Tag Archives: Ecuador

Ecuador’s democracy at risk

President Rafael Correa’s proposal to create a Constituent Assembly to rewrite Ecuador’s Constitution won an overwhelming 81.7% of the votes in a national Referendum on April 15, 2007.  The Supreme Electoral Court has resolved to convene elections on September 30, 2007 for the 130 delegates to a Constituent National Assembly.  But many see the result of the Referendum as a power grab by the Correa who didn’t present candidates for Congress and had little support to advance his policies. Implications.

NEWS:

  • Colombia: President Alvaro Uribe visits President George W. Bush to discuss Trade and Plan Colombia.
  • Chavez wants to pull out from the World Bank and IMF. Chavez wants to control a municipality in Argentina. Venezuela set to gain control of Oil Fields. Venezuela will meet all energy needs of leftist allies. Venezuelans struggle to acquire food staples. IACHR sues Venezuela over attacks on RCTV. Venezuela will leave OAS over TV Channel.
  • Nicaraguan delegation visits Venezuela to discuss refinery outline. First 20 Cuban doctors in Nicaragua. At risk contract of Glencore in Nicaragua.  
  • United Arab Emirates and Uruguay seek to strengthen relations.
  • Argentina : Iranian ally and Kirchner loyalist publicly accuses "the Jewish right" for the AMIA bombing. Kirchner and Lula reinforce "strategic alliance" and discuss biofuels.
  • Fidel Castro fails to appear at May Day Parade.
  • Brazil and Chile sign biofuel cooperation agreement.
  • Peru ‘s Garcia voted decree powers.

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For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@centerforsecuritypolicy.org. If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

 

Columbia: Moving toward more stability

The following is the official statement submitted by Nancy Menges, director of the Menges Hemispheric Security Project, to the House Foreign Relations Committee’s Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere.  The statment was submitted on April 24, 2007.

Colombia, a country which was starting to look like a failed state during the late 1990s, is generally moving in the right direction under the current government.

The Uribe administration is under attack because the demobilization of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) and the resulting peace process has led to the opening of old and new wounds, revealing links between the paramilitary and the political establishment.

We believe however, that the Uribe administration deserves US assistance and the ratification of a mutually beneficial FTA, sustaining the country’s rebounding economy. The peace process is messy and full of imperfections. It is however gaining momentum and providing a window of opportunity for a better future for the people of Colombia.

We further believe that US assistance at this moment can contribute to creating an environment of greater individual security that is less prone to lawlessness and organized crime. It is this environment, if sustained that will help curtail drug smuggling into the United States.

The recent "parapolitics" scandals need to be put into context: they are the symptoms of a consolidating democracy which has created a political climate where these things come to light. The investigations have started a judicial process unprecedented in Colombia’s history. The Justice and Peace Law offers only limited amnesty to all those laying down their arms. An estimated 30,000 troops of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) have laid down their arms and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN) are severely diminished. The country deserves military assistance to close the security gap and create the conditions for greater respect of human rights and lower criminality.

The advantages of a generous FTA will outweigh the competitive disadvantages for small farmers and foster agricultural diversification away from Coca planting. It will help sustain the rebounding Colombian economy and promote a consolidating democracy. Continued assistance under "Plan Colombia" will help strengthen central security. It could also send a powerful message to both the supporters and opponents of the US economic and democratic model.

Stepped up Security

The Uribe Administration is making some headway in reducing crime and violence. The issue of personal security is of great importance to the citizens of Colombia and the positive track record of the Uribe administration, in this regard, is largely responsible for the overwhelming popular support of his government, despite the recent scandals. Colombian investment in the military and security forces have lead to an overall reduction in crime and terror.

The FARC has been expelled from the populated Bogotá – Medellín – Cali triangle in central Colombia. For the first time in years, Colombians can drive between most of the country’s cities without risk of abduction or extortion. However, the FARC is diminished but not defeated. There is evidence that its members enjoy safe haven in neighboring Venezuela.

Colombia’s murder rate has dropped from 68 people per 100,000 inhabitants in 2002 to 38 people per 100,000 inhabitants in 2006. Some CAFTA members show worse statistics. Killings by right-wing paramilitary squads are on a massive decline and some top paramilitary leaders are in jail.

The Justice and Peace Law: The Disarmament of an Undefeated Military Group.

