: Would a people of which
80% to 90% have massively benefitted from the ruling government
policies vote with more than 50% against the continuation of such
policies – and instead for a neoliberal politician, who promised to
turn the clock back? Hardly. Unless they have been subjected to a
massive media brainwashing and slander campaign, vote buying and
other democracy-destroying measures, through foreign induced
destabilization.
We know about the NED (National Endowment for
Democracy) and other US based think tanks (sic), receiving hundreds
of millions of dollars from the State Department to train and fund
“NGOs” throughout the world, to infiltrate in counties’ internal
affairs, where Washington wants to achieve
soft regime change, as
opposed to hard-core regime change – which involves the US military,
proxy-armies, mercenaries and – of course – the ever present NATO. –
So far the election fraud worked in Argentina without bloodshed.
Such destabilization movements, soft and less soft,
abound around the globe during the last 20 years, coinciding with
the ever stronger onset of the all controlling globalized neoliberal
doctrine. Suffice it to mention the invented Arab Spring ,
the Color Revolutions of Central Asia and the former Soviet
Republics. If propaganda alone doesn’t do the trick, the Washington
imposed changes are being helped with false flags, inducing armed
conflicts and ‘civil wars’. Recent cases in point are the Ukraine,
Syria, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, Yemen, to name just a few.
Argentina’s
Constitution does not allow for more than two consecutive
presidential terms. Before the mid-term elections in 2013, the
ruling FPV hoped for a two third majority to be able to amend the
Constitution allowing unlimited re-elections. Due to strong
resistance from the opposition parties, the FPV did not win the
necessary supermajority.
The president is
elected with a modified two-stage system, whereby a candidate wins
when he / she receives at least 45% in the first run, or 40% with a
margin of at least 10% to the runner-up. A run-off election, like
the one on 22 November 2015, has never happened before in
Argentina’s history.
With a lead of more almost 14 points by Scioli over
Macri, the right-wing Cambiemos candidate, it was
absolutely necessary for the Macri camp to reduce the lead
difference by the first round of balloting to less than 10% to
provoke a run-off, allowing more time to manipulate voter opinion
and committing more election fraud. Despite the polls indicating an
8.5% lead for Scioli two days before the 25 October first election
run, the actual election count resulted in Scioli winning with only
2.4%. Again, this is an unusual margin of error that should have
attracted the attention of the election organizers and supervisors.
In 2011 Wikileaks revealed that Mauricio Macri asked
the US Embassy in Buenos Aires to launch a strong anti-Kirchner
campaign, slandering her and her political alliances, thereby
massively discrediting Cristina Kirchner’s Presidency. It did not
work for Macri in 2011, as Cristina Kirchner was re-elected. But the
Washington-driven anti-Kirchner and anti-FPV campaign expanded
massively until this past election. And it paid off.
The international investigative journalist, Estela
Calloni, who followed the elections closely, concluded that there
was not only massive manipulation with lies and defamation by an
important media elite, but a brutal campaign against the Kirchner
legacy – ‘putting the future of Argentina at risk.’ She
went on saying that ‘our societies are being hammered by
information coming from the United States and that they are worse
than disinformation.’ She warned that Argentina should stay
alert not to lose any of the progressive achievements made in the
past 15 years.
Who is Mauricio Macri?
– He was born in 1959 into a family of owners of the country’s most
important industrial and economic groups. In 1975, the Macri family
possessed 7 enterprises; at the end of the military dictatorship the
Macri fleet of companies had grown to 46. The Macri family
benefitted greatly from business relations with the totalitarian
military government of Videla. In connivance with US banks, they
built up false debt which later had to be assumed by the Argentine
government.
Nevertheless, the new
President-elect in one of his recent observations has insisted that
the Kirchner Government reopen negotiations with the IMF and pay the
infamous vulture funds in full.
As Mayor of the City
of Buenos Aires, Macri leaves behind a highly questionable legacy;
mismanagement of public funds, huge budget overruns and never ending
public works. He has also allegedly diverted public funds into his
political campaigns and accepted contributions from prostitution
rings.
Mr. Macri is known as an extreme conservative,
right-wing politician following neoliberal policies, who will most
likely turn the wheel of progress of the Kirchner Administration
back by seeking reduction of public expenditures to the detriment of
labor, privatization of public services and ending fiscal policies
aiming at redistribution of wealth.
As to Mr. Macri’s views on human rights, it can best
be described by his observation in 2014, “Conmigo se termina el
curro de los derechos humanos” – “with me the chants of ‘human
rights’ will end;” – meaning that protests against his government
will be repressed.
South America had proudly achieved over the past 20
years a degree of independence from its Washington masters, no other
western region has reached – least the vassal states of Europe. With
this neoliberal, largely unnoticed coup d’état in Argentina, the
Subcontinent of South America, is, indeed, gradually turning into
what President Obama calls his ‘backyard’. In the Center-North are
Peru and Colombia, neoliberal strongholds of the US; and now the
Southern Cone is gone.
All the while the Great Dictator and its paid foreign
minions are diligently working at discrediting the Governments of
Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela, and of Dilma Rousseff, President of
Brazil; the former with infiltrated and local mercenaries spreading
unrest and violence; the latter with defamation of corruption linked
to the oil giant Petrobras, all manufactured via henchmen and
associated banks in Florida and New York. Corruption is always an
easy accusation – difficult to prove, yet very effective with the
common people – in discrediting their government. An accusation
coming from the most corrupt, criminal rogue state of this globe –
the United States of America.
Peter Koenig is an economist and geopolitical analyst. He is also a
former World Bank staff and worked extensively around the world in
the fields of environment and water resources. He writes regularly
for Global Research, ICH, RT, Sputnik, PressTV, CounterPunch,
TeleSur, The Vineyard of The Saker Blog, and other internet sites.
He is the author of
Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental
Destruction and Corporate Greed
– fiction based on facts
and on 30 years of World Bank experience around the globe. He is
also a co-author of
The World
Order and Revolution! – Essays from the Resistance