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The Bush Administration is touting Iraq's December 15 election as a
giant leap forward for freedom guaranteed to ignite fervor for democracy across
the entire Middle East. But closer to home, the Administration has discovered
that democracy has created a monster and that the monster is democracy. In Latin
America and the Caribbean, popular movements are demanding that the United States'
"gift to the world" make good on its promise of majority rule. That
would likely disrupt a system-otherwise known as "free-market democracy"-that
has benefited a small elite and worsened poverty for most people. The possibility
has so alarmed CIA Director Porter Goss that he recently labeled the spate of
upcoming elections in Latin America as a "potential area of instability."
The Bush Administration is fighting back, stepping up USAID's "democracy
promotion" program to ensure that those who have long had a monopoly on
wealth continue to exercise a monopoly on government. The program's main targets
in this hemisphere are Venezuela, Bolivia, and Haiti. National elections in
these countries-all occurring within just one month of the Iraqi ballot-provide
a flashpoint for how hard the Bush Administration is working to keep democracy
out of the wrong hands, both in this hemisphere and in Iraq.
Venezuela
On December 4, Venezuela's main opposition parties chose to boycott congressional
elections rather than face certain defeat at the polls. In 2002, these same
pro-business parties-financed directly by the US National Endowment for Democracy
to the tune of about six million dollars a year-resorted to a military coup
to oust Hugo Chavez from the presidency. The coup failed in less than two days
because millions of Venezuelans (including the lower ranks of the army) rallied
to Chavez's defense. Most Venezuelans continue to defend-and vote for-Chavez
and his brand of participatory, bottom-up democracy, which has mobilized millions
of citizens in national dialogues on governance, produced the region's most
democratic constitution (written in gender-inclusive language recognizing women's
unpaid work and guaranteeing a pension to housewives), launched an ambitious
land-reform program, and improved rates of illiteracy, hunger, and infant mortality.
At last month's Summit of the Americas in Argentina, Chavez was a lightning
rod for widespread opposition to US-driven economic policies that have further
impoverished most Latin Americans. Afterwards, Bush accused him of trying to
"roll back democratic progress." Yet, most of the world seems quite
impressed with Venezuela's democratic progress, even by the rather narrow standard
of elections. Indeed, all eight elections held in Venezuela under Chavez have
been declared free and fair by independent observers, including Jimmy Carter.
This is precisely the problem: despite the opposition's extensive US backing,
it can't beat Chavez at the polls. Democracy just isn't working (says the only
US president to be appointed by the Supreme Court after losing the popular vote).
For decades, Venezuela was controlled by two alternating elite parties, both
allied with US business interests (sound familiar?). Most of the population
was effectively disenfranchised and elections could be counted on to confer
legitimacy on a compliant leadership. Now, Venezuela's poor majority has seized
on the rhetoric and procedures of democracy to win control of the state. This
is what the Bush Administration calls a crisis of democracy.
Bolivia
Bolivia is suffering from a similar crisis. When Bolivians go to the polls
on December 18, they are likely to elect Evo Morales to be their first Indigenous
President. Morales is a social democrat whom the Bush Administration vilifies
as a radical leftist and the US Ambassador compared to Osama bin Laden. But
Morales' platform is extreme only if you consider policies that guarantee mass
poverty and vast inequality to be moderate. His platform reflects the Bolivian
social movements' demand for increased government regulation of natural resources
and the formation of a popular Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution
that would make government more inclusive.
Apparently incredulous that Indigenous peasants could be strategic and organized
enough to overthrow two presidents in two years (Gonzalo Sanchez in 2003 and
Carlos Mesa in 2005), Donald Rumsfeld says that Hugo Chavez must be pulling
the strings in Bolivia. Yet, it is the Bush Administration that has meddled
openly in Bolivian politics since the Indigenous movement rose to prominence
in 2002. That year, the Administration publicly threatened to cut off economic
aid if Bolivians elected Morales. Since then, the US has steadily expanded its
"democracy promotion" efforts in Bolivia, pouring millions of tax
dollars into building a parallel, pro-US Indigenous movement and turning out
public relations campaigns for a series of doomed, US-friendly governments.