Embarking on a peace process, the paramilitaries needed an incentive to lay down their arms. The Justice and Peace Law was a necessary compromise albeit its implementation could have been more stringent. The Uribe administration has managed, however, to disarm an undefeated military group without having to offer full amnesty. The Supreme Court stiffened the law which shows that the administration is respecting the legal branch as compared to Venezuela which had the majority of Supreme Court judges resign in the first year of Chavez’s rule.

Ensuring peace could become a major achievement of Uribe’s administration. Continued US support is crucial, now that the process is gaining momentum. There is good reason to fear that the paramilitary will return to violence. An estimated number of 2,500 to 3,600 have joined "second-generation" paramilitary groups, with purely criminal motivations. This danger is likely to escalate if the military is not given adequate support and is therefore unable to counteract these various threats. If mafia structures believe that the military is a) not able to contain the FARC and ELN and b) might not be able to implement stepped up security measures all over the country, criminal elements will have an easier time resuming armed activities against a weakened Uribe government.

The Administration Entrenched in a Scandal

Uribe’s administration is under attack for alleged links to AUC. But Uribe’s current problems are, paradoxically, the result of his successful transformation of the conflict. These revelations are a byproduct of the successful disarmament of AUC. The consolidation of democracy has created a climate where prior connections can come to light. Witnesses are coming forward now that they can speak out with less fear. The scandals also present evidence for the slow return of trust in democratic and judicial institutions. It highlights the declining power of the paramilitary who have lost a lot of their leverage over a strengthened democratic apparatus. The recent scandal investigations have to be seen for what they are: a judicial process, unprecedented in Colombia’s history.

So far, there is no evidence that Uribe has had any direct contact with the paramilitary leadership. Two members of the Uribe Cabinet that were identified as having connections to the paramilitaries were asked to resign. Admittedly, most of the arrested representatives were his supporters. But it should be noted that most of the allegations against them date from 2002, when they backed the official Liberal candidate against Uribe, who then ran as an independent.

Uribe has given full support to the investigations against AUC members and affiliates. It is their testifying leaders who reveal the connections between them and political representatives; a sad reality of Colombia’s politics during the nineties. It is fair to say, however, that neither FARC nor ELN have surrendered to the peace and justice act provisions. To believe that their leader’s confessions would not reveal links to left leaning politicians is somewhat illusionary.

While the demobilization has been full of imperfections the process has acquired a momentum of its own that offers a chance for more peace and the strengthening of the rule of law.

Promoting Prosperity through Free Market Mechanisms

A generous free trade agreement is consistent with the interests of the United States. Declining the FTA would hamper the free movement of goods and damage the Colombian economy in a time of rebound. It would discourage those Colombian farmers who are willing to diversify away from coca into legal crops. The success story of Latin countries like Chile show that free trade and US-market access can help strengthen sustainable development and alleviate poverty. Illegal narcotics, on the other hand, do not face tariffs. Though the trade agreement will put competitive pressure on the Colombian agricultural sector the disadvantages posed by US competition are outweighed by the advantages of easier access to the market of Colombia’s largest trade partner.

As a result of enhanced security, the economy has rebounded as businesses ramp up investment to $10 billion last year. Colombia’s GDP has been stable under the current administration. However, during a period of economic recovery, Colombia will face competitive disadvantages without the trade agreement. The United States represents the most important market for the sale of Colombian goods. The decline in US-Colombian trade would make the country more dependent on its US-critical neighbors, Venezuela and Ecuador.

Free trade inherently creates win-win situations, meaning that an agreement would benefit the Unite States as well. Preferred access to a market comprising the second largest population of the Southern Cone (45.3 million inhabitants) will give US business a head start as the Colombian economy is likely to expand in the coming years.

Plan Colombia – a Link Between the Drug Trade and Security

Plan Colombia was started under the Clinton administration and passed by the Congress in order to combat the major drug cartels then thriving in Colombia. A rise in military expenses was crucial for combating drug production and trade. Plan Colombia has stopped the huge drug cartels from creating a criminal element that competes with the legitimate government. The smaller cartels no longer have the same concentration of power that single "drug lords" had before. Estimates are that Plan Colombia has contained the explosion of drug production despite better extraction techniques. Plan Colombia provided for the introduction of more permanent security checkpoints as well as the flexible intervention of security squads through increased use of helicopters.

