Brazzil

Since 1989 Trying to Understand Brazil

Home Info February 2005 For Brazil and Neighbors Bush's Freedom Sounds Ominous

----------

Brazilian Eyelash Enhancer & Conditioner Makeup

----------

Get Me Earrings

----------

Buy Me Handbags

----------

Find Me Diamond

----------

Wholesale Clothing On Sammydress.com

----------

Brautkleider 2013

----------

Online shopping at Tmart.com and Free Shipping

----------

Wholesale Brazilian Hair Extensions on DHgate.com

----------

Global Online shopping with free shipping at Handgiftbox

----------

Search

Custom Search
Members : 22767
Content : 3832
Content View Hits : 33084420

Who's Online

We have 591 guests online



For Brazil and Neighbors Bush's Freedom Sounds Ominous PDF Print E-mail
2005 - February 2005
Written by Laura Carlsen   
Wednesday, 09 February 2005 21:11

Brazilian President Lula and US President BushIn her January 18 confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asserted that the Western Hemisphere is “extremely critical” to the United States. “With our close neighbors in Latin America we are working to realize the vision of a fully democratic hemisphere bound by common values and free trade.”

While it's heartening to see that Latin America has made it onto the map of the Bush administration's foreign policy, there is little reason to expect policy toward the region to change or deepen in the next four years.

More likely, with all eyes on the Middle East , the region will remain an arena for ad hoc crisis intervention, with Cuba and Colombia as opposite focal points.

Does Latin America Matter?

Latin American countries have faded from focus since the September 11 th attacks on the World Trade Center . While little has been said about the region's significance in contemporary geopolitics, even less has been said about what short- and long-term policies could feasibly lead to more integrated but less economically and politically polarized hemisphere.

Latin American countries have been forging a new role over the past few years. They have already consolidated surprising leadership on issues of international trade, finance, and regional economic integration.

Since the formation of the Group of 21 at the 5th Ministerial of the World Trade Organization in Cancun in 2003, Brazil has adopted the role of trade reformer. Its principal banner is to reduce farm subsidies in the United States and Europe .

Argentina's insistence on stabilizing its economy before paying off creditors has made the country a maverick in financial communities and an unsung hero for many other nations facing stifling foreign debts.

The Latin American region has also become a global leader in questioning other aspects of the neoliberal model of economic integration. The list of national battles over privatization plans grows daily.

Privatization of services, promoted in U.S. free trade agreements and adjustment programs has recently become a lightening rod for discontent in Latin America .

Bolivian civil society has two major victories on water under its belt: against Bechtel in Cochabamba (2004) and with the cancellation of the contract with Suez in El Alto/La Paz (January 2005). Ecuador, Nicaragua, Mexico, Uruguay, and El Salvador have also rejected privatizations.

The Community of South American Nations founded on January 9, 2005 may be mostly symbolic, but it should be viewed as a statement of independence with respect to the Bush administration's assumption of regional hegemony. The new multilateral forum should also be viewed in the political context of the leftward shift in the Southern Cone.(1)

In recent elections, Uruguay elected a president from the leftist Broad Front, the Workers Party (PT) in Brazil made significant gains, Hugo Chávez consolidated power in Venezuela , and other center-left organizations gained on the municipal level.

This, of course, isn't exactly the kind of leadership the Bush administration wanted to see coming from its Southern flank. But it reflects deeply felt contradictions within Latin American societies and at the same time offers a serious challenge to U.S. policymakers to adopt more flexible and reality-based positions.

Ideological Offensive, Policy Vacuum

The second Bush administration appears unlikely to rise to the challenge. Before the Senate foreign relations committee, Rice reiterated positions put forth during the first administration. She reaffirmed the clampdown on Cuba and severely criticized Venezuela's Hugo Chávez.

Brazil was cited as a critical partner, Mexico viewed as key to strengthening the global competitiveness of the NAFTA bloc, the Andean countries heralded as “a vital region with a lot of potential,” and Colombia's Uribe government praised as a model of successful cooperation.

But the main message of the incoming Secretary of State was that the criteria for U.S. involvement around the world will be largely the promotion of “freedom and democracy.”

In this way, Rice presaged President Bush's inaugural address, which promised a crusade for freedom across the globe, leaving in the dust predictions of a more isolationist United States .

This reinforced agenda unfortunately fails to define the terms “freedom” or “democracy,” much less the policies to back them up.

In Latin America, phrases like “America's influence is considerable and we will use it confidently in freedom's cause” sound ominous. The neighboring superpower has a track record for sponsoring repression and intervention cloaked in similar rhetoric.

