Nicaragua
: from Sandino to Chavez
"I come from the north american
embassy where I had a conference with ambassador Arthur Bliss Lane who
has assured me that the government in Washington supports and
recommends the elimination of Augusto Cesar Sandino, considering him to
be disruptive of peace in Nicaragua."
Anastasio Somoza to National Guard
colleagues. February 21st 1934.
From "Sandino, General de Hombres Libres" by Gregorio Selser.
The US government's murder of Augusto Cesar Sandino marked the
culmination of US government efforts to destroy Nicaragua's
independence. Those efforts first came to a head in 1910 with the use
of the battle cruiser "Paducah" to protect pro-US rebel forces holed up
and cornered in Bluefields on the Nicaraguan Atlantic Coast. US
imperial military muscle smoothed the way to the presidency for a US
company employee, Adolfo Diaz.
Diaz oversaw the imposition of penal financial and trade terms through
the Knox-Castrillo treaty and the renunciation of Nicaragua's
territorial sovereignty in the Chamorro-Bryan treaty. In 1912 thousands
of marines under General Smedley Butler disembarked at the Pacific port
of Corinto to crush Nicaraguan Liberal party efforts to reclaim the
country's sovereignty. One of the baser hypocrisies of contemporary US
collaborators in the Nicaraguan ruling classes is the public lip
service they pay to Liberal martyr Benjamin Zeledon who died fighting
US marines at that time.
Spiralling contemporary political crisis
Reviewing the Adolfo Diaz period one realises that patterns of US
imperial behaviour, of Nicaraguan domestic resistance and oligarchical
betrayal, have changed little in the intervening century. Right now, a
sell-out government of mediocre placemen struggles to maintain some
shred of legitimacy, using a border dispute over the Rio San Juan with
Costa Rica as a smokescreen to cover its failures. As of writing, a
handful of senior government ministers have skipped the country to
avoid judicial process for electoral finance offences. Sandinista
opposition leader Daniel Ortaga persistently calls for dialogue.
President Bolaños equally persistently insists on pre-conditions
underwritten by foreign allies.
The US State Department and the local US embassy intervene openly,
giving orders and making threats to local politicians, demonising
anyone who resists their will. The dominant Nicaraguan oligarchy hurry
to impose yet another US-authored treaty - this time the Central
American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). They expect to do well out of it
themselves, while CAFTA's terms leave Nicaragua's poor majority and the
country's precious natural resources at the mercy of US corporate
investors.
Just as in 1910, it suits the United States and its allies who call the
shots for more vulnerable countries through control of the World Bank
and the IMF to suggest that Nicaragua is especially corrupt and
especially poorly governed. It is an image promoted precisely to
explain away the hopeless results of their own crass institutional and
political intervention in Nicaragua's internal affairs. Self-serving
interpretations of the current crisis in Nicaragua projected abroad by
the Organization of American States, the international financial
institutions, the US State Department,the European Union and the United
Nations leave out a fundamental fact. If Nicaragua is in crisis it is
because those organizations' own interventions have fomented one to
serve their own ends against the interests of Nicaragua's impoverished
majority. Maybe a good place to start is with the issue of corruption.
Do as we say......
Foreign officials love to point the finger at former presidents Arnoldo
Aleman and Daniel Ortega, pretending that current President Enrique
Bolaños is some kind of Mr. Clean. But look who's talking. The
IMF and the World Bank have a disgraceful record of setting up
vulnerable countries economies for international corporate predators.
Remember Argentina's economic meltdown? Giant Wall Street financial
houses made fortunes for their shareholders before hanging Argentina's
people out to dry - all under the benevolent gaze of the IMF and the
World Bank. Argentina is just one of many similar examples of IMF and
World Bank infamy.
The international financial and trade institutions are hotbeds of
corporate crony corruption. Bush-Cheney groupie Paul Wolfowitz heads up
the World Bank while former French financial giant Credit Lyonnais
pin-up Pascal Lamy runs the World Trade Organization. These people are
little more than smarter, bigger-scale operators than your average
racketeer. The outcome for ordinary people who are their victims seldom
varies. The poor and vulnerable pay dearly while characters like
Wolfowitz and Lamy plot yet more loot-and-pillage ops with the global
corporate elite they represent.
Po-faced international financial bureaucrats get their message
reinforced by political accomplices in the US and Europe. But few take
seriously strictures on corruption from a US regime responsible for the
billion dollar corporate scams perpetrated in Iraq or the current
corporate pork-and-gravy pell-mell after the disasters in the southern
US. The European Union too is rife with corruption. Just a few years
ago the whole European Commission resigned in recognition of their
responsibility in failing to rein in corrupt abuses.
Their cosmetic symbolic gesture changed little. EU bureaucrat-speak
about "transparency" covers up persistent corporate wheeler-dealing
behind the scenes and significant mis-management of resources as
regular minor scandals - like that around Eurostat - make very clear.