Plan Colombia has helped to equip the security forces and transform them into a more effective force within the country. US assistance has been essential for that purpose, be it the delivery of hardware or training. While spraying has had negative impacts on the environment it has lead to a decrease in long standing coca plantations. It is likely that the transportation and shipping of the drugs as well as the maintenance of clandestine drug laboratories is becoming more difficult as the security situation tightens.

US-Colombia Relations in a Regional Context

In making decisions about Colombia, it is important to consider the wider political context in the Andean region. The recent trend towards left wing governments which happen to have a strong anti-American rhetoric in common leaves Colombia as one of the few remaining examples which can prove that friendship with the United States is beneficial. While two of its neighbors, Venezuela and Ecuador are rapidly moving towards a "Bolivarian Revolution", Colombia’s democracy is healthy but fragile. Colombia has fought a narco-guerilla insurgency in the form of the FARC for the past thirty years. The FARC gave rise to the paramilitaries. Now that the paramilitaries have been disbanded, and the economy is rebounding, is this the time to abandon our ally? Should Colombia falter, the balance of power in the region would change for the worse and the consequences in terms of the increase in drug shipments alone would be contrary to US interests. In that regard, President Rafael Correa of Ecuador has already said that he will not renew the lease of our base at Manta which expires in 2009, from which the majority of our planes leave on drug related missions.

With its commitment to free trade and to the United States, Colombia has accepted the de facto collapse of the Andean Community of Nations. The departure of Venezuela for MERCOSUR marked the demise of a major trade partner. Now that the tide is turning in Ecuador too, Colombia is in need of trade partners. The FARC are diminished but unbeaten. They think history is going their way: Chávez in Venezuela has expressed sympathy for them in the past; so has Rafael Correa, Ecuador’s new president. The ratification of the FTA must send a powerful message to an ascending Colombia and to its neighbors. The failure to ratify FTA would play into the hands of those Latin American leaders who advocate giving up on the United States and would shift to more colorful aid offers by populists like Hugo Chávez.

Suffice it to say, that US support has helped to stabilize Colombia so far. Continued US support is needed to help an ally that has accomplished much but requires our assistance to meet the challenges ahead.

Colombian-American relations

The Menges Hemispheric Security Project was asked to submit a statement for the hearing before the Western Hemisphere Subcommittee of the House Committee on Foreign Relations on US-Colombia Relations. This hearing took place on April 24, 2007 and was held to consider continued funding for Plan Colombia and ratification of a free trade agreement between The United States and Colombia. Our statement clearly supports the recent accomplishments of the Uribe Administration in demobilizing the paramilitaries and encourages members of Congress to move forward with Plan Colombia and FTA.                                                            

NEWS:

  • Colombia’s Uribe slams Gore’s snub. Some call Gore hypocritical. Colombian business people show total support for Uribe after Gore’s snub.
  • Hugo Chavez to indoctrinate workers on Marxism. Thousands protest government closure of TV network. Chavez regulates prices at private hospitals. Moves to expropriate. Chavez to create state power corporation.
  • Political turmoil in Ecuador.
  • Cuba supports Iran’s nuclear plans. Castro’s health better but still delicate. Fidel and Raul receive high ranking Chinese delegation.
  • Paraguay and Venezuela: agreement on refinery.
  • Brazil and Bolivia can’t reach accord one year after oil nationalization.
  • Peru and U.S. solidify relations during Garcia’s visit.
  • Nicaragua : Ortega back Iran nuke program. Nicaragua wants ‘freedom’ from IMF in 5 years, says Ortega.
  • Bolivia retakes gas station; gas exports to Argentina to ease. Bolivia moves closer to Telecom Nationalization.

View the full version of the Americas Report (PDF)

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@centerforsecuritypolicy.org  If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

The economics of Latin American populism

The financial policies of men like Chavez and Kirchner are costing Americans millions.

Latin America has long ceased to be a primary concern for U.S. foreign policy makers.  Two separate European wars in the last century, as well as the decades-long Cold War, shifted American strategic focus outward, away from the region that had once been foremost in the minds of American strategists.

This trend continues today.  With U.S. policymakers consumed with the fight in Iraq or the fight about Iraq, there is precious little attention being paid to the political radicalism that is on the rise in Latin America.  Recent events show, though, that events in an otherwise marginalized region can have a profound effect on Americans.

