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Leftist Victories in Latin America Create New Opportunities for SOA (School of the Americas) Opponents |
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by Dan Bacher Dissident Voice Entered into the database on Friday, June 10th, 2005 @ 18:50:57 MST |
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The increasing number of leftist, populist led governments winning elections in
Latin America means a new opportunity for Fr. Roy Bourgeois and other opponents
of the School of the Americas (SOA) to close the institution down. The left is on an unprecedented ascendance in Latin America. After years of
suffering under U.S. backed dictatorships, the majority of the people in South
America have rejected neo-liberal policies and have voted for left-leaning governments
in the most recent elections. SOA Watch, the organization started by Bourgeois,
now has the chance to ask the elected leaders of these countries to pull their
troops out of training at the school. The triumph of Hugo Chavez's Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela, Lula's Workers
Party in Brazil, Nestor Kirchner's populist government in Argentina, socialist
President Tabare Vasquez in Uruguay and President Ricardo Lagos in Chile are
the result of a popular upsurge by populations sick of corporate globalization
and the predations of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.
"The victory of the socialist doctor, Tabare Vazquez, in February's elections
in Uruguay has prompted analysts and left-wing presidents to talk of a 'new
South America,'" observed James Painter, BBC Latin American analyst. "They
point out that left-leaning leaders run the big three economies of Brazil, Argentina
and Venezuela, and now predominate in most of the rest of the region. The only
exception is President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia, who remains adamantly pro-Washington
and free market policies." Both President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and President Luiz Ignacio Lula da
Silva of Brazil did extremely well in recent local elections. Pro-government
candidates won in 20 of Venezuela's 22 states, according to Painter. Lula's
Workers Party in Brazil won the most number of votes nationwide and doubled
the number of local councils it won in 2000 - even though it lost Sao Paulo
and Porto Alegre. In Central America, the left is also on the upsurge. The Sandinista Front (FSLN)
won 87 of Nicaragua's 152 mayoral posts in the November 2004 elections. The
victories will boost Ortega's chances in 2006 of winning back the presidency
he lost in the election of 1990. Likewise in El Salvador, the leftist FMLN saw an increase in seats in the parliament
and municipal government posts in the 2003 elections, though the presidency
is still controlled by the right wing. The FMLN won 31 deputy seats against
the right wing ARENA Party’s 27 deputies in the parliamentary elections,
although ARENA won the presidential election of March 2004 by a margin of 57%
to 35% against the FMLN. The focus of SOA Watch, founded by Father Roy Bourgeois, continues to be the
passage of legislation in the U.S. Congress to close down the School of the
Americas. However, his efforts to get progressive Latin American governments
to pull their troops out of training at the "School of the Assassins"
are already beginning to bear fruit, something that would have been unthinkable
just a few years ago. A new front has been opened in the battle to close the
SOA. Bourgeois recently met with Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, a country that has sent
4,000 troops to the school. Chavez agreed to stop sending troops to the school
- a historic moment in the long struggle to shut the institution down. "We are very hopeful that we will get Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil and
other countries to withdraw from participation in the school this year,"
said Bourgeois at an appearance in Sacramento this spring. "We are very
encouraged by Chavez's decision to no longer send troops to the SOA." "For many years, the eyes of Latin America were focused on Nicaragua,"
explained Bourgeois. "The Sandinistas did a lot of good things, like redistribute
land, conduct a literacy campaign and empower the powerless." However, the United States' intervention in Nicaragua resulted in many of the
revolution's gains being set back after the U.S. battered the population with
the brutal Contra War. The result was the loss of the presidency by Daniel Ortega
to Violetta Chamorro in 1990. The political situation now has changed dramatically from those bleak years
right after the Sandinistas were defeated. "After years under the IMF and
World Bank structural adjustment policies, the people and their governments
are realizing these policies are not working and they are moving away from them.
The majority of people are poor and struggling for their survival," said
Bourgeois. "The populist victories in Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela and Uruguay are
all about bringing poor people into the circle and addressing the issues of
poverty and health care," he added. "This will cause a conflict with
the people in Washington, but these countries have the right to self-determination.
Our country has been on the wrong side, on the side of the small elite and the
corporations, rather being on the side of the people." The growing groundswell against U.S. military and economic domination makes
this year a key time to pressure the U.S. to shut down the SOA. "We must
close down the SOA because it provides the muscle for U.S. foreign policy and
protects the economic interests of the corporate giants," said Bourgeois.
In March, Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA) reintroduced legislation in the 109th Congress
to suspend operations of the School of the Americas (now renamed -- WHINSEC
-- the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation). HR 1217, "The Latin America Military Training Review Act of 2005,"
had 78 bi-partisan introductory co- sponsors -- thanks to intense lobbying efforts
by activists during the February Lobby Day and National Call-in Day by SOA Watch.
The bill currently has 105 bi-partisan co-sponsors; Representative Doris Matsui
became the 105th after a delegation by local SOA Watch activists Leisa Faulkner
Barnes and Janice Freeman, supported by Lorraine Krofchok of Grandmothers For
Peace, in May. The School of the Americas has trained a majority of the dictators and military
officers responsible for the killing, massacre and torture of hundreds of thousands
of people in Latin America. Many of the soldiers and officers responsible for
the Guatemalan Genocide of the 1980's, where over 200,000 people were killed
and 637 Mayan villages were wiped off the face of the map, were SOA graduates.
Of the 28 soldiers involved in the slaughter of the 9 Jesuits, their housekeeper
and her daughter at the Central American University in November 1989, 19 were
SOA graduates. Since SOA Watch has been demonstrating at Fort Benning, 200 courageous activists
have been jailed, spending a total of 85 years in federal prison. Sacramento's
Leisa Faulkner Barnes last year completed a three-month sentence in the women's
federal prison in Dublin for participation in the protest at the SOA in November
2003. "We will keep coming back to Fort Benning until we shut the SOA down,"
said Bourgeois. "We will again demonstrate at the school on November 19
to 20 this year." Please take the time to call your Congress Member by DC office by calling the
Capitol Hill Switchboard (202-224-3121) and ask them to support Rep. Jim McGovern's
HR 1217. For more information, contact SOA Watch at: www.soaw.org. For more
information about the Sacramento SOA Watch, call Janice Freeman, 916-812-7680,
or Leisa Faulkner Barnes, 916-801-4184 Here is a suggested message for you to convey: "I am calling Congressman/woman
________ to remind him/her that Rep. Jim McGovern has introduced HR 1217, The
Latin America Military Training Review Act of 2005, which would suspend and
investigate the School of the Americas, which now uses the acronym WHINSEC.
I urge the Congressman/woman to contact Rep. McGovern's office to become a cosponsor
of this bipartisan bill. This would be one very concrete step to support human
rights and promote peace and justice for the people of Latin America."
Dan Bacher is an outdoor writer, alternative journalist and satirical song
writer from Sacramento, California. He is editor of the Central America Connection
and contributes to numerous publications and websites, including Dissident Voice,
CounterPunch, Because People Matter and the Sacramento News & Review. Email:
danielbacher@hotmail.com. |