Correction and
apology: In an earlier version of this article we incorrectly asserted that
James Petras co-signed a letter in 2008 with Noam Chomsky and other leading
intellectuals which, in the article, we criticize. This is not the case. We
apologize to James Petras for this mistake on our part. We request anyone who
has re-posted this article to add this text to the top of wherever they posted
our article.
FOR THE IMPERIAL
PROPAGANDA MACHINE, leftist Latin American governments and political leaders are either
too leftist, not really leftist, or blind fanatics, as well as being shrewdly
machiavellian, capitalists in red clothing, enemies of the market and scores of
other contradictory pairs of things all at once.
This is so because the purpose of propaganda
is to render unusable the intellectual capacity of the target population to
understand reality. By promoting mistrust, anxiety and confusion among those
sections of the public in the imperialist countries that might oppose the
designs of their rulers, the war planners seek to neutralize any effective
solidarity efforts.
Sadly, most European and North American
progressive and radical movements and intellectuals have problems coming to
terms with this, no matter what their experience, reputation or insights into
what the Empire routinely does to humanity.
Without direct involvement in them, virtually
none of those intellectuals can offer a true and fair view of Latin America's
various revolutionary processes. They may offer plausible theories and schemas,
but the nitty gritty of achieving power and effecting radical change will
always elude them. Examples of this fact abound.
Depending entirely on academics like Noam
Chomsky, or James Petras, for example, for a grasp of events in Latin America
is a mistake. Those writers theoretical preconceptions tend to fall apart when
applied to specific realities. One need not follow the anti-Stalinism of the
historian E.P.Thompson into its ultimate social-democrat cul-de-sac to
acknowledge the central argument of “The Poverty of Theory” against idealist
theory.
THE ARTICLE “PINK TIDE IN LATIN AMERICA: An Alliance Between Local Capital and
Socialism” by Mahdi
Darius Nazemroaya published on May 3 by Global Research is an example of this
sad truth. In the final paragraphs of his article, a series of reflections on
the future developments in the region after Chavez' death, the author writes:
“It can be argued that the political current
in Latin America is mostly a question of financial and economic independence,
rather than a socialist project challenging the capitalist world-system.”
Without developing further this thesis,
Nazemroaya's piece actually is an exercise in inconsequential and superficial
dissection of the progressive/radical governments in the region, with the
purpose of questioning the anti-capitalist character of the process of integration
taking part in Latin America. Since Nazemroaya's analysis spreads many biases
and mistaken views that are functional to the imperial propaganda efforts
against those governments, we will deal with it in this article, but first let
us address the core thesis the author put forward in his piece without
thoroughly grounding it.
Indeed, there is a (conflictive) synergy
between (some) Capitalist and anti-capitalist interests behind the movement for
Latin American unity and independence. There is a huge amount of money in the
hands of the Latin American oligarchies which, under the right circumstances,
might be interested in investing in the regional market rather than, say, in
the Swiss banking system or in regional tax havens. The emergence of China as a
major lender and investor in the region, the stagnation of the US and European
economies and the massive development projects carried out thanks to the
initiative of governments which Nazemroaya designates under the derogatory term
“Pink Tide”, explain some of the central drives behind this process. But does
this mean that what is going on in Latin America today is not the emergence of
“a socialist project challenging the capitalist world-system”?
WHOEVER DOESN'T
SEE THE ANTI-CAPITALIST VALUE of ending the hegemony of Western imperialism once and
for all and of building a multi-polar world order should start writing
science-fiction novels instead of feigning engagement in actual anti-capitalist
struggle. It's really puzzling that an editor of Global Research has problems
grasping this point. However, there is much more to the anti-capitalist
ambitions of the Latin American integrationist efforts than the multi-polar
dimension alone.
In Latin America, it is impossible to engage
in the construction of socialist and anti-capitalist alternatives without at
the same time struggling to integrate the region politically, economically and
even culturally. “I desire to see America fashioned into the greatest nation in
the world, greatest not so much by virtue of her area and wealth as by her
freedom and glory” (1). That is the legacy of Bolivar, as was the legacy of
Martí, of Sandino, Mariátegui, Gaitán, Che, Fidel Castro and many other Latin
American revolutionaries since Independence. This is so because the colonial
and imperial powers needed to split the region up into small countries in order
to exploit its resources and labor. This is not something Chavez made up, it is
an old insight down here.
At the core of the Latin American process of
independent integration is the Bolivarian Alliance, ALBA, which comprises 8
full members with a total population of 70 or 80 million (some 15% of the
region's population) plus an ever-growing list of countries participating as
guest members and observers.