[More]For example, in 2005, Argentine President Nestor Kirchner announced that in the face of more than 100 lawsuits over his country’s broken loan contracts, he was repudiating 20 billion dollars foreign debt.  He did so despite Argentina’s documented capability to honor its financial obligations.

The American Task Force Argentina (AFTA) reports that because of Kirchner’s actions, "America’s teachers and educators lost $100 million in retirement savings, because their pension funds held Argentine bonds."  With no word from Buenos Aires that it plans to reconsider its decisions, it seems as if, as AFTA noted in a Wall Street Journal ad, "America’s teachers have learned a harsh lesson in international economics — thanks to Argentina’s unprecedented debt default."

What makes this development all the more worrying is that Kirchner has close ties with Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, who has been the standard-bearer for anti-Americanism in the region.  Indeed, AFTA claims that they are "one and the same."

In Latin America, Chavez sets the precedent for burning economic bridges to America – he is in the final stages of nationalizing his country’s oil industry, in which American firms like ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, and Chevron have a heavy stake.   He has announced that Venezuelan troops will occupy the oil fields beginning May 1st, and has warned foreign companies not to seek "excessive compensation" from his government.

One of Chavez’s cronies, Bolivian President Evo Morales, has taken similar actions.   Last year, he assert state ownership over his country’s natural gas industry, making foreign businesses pay much higher taxes, and dramatically lowering the returns on their investments.

This financial toll of this burgeoning anti-American economic populism is probably going to get worse.  Countries like Nicaragua and Ecuador, both run by men with close allegiances to Chavez, are already heading down the path of anti-foreign statism, with predictable effects on American economic interests in those two countries.

In a disappointing but unsurprising turn of events, many of this country’s social and political luminaries nonetheless have embraced Chavez and his call for quasi-communist populism as a boon for Latin America and America’s working class.  Figures like Cindy Sheehan, Danny Glover, and former U.S. Congressman Joseph Kennedy II have all made pilgrimages to Caracas to boost their credentials as so-called "progressives."  They do this while studiously ignoring that Chavism will only worsen the retirement fund shortfalls many American workers are expected to face.  

These "progressives", along with the Washington policymakers who are doing little to nothing to counter Chavez and his ilk, need to get their priorities straight.   To do otherwise will end up costing American workers dearly.

Citgo: A Chavez-Kennedy enterprise?

Many of us have seen the CITGO, the Venezuelan-owned oil company TV commercials running across the United States, which promote discounted heating oil to low-income people. Some wonder how can this be possible: Hugo Chávez helping the poor in the US? Chávez has allied himself with staunch enemies of this country such as Iran and Cuba. He has even vowed to bring down the US government. So it is strange, to say the least, that the ads feature Americans expressing gratitude for the program. What’s really behind all this?.

NEWS:

  • Venezuela: Hugo Chávez raises nuclear plant idea. Chávez shifts ethanol stance to ease dispute with Brazil. Venezuela threatens no oil takeover compensation.
  • Lula and Chavez initiate Petrochemical Complex.
  • Brazil won’t join ‘Bank of the South.’ 20 die in Rio de Janeiro as drug gangs battle police.
  • Date set for Colombia-Venezuela Pipeline. Colombians march against FARC bombing. ELN say ready for talks on ending fighting.
  • Nicaragua: Ortega slams US ethanol campaign.  
  • Bolivian protesters seize gas pipeline to Argentina.
  • Perú: No negotiations with coca protesters backed by drug cartels.
  • Ecuador: Correa won the Referendum.
  • Costa Rica to vote on CAFTA.
  • Mexico: 100 police officers arrested allegedly linked to organized crime.  
  • Chile: Chavez apologizes for outburst against Chilean Congress.

View the full version of the America’s Report (PDF)

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@cen terforsecuritypolicy.org. If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

Latin America’s radical grassroots (part 2)

In our article "The Radical Grassroots" published on March 28, 2007, we discussed the potential situation generated by the emergence of new available masses represented in new populist movements in Latin America, formed by people who have been rather marginal in the political arena in the past. We also discussed the penetration of Islamists and Iran in the area as well as the role of Hugo Chávez as a catalyst and promoter of alliances between these groups and radical Islam. We saw that Hezbollah Venezuela is a pro-Chávez organization formed in the Wayuu Indian community, which converted to Islam.   Hezbollah Argentina is differing from its Venezuelan counterpart as it is not based on the Indian community but it includes radical rightists and populist elements both of which have close relations with local Arab Shiia’s and the Iranian regime. In this piece we continue to explore this issue and try to understand the deeper meaning of these partnerships, particularly in Argentina.  

