No Bern
Notice: The Imperial Myopia of Candidate Sanders
By Chris
Floyd
March 11,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Does Bernie Sanders know what Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama did to Honduras? Does he
care? Last week saw
yet another savage murder of a Honduran activist
for democracy -- one of hundreds such atrocities
since Clinton and Obama blessed a brutal
oligarchical coup there in 2009. But Sanders said
nothing -- says nothing -- about this damning legacy
of his opponent. It's an extraordinary omission by
someone presenting himself as an alternative to the
failed elitist policies of the past.
The only
Sanders reference to Honduras that I've been able to
find is some justified criticism of the draconian
treatment of Honduran refugees by the Obama-Clinton
team. But he never tied this back to why there has
been a flood of Hondurans fleeing their country --
most of them children, sent on a perilous journey by
desperate parents hoping to save them from the
hellish conditions wrought by the coup. Political
repression and rampant gangsterism -- including the
abandonment of broad swathes of society to the
ravages of poverty and gangs -- have driven the
nation to its knees. Last week's murder of
indigenous activist Berta Cáceres is but the latest
bitter fruit of the Obama-Clinton betrayal of
democracy.
Clinton --
with a heart as hard as that most adamantine of all
elements, neoconium -- obviously doesn't care.
(Although at least she has refrained from looking on
the latest murder and crying, "We came, we couped,
she died!") One assumes that Sanders, who
over the years has opposed various American
depredations in Latin America, might not be so
sanguine. But as of this writing, a week has passed
since Cáceres's murder without comment from Sanders.
However, his Senate colleague from Vermont, Patrick
Leahy,
did condemn the killing -- and the wasteful,
land-grab dam project that Cáceres opposed. Perhaps
now that Leahy has provided some Establishment
cover, Sanders could bestir himself for a word or
two on the Cáceres case.
But the
reticence to attack Clinton on the substance -- and
the essence and the goals -- of American foreign
policy is very much a hallmark of the Sanders
campaign. For example,his only word about the
American-backed campaign of slaughter, ruin and
starvation being conducted by the Saudis against
Yemen has been a lament that the Saudis are wasting
good ammo in Yemen when they should be "getting
their hands dirty" against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
Yes, apparently the proper "democratic socialist"
position is that the world needs more
violent intervention by the greatest purveyors of
Islamic extremism in the world. We need more
killing -- and more military expansion -- by one of
the most repressive regimes on the face of the
planet. This is where the "progressive left" is at
these days.
Again, this
is an extraordinary position for someone who is
calling for a "revolution" in American affairs. For
although Sanders wants the Saudis to do more of the
"dirty" work of killing people in the Middle East,
there's no suggestion on this part that the United
States won't continue to supply the weaponry and
logistics and intelligence for the "Sanders
Surrogate" wars he envisions, just as it is doing
now in Yemen. This same resistance to any
fundamental change in America's militarist imperium
runs through all of Sanders' foreign policy stances.
Which means that his plans for a "revolution"
(really mild reform) in domestic affairs are doomed
to failure, because the War Machine will continue to
dictate policy -- and budget priorities. Dennis
Riches put it well in this quote from
MintPress News:
Although
Sanders claims to seek a more democratic government
and hopes to remove the influence of money from
politics, Riches said he avoids talking much about
this complex topic because doing so would involve
admitting how much the U.S. national economy depends
on a massive military and endless foreign wars.
“Doing the
right thing would require a complete abdication of
America’s self-assigned role as master of the global
order, and this would also entail a re-imagining of
the domestic economy,” Riches noted.
There will
be no "revolution" -- there will not even be any
genuine reform, beyond mild tinkering at the margins
-- without such an abdication and re-imagining. But
this is not on offer from any of the "major
candidates" now vying to be the temporary manager of
the corrupt and violent American imperium, including
Sanders.
Meanwhile,
the horror in Honduras goes on. As so often over the
years, John Perry of the London Review of Books
provides excellent background on the situation
there. He notes that the Cáceres murder is part of
an American-backed ethos that puts "business" before
any and all other concerns -- community,
environment, individual human lives.
In this
case, even the decidedly unsentimental Chinese
investors -- and the equally bottom-line World Bank
as well -- concluded that the dam project opposed by
Cáceres was not worth pursuing. But local oligarchs,
backed by the coup regime, decided to plow ahead.