ALBA's economic relationships are not based on
profit but on solidarity and complementarity among its members. Nor is it an
alliance of convenience, but a project aimed at consolidating a higher
political unit beyond Capitalism. It is not based on Venezuelan charity either,
but on the use of common resources as a lever enabling its member countries to
leave Capitalism behind.
Through ALBA and schemes such as PETROCARIBE
(18 member countries), the Venezuelan oil imports are re-invested by the non
oil-producing countries in social and economic programs financed by almost
interest-free long-term loans. Thus, agricultural countries such as Nicaragua
widen their list of trade partners, but most importantly, they develop and
diversify their economies becoming less dependent on the export of agricultural
products.
Exchanges at all levels between Venezuela,
Cuba and the rest of the ALBA member countries aim at sharing experiences on
all fields. For example, Nicaraguan rural workers travel to Venezuela to share
their experiences of cooperative organization in order to help Venezuela
increase its food production. Cuban personnel from many different fields,
specially health care and education, play a very important role in many social
programs, but they also share their experience and know-how while at the same
time gathering many experiences from their colleagues in the other member
countries. ALBA members have started using their own national currencies
instead of the US dollar to trade with each other through a financial
arrangement called SUCRE, the Unified System of Regional Compensation. This
scheme helps protect the ALBA's economies from the financial collapse of
Capitalism.
FROM THE EXAMPLES
ABOVE, it is
foolish to deny the anticapitalist dynamics of ALBA. Even more foolish would be
to deny ALBA's influence on the rest of Latin America.
ALBA was founded in 2004 after an agreement
between Venezuela and Cuba. The following year, in 2005, the US plan to build a
“free trade” zone in the Americas, the FTAA, was buried at the Summit of The
Americas in Mar del Plata, Argentina, when most Latin American governments
refused to hail Bush's offer of “open up your customs or else...” Without the
joint leadership of Hugo Chavez, Evo Morales, Lula da Silva and late Argentinean
president Néstor Kirchner, this strategic defeat of imperialism in Latin
America would not have been possible.
With the establishment, on February 23rd,
2010, of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, CELAC, the 33
countries in the region, for the first time in history, created an organization
outside the control of the United States and Canada. Without the role played by
Cuba, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua, CELAC's profile would not be
as integral as it is today. Actually, Venezuela's contribution was crucial, not
only because of the strategic dimension of the Bolivarian revolution, but also
because of its intelligent handling of the most reactionary sectors of the
Colombian oligarchy represented by Alvaro Uribe.
It is quite clear that some Capitalist
interests see important opportunities in all these developments, but they are
not politically organized. The Latin American right is dominated by highly
aggressive, reactionary pro-imperialist political parties, right-wing networks
and corporate media. On a daily bases, these groups conspire and carry out
disinformation campaigns against almost all governments in Latin America and
the Caribbean, especially those with progressive and radical inclinations.
IN HIS ARTICLE,
NAZEMROAYA QUESTIONS these government's leftist and anti-capitalist credentials. Although he
warns against “oversimplification and romanticization”, and although he tries
to define what he understands as “left”, Nazemroaya confuses the concepts and
decontextualizes the facts, ending up with a list of more or less flattering
aspects which he then uses to build up a negative portrait of the developments
in Latin America.
Let us start with the concepts. Correctly,
Nazemroaya defines “left” and “right” as political positions within a given
context, but he then almost immediately abandons all interest in understanding
the multiplicity of the contexts that compose the reality of the region to
focus on the fact that there is “a Plethora of 'Lefts' in Latin America”, an
“eclectic bunch” as the author's derogatory style defines them.
Nazemroaya goes even further and states that
“Latin American left-wing governments do not strictly operate to the 'left'“:
So, according to his actual view, there is a “real left” (a context-independent
Left he feels he is entitled to define as such) and some kind of “fake left”
(another context-independent left he thinks is entitled to denounce as false). As
“proof” of his assertion, the author refers to an alleged “debate over whether
the Cuban socialist project is genuinely reforming or if it will eventually
follow the paths of capitalist restoration like China and Vietnam”.
A debate where? In some cafe in Toronto? That
is not a serious argument, for two reasons. Firstly, the existence of debates
about the future course of a revolution are no proof of the actual orientation
of that revolution. Secondly, Nazemroaya passes as received truths his opinions
on socialism in China and Vietnam without feeling it necessary to go into any
further details.
ACTUALLY, AS TRUE
AS THE FACT that there
are many “lefts” in Latin America, is the fact that there is a vast experience
of collective discussions among those “lefts”. An example of this is the Forum
of Sao Paulo, which since 1990 has gathered more than 90 political
organizations from almost all countries, including Puerto Rico. Most countries
are represented by several political parties, and in cases such as Argentina
and Uruguay, by 12 or 13 organizations. For over 20 years, those organizations,
ranging from the Chilean Socialist Party to the Cuban Communist Party, from
various Peronist parties in Argentina to Peruvian nationalists, just to mention
a few examples, have been able to carry out many debates and achieve consensus around
key issues such as the struggle to end the US genocidal blockade of Cuba, the
support to the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela and ALBA as well as the
project of continental integration.
