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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Friday,
August 19, 2005
COHA MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESS
Rumsfeld and Rice on Chávez: But Where’s the Beef?
• U.S.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld visited Paraguay and Peru this
week and reiterated claims that Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez
had been “unhelpful[ly]” involved in the ouster of Bolivian
President Carlos Mesa. If this is true, where is the evidence?
• U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has made similar
comments, also lacks conclusive evidence.
•
If the Bush administration
is truly concerned about the health of democracy in Latin America,
Rumsfeld, while visiting Peru yesterday, should have focused his
and the U.S.’
attention on the country's failing democracy, instead of Chávez's
exploits and the recent political turmoil in Bolivia.
• Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo's
approval ratings dropped to eight percent last weekend over the fallout
regarding the controversial
appointment of Fernando Olivera as Foreign Minister.
In another example of
touch and go diplomacy, U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld spent just a few short days in both Paraguay and Peru this week,
where he echoed claims made ealier by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice
that
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chávez is a destabilizing force in the
region and had been “unhelpful[ly]” involved in the
recent political turmoil in Bolivia. Yet thus far, neither Rice
nor Rumsfeld have
presented the slightest shred of evidence to support their assertions
that Chávez
was involved in the ouster of Bolivian President Carlos Mesa.
It is a near certainty that neither Rice nor Rumsfeld possess
any such
evidence; if they did, presumably they would race to publicly
announce their bombshell revelation confirming
the Bush administration’s
long standing mutterings that Chávez has been a subversive
influence in Latin America.
Economies More Than Ideology on Their Minds
Rice and Rumsfeld’s real fear is that oil-rich Venezuela will threaten
the continued shipment of oil to the U.S., stoked by the shift in Chávez's
oil policy to favor the Caribbean, Uruguay,
Brazil and China, at the
expense
of U.S.
energy interests. They also worry that Chávez may successfully
push for the economic unification of Latin America through the
expansion of MERCOSUR, the fleshing out of the Bolivarian
Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) along with the
implementation of Petrocaribe in order to challenge
U.S. influence and interests in the hemisphere. But stuck with
no evidence as to how the political developments in Bolivia are
contrary to U.S.
interests or how Chávez is undermining U.S. objectives
there, Rumsfeld and Rice are forced to make blanket accusations
that the issues are somehow
connected and are destabilizing the continent and are detrimental
to the U.S.' welfare.
Paragauy has also been on the mind of Rice and Rumsfeld; the Secretary of Defense was in Paraguay August 17. Recently, the presence of U.S. troops has been lamented by regional leaders as destabilizing, especially in Brazil, whose high military command fears that the U.S. infiltration of the tri-border region is a subtle threat to the Amazon. The U.S. seems intent on geopolitical expasion in Latin America with the past estabalishment in Manta, Ecuador and regional fears regarding the possibility of another base in Paraguay to promote U.S. the anti-terror and anti-narcotic agenda. It appears tht the U.S. seems to have given up softball and now instead are playing hardball. For more information about the U.S. presence in Paraguay click here.
Peru:
Toledo’s Numbers Fall Again
Rumsfeld traveled to Peru yesterday
where the current issue, unlike in Bolivia, is not the destabilizing
of the political system but the instability
of the political system after four years of failed political
leadership by the country’s hapless president, Alejandro Toledo.
Peru’s
first indigenous president’s approval ratings, which
peaked at 15.7 percent in recent months, fell to a shockingly
low eight percent
over the weekend following the president’s controversial
appointment of Fernando Olivera as Foreign Minister. Olivera’s
astonishing appointment proved so controversial that Toledo’s
cabinet chief and another minister resigned in protest
citing Olivera’s lack
of experience (he is not a career diplomat) and his abrasive
and arrogant style. The resignation of the cabinet members
forced Toledo, in accordance
with Peru’s constitution, to disband the current
cabinet and appoint a new one, which he did with the announcement
that
former World
Bank official Pedro-Pablo Kuczynski would step in as the
new Prime Minister.
Despite his abysmal poll numbers, it is unlikely Toledo
will be forced from office. The president has faced similarly
perilous situations
before and
survived; he has proven to be far more adept at hanging
on to the presidency than at using it wisely. For example,
allegations
in
March
of this year that Toledo conspired with his sister
and senior officials of his Peru Possible (PP) political
party
to forge thousands
of signatures to
permit him to register for the 2000 election, reduced
his low approval ratings to a dismal eight percent.
By the
end of last month, however,
they
had nearly doubled. Nevertheless, while Toledo has managed
to survive and even thrive in conditions similar to those
that forced out leaders
in neighboring Bolivia and Ecuador in recent months, the
President’s
miserable poll numbers and the nature of the candidates
in next year’s
elections, which include the disgraced former President
Alberto Fujimori, raise serious questions about the health
of Peru’s
democracy.
Fujimori: An Affront to Democracy
Fujimori ruled Peru in an authoritarian manner from 1990
to 2000, when he left office under charges of corruption
and human
rights violations.
Fujimori did
little to engender Peruvians’ affections, despite his significant
achievements: impressive,
if inconsistent economic growth and the defeat of the Maoist Shinning
Path guerillas. He oversaw a hugely corrupt regime that stole an
estimated $1.8 billion from
state coffers (though he claims ignorance and denies his own involvement),
and was accused of rigging the 2000 election, in which he won a blatantly
unconstitutional
third-term over Toledo.