Perry sets the scene:
After the 2009
military coup, Honduras was declared open for
business. Utopian projects for charter cities to
bring in foreign entrepreneurs are still on the
drawing board, but Honduras’s mineral resources have
already attracted investors. To serve hundreds of
new mines, 47 new hydroelectric projects were given
the go ahead two months after the coup, overriding
the legal protection for indigenous lands. One of
them, Agua Zarca on the Gualcarque River, with dams
generating 22 megawatts of electricity, would
destroy Lenca farmland and villages. The Lenca
community of Rio Blanco and the Council of
Indigenous Peoples of Honduras (COPINH), co-founded
by Cáceres, were determined to stop the dams being
built.
They blocked
the access road for construction traffic for a whole
year in 2013, eventually forcing the Chinese firm
Sinohydro to give up its contract. The World Bank
also withdrew funding. The community seemed to have
won, at the cost of activists being killed or
injured by soldiers guarding the construction site.
Then last
July, DESA, the local firm that holds the concession
to dam the river, decided to go ahead by itself. A
new phase of struggle began, with peaceful protests
met by violent repression and bulldozers demolishing
settlements in the valley. Threats against the
leaders, and Cáceres in particular, increased. She
was granted special protective measures by the
Inter-American Commission for Human Rights, but the
Honduran government never properly implemented them.
So just two
months after the coup, 47 dam projects got the green
light, to serve hundreds of new mines. Yet Hillary's
defenders (you can read their obsequious offerings
by the yard at Daily Kos) now tell us that she and
Obama only supported the ouster and exile of the
democratically elected Honduran president in 2009 in
order to "prevent a civil war" in the country. It
was pure altruism, on the level of high statecraft.
It had nothing to do with, say, grubby business
interests and powerful investors (including the
not-at-all Washington-connected World Bank) needing
a "green light" to move the pesky redskins off their
land and gut the earth for more extraction
profiteering. Such considerations did not enter into
the mix at all.
(Even if
one takes the argument of the Clinton apologists at
face value, it's still a remarkable scam: Rightwing
oligarchs threaten civil war if they don't get what
they want; you give them what they want; and hey
presto -- you've "saved" a nation from civil war!
Why didn't Abe Lincoln think of that?)
The violent
repression took its accustomed course:
In the small
hours of the morning on Thursday 3 March, armed men
burst through the back door of Cáceres’s house and
killed her in her bed. They also injured a visiting
Mexican activist, Gustavo Castro. At around eight
o’clock, police and army officers arrived, dealing
aggressively with the family and community members
who were waiting to speak to them. As they left the
scene, they insinuated that the motive was robbery.
Cáceres’s body was wrapped in plastic and thrown in
the back of an unmarked truck. ...
It is all
part of a sickening pattern, played out over and
over in Honduras, as elsewhere in the American
imperium.
As I wrote back in 2010:
Since the
installation of these throwbacks to the corrupt and
brutal 'banana republics' of yore, Obama's secretary
of state, the "progressive" Hillary Clinton, has
spent a good deal of time and effort trying to
coerce Honduras' outraged neighbors in Latin America
to "welcome" the thug-clique, now led by Porfirio
Lobo, back into the "community of nations." Let
bygones be bygones, Clinton says, as Lobo's regime
murders journalists (nine so far this year),
political opponents and carries on the wholesale
trashing of Honduran independence (such as sacking
four Supreme Court justices who opposed the gutting
of liberties and the overthrow of constitutional
order). After all, isn't that Obama's own
philosophy: always "look forward," forget the crimes
of the past? Every day is a new day, a clean slate,
a chance for a new beginning -- indeed, for "hope
and change."
In other
words: let the dead bury the dead -- and let the
rich and powerful reap their rewards.
Chris
Floyd is an award-winning American journalist, and
author of the book, Empire
Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush
Regime. For more than 11 years he wrote the
featured political column, Global Eye, for The
Moscow Times and the St. Petersburg Times in Russia.
He also served as UK correspondent for Truthout.org,
and was an editorial writer for three years for The
Bergen Record.
http://www.chris-floyd.com/Articles/
See also
-
Hillary Clinton sold out
Honduras: Lanny
Davis, corporate cash, and the real story about the
death of a Latin American democracy. Want to know
why Clinton's State Dept. failed to help an elected
leader? Follow the money and stench of Lanny Davis
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