Moreover, the kind of engagement envisioned by the second Bush administration espouses lofty principles but shows little commitment to grappling with the pressing problems that exist in the region.

Terrorism remains at the top of U.S. security concerns, when the term rarely even figures on lists of priorities for the other nations of the hemisphere.

In Colombia , the battle lines have been drawn against “narco-terrorism” - a questionable category that conflates the drug war with counter-insurgency efforts in a general campaign that has raised serious questions of human rights violations.

Cuba remains on the list of state terrorists, despite no evidence that the Cuban government has ties to international terrorism.

Latin American governments, meanwhile, face daunting challenges of poverty, economic inequality, urban violence, and massive displacement. All these require U.S. support for domestic policies that have little or nothing to do with the “War on Terrorism” (now “Tyranny”), or free trade.

In addition to these long-term challenges, the United States is already deep into policy conflicts with individual nations that require immediate, negotiated solutions.

In Mexico , the issue is immigration. In the United States , the issue is treated by restrictionists, corporate interests, and pro-immigrant groups as a political hot potato.

But in Mexico, fair treatment of immigrants is regarded by all sectors as a measure of the government's ability to protect its people and a weather vane for binational relations.

In Brazil-U.S. relations, the issue of U.S. farm subsidies remains in the center of the table. The Lula government has made it clear that it will not negotiate an FTAA without a commitment to subsidy reductions. No such commitment has been forthcoming from the Bush government.

The Bush government has offered no concrete proposals to these sticky issues. In fact, beyond the counter-terrorist agenda, there still is no evidence of any coherent policy toward the region that takes into account real problems and the need for two-sided dialogue.

The “Freedom” Lens

In this context, Latin American policy is likely to be a series of reactions, punctuated by a few pet projects, especially Plan Colombia . This lack of an overall policy - and particularly the absence of concern over deepening poverty and inequality - could have profoundly negative effects.

Such a disjointed and disoriented policy perspective leaves policymakers without tools for interpreting growing protest in the region. Generally treated as problems of “governance” by the Washington elite on both sides of the aisle, demands to maintain public services and assert more local and national control over natural resources cannot be dismissed as “populism” or mob hysteria, but in most cases represent organized expressions of public will.

The “freedom” lens that defines governments as good and bad along a single, invisible axis, renders these demonstrations of public will incomprehensible.

In a refrain well-known from the days of the Central American conflicts, the Bush administration tends to accuse third parties of outside manipulation before acknowledging popular discontent with policies favored by the United States.

This political short-sightedness leads to a serious underestimation of the breadth and depth of the indigenous movements in the Andes, for example.

The Second-Round Team

The new team being put together for the second Bush term leaves little reason to foresee the emergence of a more coherent policy agenda for Latin America.

Condoleezza Rice brings a marked lack of experience in Western Hemisphere affairs to her post. Her training in Cold War mentality feeds into the president's messianic vision of foreign policy to create a dangerous tendency to prejudge events.

Rice's refusal to condemn the thwarted coup in Venezuela raises concerns that in certain circumstances she places ideological objectives over rule of law.(2)

At a time when most Latin American countries seek to consolidate democratic institutions, basic governance depends in large part on the United States respecting internal processes.

The appointment of Robert Zoellick as Under-Secretary of State also does not bode well for Latin America.(3)

Zoellick's crusade for the free trade model and corporate privileges has caused him to dig in when the U.S. should have been negotiating.

The WTO ministerial in Cancun broke down due to the combined intransigence of Zoellick's team and the European Union's Pascal Lamy,(4) and talks over the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas have arrived at a stalemate due to the same intransigence.

Zoellick's style of trade negotiation has been characterized by a hard-line unconditionality combined with personal arrogance. Brazilians still smart over his 2002 remark that if the country didn't like the FTAA offered by the United States it could always head south, to trade with Antarctica.

Much to Zoellick's chagrin, that is exactly what Brazil is doing. Bypassing the penguins, Brazil has sought to form alliances with Southern countries both in the Americas and on other continents.

In so doing it seeks to improve its bargaining position - and that of other developing countries - in trade negotiations. The formation of the Community of South American Nations and the association of Andean nations to Mercosur both form steps along the path of alternative regional integration.

At the same time, Zoellick has openly favored breaking down resistance to U.S. agendas by choosing bilateral negotiations over multilateral institutions.(5)

In this way, the U.S. trade negotiator hopes to bulldoze through some issues that are highly sensitive - including farm subsidies - for developing countries in the region. Zoellick has made rhetorical allusions to subsidy reduction while refusing to budge in practice.