The huge continental wave of solidarity with
the Bolivarian revolution after Hugo Chavez death, especially in face of the
fascist violence unleashed by Capriles Radonski's thugs, is another case in
point in relation to the capacity of this variegated array of “leftist”
movements to very quickly set aside their differences for a common cause. Without
the existence of similar mechanisms and processes, it would have been
impossible, in recent months, to mobilize a movement capable of denouncing the
Cuban CIA agent Yoani Sanches World Tour. In capital after capital where the
CIA blogger attempted to smear Cuba, se was received by large groups of
activists that on several occasions managed to force her to desist from her
activities.
Another case in point, The existence of the
Network of Intellectuals in Defence of Humanity, composed of hundreds, if not
thousands, of intellectuals from all over the world and from a broad
ideological spectrum, routinely organizing campaigns in defence of Cuba,
Venezuela and ALBA, as well as against imperialist putschist moves in countries
such as Honduras, Ecuador or Paraguay. Without denying the differences between
various political movements, it is necessary to stress that there exists an
ever-growing common understanding of the problems and challenges ahead.
Nazemroaya warns against easy generalizations
but goes on to make sweeping generalizations such as the following:
“Latin America’s comprador elites
are the local representatives of the foreign corporations, governments, and
interests that have exploited Latin America for centuries. These comprador
elites can frankly be described as either the 'House Negros' or racist upper
class that have historically ruled Latin America and managed its wealth and
resources for the changing centres of power in other parts of the world that have
controlled the area. Today, the regional comprador elites are mostly aligned
with the United States and prefer Miami or New York City to Caracas or Quito”.
One first commentary about this description is
obvious: If the Latin American “comprador elites are mostly aligned with the US
and prefer Miami or New York to Caracas or Quito”, how can they actually be a
driving force behind a process of regional integration that is not to the
liking of the US, NATO and Europe? Are they really a driving force behind this
process as Nazemroaya implies?
This is the kind of sweeping, oversimplifying
generalization that makes it impossible to understand the contexts and the
particular traits of the various countries in the region. This in turn explains
why there are so many “lefts” which, incidentally, show a startling capacity to
cooperate with each other and to reach a common consensus around key issues. Also,
such oversimplifying generalizations make it impossible to understand the
complexities of the international relations among the region's countries, for
example, in the case of the relations between Colombia and Venezuela and the
Peace Process taking place between FARC-EP and Santos.
The 33 nations that compose Latin America and
the Caribbean show a common situation of dependence on imperialism, but they
also show startling differences. Countries like Chile, Argentina or Uruguay
have very strong European cultural influence, while other countries, such as
Bolivia or Guatemala have big indigenous majorities. Some oligarchies are
richer than others, some of them have had more freedom than others to carry out
policies of import substitution.
SOME COUNTRIES,
SUCH AS Honduras
and Paraguay, have been ruthlessly subjected to a state of utmost political
underdevelopment for decades by repressive dictatorships, while others, such as
Ecuador or Uruguay, have enjoyed relatively long periods of successful
reformism. Although Latin America is the world's most unequal region, not all
countries and societies are equally poor and not all of them are equally
underdeveloped. Different forms of dependent economic insertion in the World
Market, different political cultures, different social realities explain the
differences among the political subjects.
Are “Latin America’s comprador elites ... the
local representatives of the foreign corporations, governments, and interests
that have exploited Latin America for centuries” as Nazemroaya puts it? They
are many other things besides that. They are mediators between the Western
multinational interests and the local markets, but in many cases, they are
players on their own right as well. Think about the example of Mexican Carlos
Slim, the world's richest man. Think about the financial Colombian capitalists
represented by Santos or even sectors of the Brazilian oligarchy. They fear
Socialism and most progressive politics, but they also fear the prospects of a
sociopolitical meltdown that would make their profits vanish into thin air. In
many cases, they have to reluctantly accept many of the progressives' and
radicals' policies, even if their newspapers routinely pour bile on those
governments.