NEWS:

  • Hezbollah claims it receives money from Argentina.
  • Venezuela: assuming chair of OAS Permanent Council (Organization of American States). (Organización de Estados Americanos – OEA). High stakes: Hugo Chávez plays the oil card.
  • Cuba and Venezuela turn against Ethanol.
  • Brazil: "Castro’s biofuels views are outdated." Rio’s governor to call the army to help fight violence.
  • Ecuador: Correa predicts win for Constituent Assembly. Ecuador wants Brazil to help to enter the biofuel market. Venezuela’s PDVSA and PetroEcuador to partner to develop oil reserve in Ecuador. Congress reconvenes.
  • Cuba and Spain renew bilateral ties during Havana Talks.
  • Bolivia: violence over natural gas. Morales’ MAS for Assembly deadline.
  • Colombia: car bomb hits police headquarters killing one injuring 34 people.
  • Perú may go to The Hague over Chile maritime border issue.

View the full version of the Americas Report (PDF)

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@centerforsecuritypolicy.org . If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

 

Guatemala’s upcoming elections

Guatemala was the smallest country on President Bush’s recent Latin America tour. It was worth the stop, however. For good reasons: the Central American country has gained international weight and recognition after benefiting from widespread Latin American mistrust against Venezuelan representation in the United Nation Security Council. More importantly, Guatemala will go to the polls to elect a new executive and legislative branch in September. The core topic, however, is likely to be domestic security, as crime has been on the rise for years. It will be difficult for a female candidate with little experience in security issues to gain the confidence of a majority.

NEWS:

  • Presidents Bush and Lula meet in US to talk trade and biofuels.
  • Four bombs explode in Chile. Great unrest and violent protests against President Bachelet.
  • Nobel Menchú trails in Guatemala Election Poll.
  • Chavez could nationalize Hospitals. PDVSA sells record $7.5 billion in bonds despite cash flow problems.
  • Bolivia to nationalize Top Phone Company.
  • Colombia: drug traffickers supplying FARC. Six FARC members captured.
  • Peru’s Garcia visits Colombia; calls for Alliance. Peru’s trade minister hopes to get past FTA obstacles this month.
  • Ecuadorian Congress suspended.
  • Argentina vows to regain Falkland sovereignty. 28 killed, 40,000 displaced in flooding in Argentina.
  • Castro lashes out at US in first post-surgery editorial.
  • Brazilians back Lula’s friendly ties with Bush.

View the full version of the Americas Report (PDF)

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@cen terforsecuritypolicy.org. If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

Latin America’s radical grassroots








 

The logo of Hezbollah in Venezuela


by Dr. Luis Fleischman and Nicole M. Ferrand


 


The emergence of neo-populism in Latin America has coincided with the rise of new leaders promising equality and rejection of the old elites.  It also combines, in numerous cases, with the political mobilization of previously passive populations who lived on the margins of society, often of indigenous origins, who speak different dialects.


 


These new groups have become a most desired political prey for populist leaders willing to climb the political ladder and even carry a revolutionary change. The populations which include the cocaleros (coca leaf growers) in Bolivia or the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE) indeed have been key players in the election of leaders such as Evo Morales and Rafael Correa. Ollanta Humala in Peru also used the etnocacerista group relatively successfully even though he lost the election.


 


[More]


 


Despite being an interesting political capital for political leaders, some of these new populist movements have an element of independence and do not necessarily blindly follow leaders. One example is the Piquetero Movement in Argentina. Even though some of its leaders have associated themselves with President Nestor Kirchner, they have also taken independent action which, at times has become a problem for the President and at other times is useful and coincides with his purposes.


 


 


Indigenous movements such as the Zapatistas in Mexico, the CONAIE in Ecuador, the radical indigenous movement in Chile, and the landless movement in Brazil represent examples of more independent movements. They represent a feeling of economic and political exclusion and their demands include redistribution of land and expropriation of private property and foreign capital in favor of indigenous cooperatives and other forms of economic autonomy.