Other sensitive trade issues include a reticence on the part of many governments and civil society groups to grant so-called “investor rights” as established in Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Many of these “protections” border on the absurd, including not only liberal expropriation compensation but compensation for future earnings for cancelled projects.

Intellectual property rights that outlaw state programs for treatment with generic drugs have also raised protests, especially in Brazil , where successful control of the HIV-AIDS pandemic is based on access to generic drugs.

Washington's insistence on including all these issues as a package deal in free trade negotiations will undoubtedly continue, leading to more friction with Southern trade partners.

Policies that Divide or Unite

Democracy, freedom, and good governance are undoubtedly shared goals in the hemisphere. The recent, reinvigorated activity of truth commissions and courts to prosecute human rights violations committed under dictatorships is proof of reinvigorated democracy, the end of impunity, and a new era of responsibility.

Ironically, as the Bush administration proposes these principles as the guidelines for foreign policy, the U.S. government appears repeatedly on the wrong side of these cases.

Its at-least tacit acceptance of repression under Operation Condor, and its role with Central American death squads and contra forces, have generated long-term resentments in the region.

Recommending application of a “Salvadoran solution” in Iraq(6) or placing indicted criminals like Elliott Abrams(7) in high-level State Department posts rubs salt in old wounds.

To move toward a united hemisphere capable of guaranteeing mutual security and well-being, the United States needs a policy toward Latin America that learns from - rather than repeats - past mistakes.

Despite differences of opinion, the dynamism and innovation in Latin American politics today provides a source of hope. Urgent tasks remain to consolidate democratic institutions, foster grassroots alternatives, and channel movements for change.

Decades of experience have disproved the theorems that democracy and development flow naturally from the center to the periphery. The model is even more unlikely to apply to “freedom.”

Imposed freedom is an oxymoron. As in other parts of the world, Latin America's freedom will depend on its people and U.S. policy must be sensitive to the needs and challenges determined through strong democratic processes in those societies.

Endnotes

(1)See Laura Carlsen, “Latin America Shifts to the Center-Left” http://www.americaspolicy.org/columns/amprog/2004/0411elect.html

(2)Senator Christopher Dodd was reported in the press as noting about Rice's response: "To stand silent while the illegal ouster of a government is occurring is deeply troubling and will have profound implications for hemispheric democracy."

(3)See Right Web analysis at http://rightweb.irc-online.org/analysis/2005/0501number2.php

(4)See Laura Carlsen “Bringing down the Walls: A Partial Victory in Cancun http://www.americaspolicy.org/columns/amprog/2003/0309walls.html

(5)See Tom Barry, “Coalition Forces Advance” IRC Americas Program http://www.americaspolicy.org/briefs/2004/0407econ.html

(6)See Michael Hirsh and John Barry, “The Salvadoran Option,” Newsweek,http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6802629/site/newsweek/ and Christopher Dickey, “Death Squad Democracy,” Newsweek, http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6814001/site/newsweek/

(7)See Right Web Profile http://rightweb.irc-online.org/ind/abrams/abrams.php Abrams wrote of El Salvador in National Review (February 3, 1992, pp.39-40) : “In this small corner of the cold war, American policy was right, and it was successful.”
 
Laura Carlsen directs the Americas Program for the Interhemispheric Resource Center (IRC, online at www.irc-online.org).)

This article was published originally by the Americas Program at the International Relations Center (IRC) - www.americaspolicy.org.



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
Comments (16)Add Comment
Lots to think about
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
US policy in our region, or lack of it, has been a very good thing for Brasil and other South American countries. It has forced us to "stand on our own feet" and to deversify our trade efforts and exports. The US has a right to a foriegn policy that protects it's own interests amd security, so where else whould they concentrate their efforts but on the Middle East? Can you blame them? Even a country like the US has limited resources. It is important to remember that it was not Brasilians who flew planes into the World Trade Center, we are not the enemy of the US, but as always, American's expect Brasil to look out for itself. And, we have started the process, new agreements and relationships with Asia, Russia, and other countries have insured our termendous growth in exorts, our products are being purcahsed as fast as we can make them. The only thing limiting more growth is capacity and infustructure...and the US continues to be an important trade partner. In case the author has not noticed, President Bush has called for an end for farm subsides in his new budget...the elimination of these would be the single most important thing the US could do to help Brasil in his next 4 years in office. As far as Columbia, we should applaud the US efforts there as well. Has anyone noticed that Brasil has quite the problem with drugs as well? Crime and addicition hold us back, makes our streets unsafe. Brasil does not produce drugs, so where in the hell do you think they are coming from? How do people that can not even write their names get automatic weapons? From the Columbian drug cartels of course. We need to take a common sense approach to our US relationship. The US is not our enemey. In fact it is us who can often be are own worse enemy. If we see sustained real growth in 2005, along with checked inflation, we should be OK, even if Lula is still the president!
AMEN !
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
Finally, an articulate well documented article which seems not so much an editorial opinion as a scholarly exposition. Same with the first response. So much discussion of world politics today seems so polarized by the kind of sad extremes reflected in U.S. politics.