Lacking a better political reference frame,
Nazemroaya lays hand on James Petras' typology on the Latin American left - one
the weakest intellectual products of the US-American sociologist. With this
typology, an otherwise sharp analyst such as Petras cannot resist the Western
temptation of handing out small stars of revolutionary approval to movements he
fancies more than others, irrespective of the concrete circumstances of their
struggles. Incapable of understanding many of the true challenges of social
transformation in the real world and the actual limits of political power,
Petras projects his romanticized revolutionary ideals on various movements and
subjects. When those movements in real life do not behave according to Petras'
wishes, they are either ditched or condescendingly tapped on the back with some
scornful comment on having “sold out”. Apparently unable to understand the value
of nation-building for the materialization of any sort of socialist project, he
rejects movements such as Peronismo, irrespective of how stubbornly the
working-class masses support them.
Petras' schematic division between “radical
left”, “pragmatic left”, “pragmatic neo-liberals” and “doctrinaire neo-liberal
regimes” is seriously flawed when confronted with reality. If FARC were in the
same situation as PSUV in Venezuela, it would certainly act along much the same
lines. In fact, it supports the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela and shares
its inspirational force, namely, the heritage of Simon Bolivar.
IN BRAZIL, THE
LANDLESS WORKERS' MOVEMENT gives critical support to the Worker's Party (PT). While it rightly
criticizes the agribusiness-oriented development strategy of Lula's and Dilma
Roussef's party, the Landless Workers' Movement also understands the various
constraints the PT government faces being dependent on alliances with other
political forces, in an inmense country where the oligarchy retains
considerable power at all levels. They are also well aware of what it would
mean were the neo-liberal right to return to political power in Brazil.
In Argentina, to call Cristina Fernández a
“pragmatic neo-liberal” is an outright insult, not to mention an irresponsible
lack of solidarity with a progressive government subject every day to the most
vicious destabilizing campaigns from the oligarchy. No neo-liberal regime
increases minimum wages, raises pensions, improves education or fights poverty.
Nor does any neo-liberal regime say “Good-bye” to IMF the way Argentina has
done.
The same goes for Mauricio Funes' government
in El Salvador, where the FMLN is on its way to win the coming elections with a
candidate of its own. Incapable of identifying processes and accumulation of
forces, dogmatic analysts such as Petras/Nazemroaya see only traitors,
sell-outs and capitalists everywhere. The superficiality of Petras' analysis
becomes sheer bad faith when it comes to certain countries he simply doesn't
mention such as Nicaragua, where cooperatives account for about 40% of the
country's GDP and about 70% of the work force.
Back in mid-2008, a group of leading left-wing
Western intellectuals, most prominently Noam Chomsky, wrote a letter supporting
a hunger strike held by ex-FSLN leader Dora Maria Tellez in Nicaragua. Tellez
was protesting the elimination of her MRS political alliance from the municipal
elections in November of that year for having failed to comply with the
electoral law. So Noam Chomsky and the other well-respected intellectuals
concerned demonstrated the loyalty and solidarity of their
intellectual-managerial class and spoke out on her behalf.
IN FACT, AS IT
TRANSPIRED, the MRS
immediately entered into an electoral alliance with the Nicaragua's corrupt
extreme right-wing PLC party. They campaigned in particular in support of
reactionary banker, Eduardo Montealegre who to this day uses his parliamentary
immunity to avoid indictment for multi-million dollar banking fraud. Clearly,
the MRS suckered Noam Chomsky and his fellow intellectuals into misguidedly
supporting her 2008 charade, because those intellectuals had no idea of the
political realities in Nicaragua. Anyone who doubts MRS' allegiance to the US
Embassy in Managua, should read some of the diplomatic cables recently released
by WikiLeaks on the subject.
That particular case only highlights the
pitfalls of depending on the neat schemas of the managerial class who dominate
intellectual production in North America and Europe. So when Nazemroaya cites
James Petras as his theoretical reference point in his recent article on Latin
America, one needs to apply extreme scepticism to his arguments so as to try
and discern the reality. Among the typical omissions of James Petras and his
colleagues, Nicaragua understandably looms large by its absence.
They see that a given country still is in the
grip of IMF loans, but they are incapable of seeing that the country is
becoming less dependent on such loans. They see that a given country is
depending on agro-exports, but they don't see how that country is diversifying
its economy and becoming less dependent on those exports. They see capitalists
and State-Capitalism and cry “Neoliberalism! Extractivism!” without even
proposing a workable alternative that might to develop a country's productive
forces. Or else when they actually see those alternatives being implemented by
those governments, they shout “It is not enough!”.
To revolutions applies an old Latin American
saying: “It is easy to look at the lady from afar, but quite a different story
to go ahead and talk to her”.
A superficial and disrespectful treatment of
developments in Latin America poses two sets of problems. The first one is that
it makes practical solidarity more difficult, especially now, when Washington
is engaging in a fascist continental crusade against Latin America. The second
set of problems has to do with the crucial importance of the Latin American
experience for any new projects beyond Capitalism anywhere else in the world.
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