  


Often, these new movements tend to be radical, anti-systemic, and are inclined to reject the old political and economic order. In some cases, Indian movements have claimed their status as the majority and therefore claim all the power for themselves. Street protests and challenge of the government as well as rejection of the system and revolutionary unwillingness to compromise also characterize some of these movements.  


 


Of course, such discontent could be capitalized on by demagogue populist leaders, but it can also go beyond. One such example is presented by the Wayuu Guajira Indians who represent the largest indigenous group in Venezuela and Colombia (about 135,000 in Colombia and 170,000 in Venezuela).  On October 23, 2006, the police in Caracas found two explosive devices near the American Embassy. One of the bombs was in a box which also contained propaganda brochures for the Iran-backed organization, Hezbollah. One young man, a student at the Bolivarian University founded by Hugo Chavez, was arrested.[1]


 


An organization called Hezbollah Latin America claimed responsibility for the attack. Hezbollah Latin America is an organization based in the Wayuu Indian population and also calls itself Autonomia Islamica Wayuu (Wayuu Islamic Autonomy). Its website is written in Spanish and Chapateka (a combination of the Wayuu language and Spanish) and claims activity in Argentina, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador and Mexico. But the backbone of the organization is Venezuela. Their website states: “The brief enjoyment of life on earth is selfish. The other life is better for those who follow Allah.” The members of this group are locals and not Muslim in origin and claim to be Shiites, supporters of Hezbollah and Iran.[2]


 


The leader of Hezbollah Latin America is Teodoro Rafael Darnott. Mr. Darnott was initially the leader of a small Marxist faction called The Guaicapuro Movement for National Liberation, (Proyecto Movimiento Guaicaipuro por la Liberacin Nacional – MGLN)” which struggled against the oppression of the poor, indigenous peasants in the Valle de Caracas region. The organization initially proposed a concrete micro- farming project but it failed to obtain support from the authorities. It was then that Darnott decided to join the Chavez political party Movimiento Quinta Republica.[3]


 


It was reported that early in 2004 about 100 Wayuu Indians were massacred by Colombian para-military, guerilla and drug traffickers. These events also pushed hundreds of Wayuu to flee Colombia into Venezuela. It is thought that such genocide was the result of the need to control the drug trafficking ports in the Guajira littoral by the para-military and the guerillas, according to the Colombian army.


 


The organization opens up its website with a set of interesting quotations by the leader of the Islamic revolution, Ayatollah Rhuolla Khomeini. “Our struggle is the struggle against all inequalities. Our struggle is the struggle of the barefoot people against uncontrolled freedom. It is the struggle of the ideological values against the dirty world of power, money and greediness”. Then it proceeds to two other quotations from Khomeini. The first states that “all the political activities are part of a religious duty” and the second points out that the “Koran is not a book of prayer but a manual to organize society and to train its leaders to rule. Islam and Islamic rules are divine and their practices guarantee prosperity in this world and salvation in the world to come. (Islam) can put an end to injustice, tyranny and corruption and help mankind to achieve perfection.”[4]


 


The philosophy of this “new Muslim” group says that the Venezuelan revolution cannot take place unless it takes a path towards the moral and divine. The group claims that Venezuelans worship sex, money, industry and commerce leading society into a “swamp of immorality and corruption”.[5]  Hezbollah Latin America claims that political movements and parties cannot provide an answer to these problems because they are also part of the problem. Thus, only “a theocratic, Political-Islamic force can liberate society from this situation”.[6]


 


Hezbollah Latin America “respects the Venezuelan revolutionary process, and supports its social policies as well as its anti-Zionism and anti-Americanism”, even though it rejects socialism in favor of an Islamic order. The group urges everyone to vote for and support Chavez.[7]


 


Nobody seems to have an answer as to why and how this Wayuu indigenous group came to embrace Hezbollah and why. The first possibility is that Hezbollah has its own independent agenda trying to create terrorist cells and bases of support for their activities aimed at spreading Islam  in the western hemisphere.[8]


 


Some of those covering the events since the October 23rd bombing have tended to downplay the role of Darnott and to question to what extent Hezbollah Latin America is a serious organization. Yet, the phenomenon is worrisome for a number of reasons. First, Hezbollah obviously has ways to either bribe or convert so- called marginal and indigenous groups in Latin America that had already developed anti-system ideologies, and, consequently, have a predisposition to make alliances with other groups that also detest the system and identify with the oppressed. In other words, Hezbollah and radical Islamist groups do not have to import Islamists from the Muslim world; they can be “home-grown” in Latin America, itself, because the social and emotional conditions provide fertile ground. Furthermore, this new available human capital clearly does not have to have any previous connection to Islam, they can be converted to Islam because Islamism is not merely a religion but is foremost a political movement.