Fujimori ultimately resigned as president while visiting Japan. As
a descendent of Japanese parents, Japan could not extradite him back
to
Lima, where he would have been tried, over the scandal
that erupted after his intelligence chief, Vladimiro Montesinos,
was filmed bribing an opposition member of congress two months earlier.
Elections
were held the
following April and Toledo was elected Peru’s new president. Meanwhile,
the State Department has all but forgotten the plight of U.S. national
Lori Berenson, who was jailed by Fujimori in the early 1990s and
has yet to be released.
After leaving Peru, congress banned Fujimori from holding elected
office until 2011. He recently developed a new political party, Sí,
Cumple (“Yes,
he delivers”) and has vowed to return to Peru in time for the
April 2006 presidential race. Despite constitutional obstacles to
his candidacy and strong
opposition from the majority of Peruvians, Fujimori tops some presidential
polls with the support of upwards of 23 percent of the electorate.
The majority of
Peruvians who fear a possible Fujimori presidency can rest assured
that his return to power would be a most unlikely event because his
congressional allies are
not numerous enough to lift his ten year ban from holding public
office. However, given his history of corruption and clear disdain
for constitutional law, Fujimori's mere reemergence on the Peruvian
political scene is an affront to
democratic
practice.
Toledo’s Failed Presidency
Toledo first became a major national figure as the de facto opposition
leader after the first round of voting in the 2000 presidential election,
during which
he charged that Fujimori illegally engineered his defeat. Then Toledo
campaigned in 2001 on a platform of breaking with Peru’s corrupt
past by pledging to create jobs and to aggressively attack poverty.
At
his inauguration,
he said, “I’ll
dedicate all my efforts,” to eradicate poverty and fight
corruption, and “from
this objective, no one will move me.” But he never fulfilled
either promise.
While Peru’s economy has improved mildly since Toledo took
office, the strains on the economically disadvantaged have not been
relieved. Discontent
with Toledo’s economic policies has significantly hurt his
poll numbers throughout his tenure. Though Toledo promised a radical
departure
from Fujimori’s
neoliberal economic policies, in fact he quietly continued his predecessor’s
approach, bolstering the country’s macroeconomic statistics
(averaging at 4.8 percent growth in GDP for each year of his presidency)
without paying much
heed to Peru’s disadvantaged majority. This is illustrated
by the country’s
minimal job growth: fifty percent of the population still live below
the poverty line and 15 percent live in extreme poverty.
Toledo Maintains Power
Toledo broke his commitment to his people by falling prey to government
corruption as well. In addition to allegations of forged registration
signatures during
his 2000 campaign, the Toledo administration has been rocked by claims
that his intelligence chief, César Almeyda, accepted a $2
million bribe in 2002 from the Colombian beer company Bavaria so
that the Peruvian government would approve its purchase of Peru’s
lone brewery, Unión
de Cervecerías
Peruanas Backus. Accusations also surfaced that members of his
Peru Possible won patronage jobs from the government. Toledo’s
sorry record of broken economic promises and government corruption
shook Peruvians’ fear that
a political power vacuum would develop, proving disastrous to the
country’s
weak economy and worry, as columnist Mirko Lauer describes,
that such a vacuum would allow either Fujimori or the Shining Path
guerrillas
to return to power.
Peruvians’ fundamental lack of faith that a leader capable
of securing Peru’s economic future can be found and that
the just use of power can be assured absent a resurgence
of violence illustrates just
how tenuous the democratic process is in Toledo’s Peru.
Toledo also has been able to maintain power by pursuing a narrowly
acceptable agenda and seeking to offend as few interest groups as
possible. For example,
in 2002, after Toledo announced that he was going to privatize two
electricity companies in southern Peru, five days of violent protests
in Arequipa followed,
leading him to backtrack and pledge that the government would continue
to run the facilities.
Although Toledo’s governing style may have proven successful
in helping him retain power, it only further demonstrates the country’s
domestic political paralysis. The Peruvian president’s reckless
nature, his indifferent governing manner and lazy managerial style
have prevented him
from engaging in effective governance
and has stripped the people of genuine representation.
Prospects for Democracy
The successive presidencies of Fujimori and Toledo raise serious
questions about the future of democracy in Peru. The former employed
authoritarianism and corruption; under the latter, Peru faces a political
crisis that has undermined
the basic democratic tenet that the governing body represents the
voice of the people. Furthermore, given that current polls for next
year’s presidential
election indicate that no candidate is supported by more than 25
percent of the public, it is questionable whether any of the contenders
will win a backing wide enough to effectively represent all stratum
of the population and pursue a sufficiently ambitious agenda to break
from
the country’s
troubled past and set Peru on a path to sustainable progress.
If Rumsfeld, Rice and the rest of the Bush administration are truly
concerned about the health and viability of democracy in Latin America,
they might
quit dreaming up baseless conspiracy theories to explain Bolivia’s
political turmoil, drop their sorry obsession with Chávez
and refocus their attention on Peru. When a Latin American government
pursues policies that conflict with
U.S. interests, democracy is not necessarily endangered as
the administration claims, but when a people’s beliefs and
values are no longer reflected in their governing institutions, that is a
tangible threat to representative democracy.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Hampden Macbeth.
August
19, 2005
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Memorandum
to the Press 05.96