The cases of individuals like French President Jacques Chirac, former
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, current Italian President Silvio
Berlusconi, the sleaze-ridden Blair government in the UK, all indicate
how prevalent corruption is in Europe. Clearly, few countries and
certainly not the European Union or the US, have any business lecturing
impoverished countries like Nicaragua on corruption. Still, they do.
The Nicaraguan version
During Violeta Chamorro's 1990-1996 presidency, anti-Sandinista media
and politician's took pleasure in lambasting Daniel Ortega and the
Sandinista FSLN for the so-called "piñata" (a children's party
game with a scramble for caramels as the prize). The outgoing 1990
Sandinista government recompensed its soon-to-be-redundant
functionaries with gifts of State-owned property, vehicles and
equipment. Subsequently, Violeta Chamorro's cronies had few qualms
about helping themselves with a large spoon to great dollops of public
resources under the auspices of wholesale IMF and World Bank mandated
privatization, as well as more routine self-enrichment at public
expense.
But it was the 1996-2002 administration headed up by Arnoldo Aleman and
Enrique Bolaños who took self-aggrandizement by public officials
to extremes in Nicaragua only matched by the former Somoza dynasty.
They bled well over US$100 million from public coffers. Much of the
money went on doubling up official salaries on the quiet. That fact
explains why so many of Aleman's Constitutional Liberal Party (PLC)
still support him and view Bolaños as a contemptible turncoat.
It explains much of the breakdown of presidential authority in the
country.
Nicaragua has no established permanent civil service. Almost all public
officials lose their jobs with every change of government. So people
naturally seek to provide for an uncertain future while they have the
chance. Is the revolving door system between public and private
corporate life much different in the US or Europe? Is Tony Blair's
widely publicised entree to the board of war-providers-to-the-empire
Carlyle Group anything more than a fat payoff for political services
rendered? No wonder people in countries like Nicaragua view US and
European strictures on corruption with healthy scepticism.
And so it goes with all the other wails of lamentation so beloved of
foreign officials in Nicaragua. The politicised judiciary, the
legislative assembly dominated by big party machines, small parties
struggling for electoral viability - all are common fixtures in many
countries around the world, in the US particularly. But foreign
officials in Nicaragua regularly pronounce and expound as if none of it
has ever happened anywhere, ever before. Such pap is loyally repeated
by domestic parrots in Nicaragua's political and media classes.
Nicaragua is awash with latter-day Adolfo Diazes and Emiliano
Chamorros. President Enrique Bolaños and his ministers as well
as opportunist "centrist" wannabes like Eduardo Montealegre and Herty
Lewites regularly and insistently denigrate "El Pacto" - the
political deal between the dominant Sandinista and Liberal parties.
They use the term "El Pacto" well knowing it is loaded with all the
history of shameful betrayals of which Nicaragua has had more than its
fair share. So far the Nicaraguan media have strung along with the
one-way propaganda ridicule.
It is striking that Nicaraguan journalists never point out to
Bolaños that his deal with the US embassy and other foreign
governments stinks as badly as the Chamorro-Bryan and Knox-Castrillo
treaties ever did. They never point out to Montealegre and Lewites, who
have publicly declared a deal to collaborate, that their own "Pacto" is
at least as questionable as that between the leadership of the FSLN
Sandinista party and the PLC Liberal party. It is by no means necessary
to support Arnoldo Aleman or Daniel Ortega in order to note the rank
hypocrisy and cynical opportunism of astute political sharpsters like
Lewites and Montealegre and desperate failures like President
Bolaños.
Fundamentals of the crisis
Nicaragua is like the rest of Central America, only more so. The major
social issues are widespread poverty and demographic migration. The
major economic issues are unemployment and under-investment. The major
environmental issue is water-resources management. The energy crisis
provoked by oil price rises only makes these existing problems worse.
As ever, foreign governments and the corporations they serve are only
interested in Nicaragua for what they can get out of it.
They seek cheap labour to inflate their profits, disinvesting in their
own countries in the name of the "free market". They want good transit
infrastructure for their own strategic and business purposes, not for
the integral purposes of Nicaragua's population. They want high profits
from the sale of Nicaragua's natural resources, for their
share-holders, not for people in Nicaragua. If they can finish off
stripping Nicaragua's public resources under privatizations extorted by
IMF conditionality, all the better. For them a weak government in
Managua is good policy.
They want to deregulate capital controls to be able to shift their
hot-money off-shore as and when they need, for both financial and
political reasons. They want equal or preferential treatment in
comparison with local national businesses because "a level-playing
field" means hugely one-sided advantages to them, given their massive
international resources. They want investment rules that shift
arbitration outside national jurisdiction where corporate-friendly
judges will tend to rule in their favour and against the interests of
distant impoverished masses. All this the IMF and the World Bank are
anxious to make happen as tools of the US government and its allies.