 


This method is similar to Islamist methods we find in the U.S. The case of Jose Padilla comes to mind. Padilla, an American citizen of Hispanic ancestry was indoctrinated by Islamists while in prison for common crimes and later charged with terrorist conspiracy. Indigenous populations have been socially marginal and their status is comparable with criminals even though they are not criminals, by definition. Those who have dismissed Mr. Darnott as a mere opportunist have ignored the systematic way in which the message of the organization was put together. The methods of indoctrination use images that are simple and consistent with the totalitarian ideology of the Iranian revolution. 


 


The second possibility worth exploring is that Hugo Chavez is fully cooperating with the Islamization process of indigenous and other populations. Indeed, such conversion is taking place as relations between Venezuela and Iran strengthen at all levels and as Chavez openly supports Iran‘s nuclear program and Hezbollah during the war against Israel. In addition, Chavez has strong sympathies for Islamic groups and has provided safe haven for financial activities benefiting Islamic terrorist organizations. Chavez has given Venezuelan passports to individuals coming from Arab and Muslim countries, and, his administration maintains a very uneasy relationship with the Jewish community as anti-Semitism among Chavista circles becomes more apparent. Chvez is supporting Hezbollah in the Middle East and will most probably support their criminal work in Venezuela.[9]


 


Gustavo Coronel, an opponent of Chavez, reports that in October 2005 Hugo Chavez expelled a group of US Evangelical missionaries who were working with indigenous communities in the area for more than half a century. Coronel reports that as the evangelical groups left Venezuela, Hezbollah occupied the new territory.[10]


 


The presence of Hezbollah Venezuela is worrisome because of the timing of their activities. They have become visible at a moment in which Hugo Chavez and the Iranian President Ahmadinejad have become really close allies. Ahmadinejad visited Caracas in September 2006 and again in January 2007 and the two countries have signed more than 20 cooperation agreements in the fields of oil & gas, iron & steel, and infrastructure worth billions of dollars.[11]


 


As stated in The America’s Report of March 13, 2006, Luis D’Elia, one of the leaders of the Argentinean Piquetero movement and a former member of the Kirchner cabinet, has established both a relationship with Chavez and with the Iranian government. D’Elia, like other Latin American ” social” leaders from Latin America, attended the first Iran- Latin American conference that took place in Tehran on February 27 and 28, 2007. The conference was characterized by a clear ideological agenda with strong anti-American tones and was not attended by the higher echelons of the political system in Latin America but by “social” leaders such as Mr. D’Elia. By the same token, Chavez has been the main promoter of the reinforcement of relations between Iran and Latin America, as he has engaged in deepening relations between Iran and grassroots leaders in the region, mostly those newly mobilized social forces that we described above.[12]


 


It could be said that the road from socialist revolutionarily Marxism to Islam has been paved by no other than Hugo Chavez. Therefore, should we rule out the Darnott episode as a farce? We do not think so. At this point the revolutionary fever led by Hugo Chavez, to mobilize the “politically” available marginal masses of society coupled with the Iranian penetration in the region should raise an eyebrow not only among American government officials but also among those in Latin America.  Given its importance, we will continue to explore the radicalization of indigenous populations in the region.


 


Dr. Luis Fleischman is an advisor to the Menges Hemispheric Security Project at the Center for Security Policy in Washington DC. He is also an adjunct professor of Political Science and Sociology at Wilkes Honor College at Florida Atlantic University.


Nicole M. Ferrand is a research analyst and editor of “The Americas Report” of the Menges Hemispheric Security Project at the Center for Security Policy in Washington DC. She is a graduate of Columbia University in Economics and Political Science with a background in Law from Peruvian University, UNIFE.


[1] The Hezbollah Venezuelan Metastasis. September 4, 2006. Venezuela Today. By Gustavo Coronel.


[2] “La Fascinacin por el xito: Hezbollah en Amrica Latina .” Jihad Monitor. Oct. 17, 2006. Manuel Torres Soriano.


[3] The Hezbollah Venezuelan Metastasis. September 4, 2006. Venezuela Today. By Gustavo Coronel.