As in Venezuela, US "democracy promotion" in Bolivia supports a limited
notion of representative government enacted by pro-business elites over more
direct participation in government by the poor majority. The big headache for
the Administration is that Bolivia's Indigenous-based social movement is playing
by the rules, working within the system to gain more legitimate representation
within government.
Haiti
Two weeks ago, Haiti postponed its presidential election for the fourth time
in five months. With the vote now set for January 8, the Interim Government
(installed by the US after it helped overthrow Haiti's democratically-elected
President, Jean Bertrand Aristide, in February 2004) will hold on to power past
its February 2006 deadline (just imagine if Hugo Chavez tried that). Regardless
of when elections are held, conditions in Haiti make a mockery of democratic
process. Yet the Bush Administration has demanded that elections go forth.
Secretary of State Rice has hailed Haiti's election as "a precious step
on the road to democracy." But look closely. Haitians are being denied
the right to vote: only a few hundred registration and polling sites have been
created to serve eight million people (compared with 10,000 provided by the
deposed Aristide government) and some large, poor neighborhoods-with few government
supporters-have no registration sites at all. Haitians are being denied the
right to campaign: the government's potential challengers have been jailed on
false charges or no charges. And Haitians are being denied the right to organize:
in September, the government outlawed political demonstrations in violation
of Haiti's constitution; and anti-government protesters have been repeatedly
attacked by the Haitian National Police. The Bush Administration fueled this
repression by sending $1.9 million worth of guns and police equipment to Haiti
just in time for election season.
In fact, repression is the Haitian government's primary campaign strategy.
Since 1990, every internationally-validated election in Haiti has produced a
landslide victory for the Lavalas Party. Once the standard-bearer of Haiti's
pro-democracy movement, Lavalas-like its exiled leader, Aristide-is a casualty
of US "democracy promotion." After US-backed forces ousted Aristide,
the party splintered into factions, including unaccountable and violent groups.
Despite its flawed human rights record, Lavalas would no doubt win again in
January if its candidates were allowed to run. The reason is simple: Lavalas
is the party of the poor and most Haitians are poor.
Far from supporting constitutional democracy in Haiti, the US has twice helped
to overthrow Aristide, who resisted Washington's prescriptions for Haiti's economy
by insisting on social spending for the poor. The first time, back in 1991,
"regime change" was still a covert business. The US had to deny that
it was sponsoring the military thugs that took over Haiti and killed thousands
of Aristide supporters (and poor people in general, just for good measure).
By last year, when Aristide was ousted for the second time, things had changed.
A Pentagon plane flew him into exile. The US warmly welcomed the "new"
government, including remnants of the 1991 coup who are poised to win next month's
sham election.
Democracy in Iraq: The Freedom to Do What We Tell You
The first fact of Iraq's election is that it will take place under the distorting
influence of military occupation, precluding a free and fair vote from the start.
Iraq's "march toward liberty" has been marred by US intervention at
every step, starting with Paul Bremmer's 2003 decision to appoint reactionary
clerics to the Iraqi Governing Council. That move has helped Islamists dominate
Iraq's interim government and roll back the democratic rights of Iraqi women-a
majority of the population.
In fact, the Bush Administration has no intention of allowing a majority of
Iraqis to determine key policies. The Administration has tried to avoid holding
direct (one person, one vote) elections in Iraq, giving in only because of pressure
from Ayatollah Ali Sistani, a Shiite cleric who wants Iraq to be an Islamic
state. And Bush's two most important objectives in Iraq-creating an extreme
free-market state and maintaining a long-term military presence-have been placed
well beyond the reach of Iraqi voters.
As in Haiti, democracy in Iraq is to be mainly a procedural matter, demonstrated
by periodic elections regardless of political chaos and widespread violence
against candidates and voters alike. And as in Venezuela and Bolivia, the government
that is produced by the elections will be entitled to the label "democracy"
only as long as it follows a US policy script.
In 1819 Simon Bolivar observed that, "The USA appears destined by fate
to plague America with misery in the name of democracy." The Bush Administration
is intent on extending this destiny to Iraq and the whole Middle East. Iraqis
may be having an election this week, but the Bush Administration is no more
interested in genuine democracy in Iraq than it is in Latin America and the
Caribbean.
Yifat Susskind is the Communications Director of
MADRE, an international women's human
rights organization based in New York. She can be reached at madre@madre.org.