It is that external imperialist dynamic - ripping off people in
Nicaragua to serve foreign interests - that has provoked the country's
political crisis. The European Union, the United States, the World
Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations, the
Organization of American States and a plethora of other smaller foreign
and mulitlateral outfits all play their part one way or another in this
systematic gangsterism. It is all smeared over with a film of obnoxious
moralistic posturing.
So long as Arnoldo Aleman played ball during his presidency, none of
these organizations spoke out, just mumbling discontent from time to
time in the wings. Now they stick up for Aleman's former accomplice,
Enrique Bolaños. Suave foreign barbarians like US Ambassador
Paul Trivelli, following on from his interim predecessor Embassy Charge
d'Affaires Oliver Garza, openly attack the opposition Sandinista and
PLC political parties. European Union spokespeople question perfectly
legitimate attempts by the National Assembly to subject electoral
finance irregularities to judical process - exactly what led to the
political demise of Christian Democrat strongman Helmut Kohl in Germany.
The double standards are self-evident. Perhaps the most interesting
response is the lack of one in the Nicaraguan media. Almost uniformly
the two main dailies El Nuevo Diario and La Prensa and virtually all
the television media editorialise mimicking foreign spokepersons. They
seem to be playing a game of pretending that there is some unquestioned
mushy "centrist" "moderate" social-democrat-style political "modernity"
that all "reasonable" people should support.
One practical effect of that is that they seldom press
flavour-of-the-month favourites like Herty Lewites or Eduardo
Montealegre to define political positions - on CAFTA for example, or on
water privatization, or education and health policy. Real politics
appear to have been abandoned while the crisis floats through a kind of
weightless make-believe that self-serving foreigners are in fact
humanitarian altruists entitled to intervene, whose only concern is the
best for the Nicaraguan people. One has only to consider the fates of
Iraq, Palestine or Haiti to realise what these foreign interests really
represent.
Let's put a figure to that. Plenty of small Nicaraguan community
organizations deliver education, health and social services to people
on tiny budgets thanks to the gutting of central government by foreign
intervention. A typical example would be a community development outfit
with a budget of US$60,000 a year delivering a mixture of services to
about 400 people a month. So the total number of direct and indirect
beneficiaries would be around 1800. Now, that figure US$60,000
constitutes a typical annual salary and benefits package for just one
middle level foreign official working for their government or some
mulitlateral outfit like the UN or the World Bank. So please don't
let's hear that they are in Nicaragua for the good of the Nicaraguan
people - that sum just don't add up.
From Sandino to Chavez
The US government organized assassination of Sandino may have marked a
kind of ending. But in other ways his murder only postponed matters.
Towards the end of his short life Sandino was calling for coordinated
action throughout Latin America to confront US regional and continental
ambitions. If any one person has inherited and taken up Sandino's
vision it is Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez. The resemblances are
hardly accidental.
When Chavez calls for Latin American unity and regional economic
integration based on a continental social charter, he is taking up
again the business Anastasio Somoza tried to have buried in Managua's
Larreynaga field that February night in 1934. Like Sandino, Chavez
believes people in Latin America can and should sort out their
political and economic arrangements to suit themselves without foreign
impositions. That is why the United States government would like to
have him killed. That is why European governments cravenly refuse to
denounce US intervention.
The traditional oligarchy in Nicaragua wants their country to be a
colonial adjunct of the United States as they always have done. In that
they seem to be supported by "centrist" and social-democrat style
politicians like Eduardo Montealegre and Herty Lewites. They, like the
Liberal PLC party, dominated by Arnoldo Aleman will deal with imperial
agents like Paul Trivelli in the local US embassy so long as they get
an appropriate share of whatever political benefits and
perquisites are on offer.
The only political force in Nicaragua openly and determinedly defending
Nicaragua's independence is the Sandinista FSLN. The tension between
Adolfo Diaz-style sell out to US imperial scheming and Augusto Cesar
Sandino's vision of Nicaragua's place within a united sovereign Latin
America is again defining politics in Nicaragua. The energy crisis and
Venezuela's obviously decisive role in any resolution it may have lend
an unpredictable new dynamic to an old pattern of regional politics.
Sandino's vision of Latin American dignity and autonomy, renewed and
revitalised by Hugo Chavez, simply refuses to die. Both the US
government and the European Union are anxious to keep Nicaragua as a
loyal, secure satrapy of the US empire. Nicaragua is a country
traditionally perceived to be strategically important for its location
on the American isthmus. Just as it did in Haiti, the European Union
will support the US government in doing whatever it takes to squash
potential moves towards autonomy by Nicaragua through alignment with
Venezuela. The current crisis in Nicaragua should be seen in that
overall context.