[4] Democracy? I meant theocracy. August 5, 2003. The Iranian.


[5] “La Fascinacin por el xito: Hezbollah en Amrica Latina .” Jihad Monitor. Oct. 17, 2006. Manuel Torres Soriano.


[6] Chvez joins the terrorists: his path to martyrdom. September 2, 2006. Venezuela Today. By Gustavo Coronel.


[7] The Hezbollah Venezuelan Metastasis. September 4, 2006. Venezuela Today. By Gustavo Coronel.


[8] Hezbollah America Latina: strange group or real threat? Feb. 12, 2007. By Ely Karmon. Reporter Associati Internacional.


[9] The Other “Axis of Evil.” July 1st, 2003. The American Legion Magazine. By Paul Crespo.


[10] Chvez joins the terrorists: his path to martyrdom. September 2, 2006. Venezuela Today. By Gustavo Coronel.


[11] Gustavo Coronel. The Hezbollah Venezuelan Metastasis.


[12] Jose Orozco, “Venezuelan Jews Fear Chavez-Iran Ties,” The Jerusalem Post, September 19, 2006.

Latin America’s radical grassroots (part 1)

The emergence of Latin American neo-populism, as well as the political mobilization indigenous peoples, has created a new class of political prey for radical leaders and terrorist groups.  The Piquetero Movement in Argentina, indigenous movements such as the Zapatistas in Mexico, the CONAIE in Ecuador, the radical indigenous movement in Chile, and the landless movement in Brazil are some examples of this worrying and growing phenomenon.  This article details and analyzes the fundamental currents which underlie this new movement taking place in Latin America.

NEWS:

  • Brazil’s Lula visits Bush for Ethanol and World Trade Talks.
  • "Venezuela is a drug dealers’ temple." The Venezuelan Government seizes private land. Jews fear for future in Venezuela.
  • Chile: Trouble for Bachelet. Bachelet shuffles Cabinet. Chile and Japan sign free trade agreement.
  • FARC calls upon Lula and Chavez for recognition. FARC would accept US lawmakers in talks.
  • Bolivia: Morales may extend term in office. Head of state energy firm replaced.
  • Mexico: Zapatista "Subcomandante Marcos" launches countrywide tour praising Chavez, Morales and Correa. State Oil Company in Financial Trouble.
  • Cuba and Nebraska sign trade deals.
  • Colombia accused of violating Ecuador sovereignty. Para-scandal: Colombia amry chief denies role in 2002 raid.    

View the full version of the Americas Report (PDF)

Ver la versión completa del Informe de Américas (PDF)

 

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@centerforsecuritypolicy.org. If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.

 

Bush and Lula sign agreement on biofuels

President George W. Bush just finished a week long trip to Latin America, the longest visit to the region of his presidency which included stops in Uruguay, Colombia, Guatemala, Brazil and Mexico. A key point of the President’s new strategic approach with Latin America is the relationship with Brazil. In his State of the Union address delivered on January 31, 2006 President Bush said: "America is addicted to oil", and has to find new ways of lessening this dependency. In order to overcome this addiction, Brazil could be of great help since it is the world’s most efficient producer of ethanol, a clean-burning, high-octane fuel that is produced from renewable sources.

NEWS:

  • U.S.-Latin America dance.
  • Venezuela: Chavez Issues Warning to political parties.  Venezuela to Give Currency New Name and Numbers.  Barbara Walters candidly Interviews Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.  Venezuela disburses funds for Argentinian Sancor.
  • Interpol: Iranians Connected to Argentine Bombing.
  • The Dominican Republic: Fernandez raising money for re-election.
  • Bolivia: Morales accused of suppressing media.  Evo Morales will "call elections" in 2008.  ETA found active in Bolivia. 
  • Ecuador: Banking system threatened.
  • Chile: Bachelet Heads for Mexico.
  •  Conflict over Cuban Oil.

View full version of the Americas Report (PDF)

For any questions, comments, or those interested in receiving this report in the future or seeking to have their email removed from our list please contact Nicole M. Ferrand at our new e-mail address: mengesproject@cen terforsecuritypolicy.org. If you have news stories that you think might be useful for future editions of this report please send them, with a link to the original website, to the same e-mail address. If you wish to contribute with an article, please send it to the same address, with your name and place of work or study.