I am not a supporter of President Bush, but I have come to the conclusion that, like it or not, the policies of his government reflect the attitudes of those who voted for him. That is a comfort to some, a terrifying thought to others.

With regards to Brasil, Bush's policies seem to be a very acurate reflection of the indifference towards or lack of knowledge of Brasil by the very vast majority of North Americans, most of whom (I suppose) could not identify Brasil on a map and believe all of South America speaks Spanish. Again, whatever people think about Brasil, that sad fact says more about the people of the U.S. than about Brasil.

One of the many paragraphs that struck me from this article was:
"Moreover, the kind of engagement envisioned by the second Bush administration espouses lofty principles but shows little commitment to grappling with the pressing problems that exist in the region."

I guess it is always been tempting to wave the flag and speak of the proverbial "motherhood and apple pie" without openning one's mind to learn about another person / country / issue. It feels to me like there is a lot of flag waving going on these days (perhaps understandable) which can easily turn patriotism into arrogance, a commitment to democracy into political and economic expansionism, and "dedication to liberty" into a pseudo-religious crusade. No wonder, then, that the rhetoic coming out of Washington may sound a bit ominous to some. A foreign policy can still be patriotic, commited to democracy, and dedicated to liberty. The arrogant, expansionistic, crusade mentality part is what is truly scary.
Freedom Sounds Ominous
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
.... for those in power who want to exploit the average citizen. Freedom Sounds Ominous for those who work for the Brazilian government! They might actually have to work for a living.
the farm bill
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
Americas farm bill that subsidizes american farmers plus other estrictions and tarifs on brazilian goods is the only real problem brazil has with the united states. We should not nor do we expect the americans to fix or nations like the europeans did and are eternally endebted to the united states. Brazil only needs to produce, compete, diversify and get rid of a elephant state that keeps its citizens behind with its enormous taxes and endless buorocracy. Brazil is a new world, immigrant nation and hence will always be superior to europeans. We should also not be tied down with this mercosul agreement. We don´t need these other south american countries, they arew far behind and i for one do not feel i must pay for their development in any way. The euroPEONS will one day get rid of their protectionism and we will prosper even more. Yet the task now os do do our homework and weaken this brazilian state hence empowering brazilian citizens as individuals with rights and responsabilities.
Agree...kind of
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
America is not our enemy...unfortunatly, most of the time we are our worst enemy, but we spend so much time not taking responsibility for our actions or lack of actions, because it is easier to blame others. We should not wait or expect for anyone to come solve our problems for us...or continue to stand in line for rich country hand outs to the third world. Brasil's participation in the World Social Forum made me sick, we should be above attending, yet hosting an event of this nature. The previous poster is correct the state is an "elephant" that refuses to get offour chests.Unfortunatly, right now, we do not have the experience or education...or money necessary to make dramatic changes, the best we can hope for is incremental changes. The poster states "we will always be superior to Europeans", this is the typical nationistic talk and thoughts that prevent us from moving forward. Who cares who we are superior to? I don't. It makes no difference to me wether or not we are superior to Germany or Uganda, as long as I can raise my family, provide my kids a good education, and walk my neighborhood streets at night. I also disagree that a 'strong" Mercosul is not important, as the leader in the region, we have a responsibilty to insure our regions growth, which ultimitly benefits Brasil more than any other country...the one thing that the Lula governement might consdier a success, is to bring EU countries into Mercosul, which they are discussing now, this would also force the US to be more reasonable in their efforts with the Free Trade of the America's negotiation. Oh...and by the way, the Europeans will never stop protecting all of their markets, they were founded on sociaists principals, and they will die with socialist principals.
Exactly
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
"Europeans will never stop protecting all of their markets, they were founded on sociaists principals, and they will die with socialist principals."

Exactly. This is why brazils natural ally is the united states, not europe, when it comes to fowarding free trade. Lula does the opposite, he ostrasizes the maericans and caters to the europeans and to these latin american countries like argentina who have long proved not to be worthy trade partners.
This is a great article about the republ
written by Guest, February 11, 2005
well written article about the evil and racist and coup supporting gringo republican blue eyed devils.

A for this well written article.

the gringos can go trade with the arctic ocean. with ignorant racists and white supremacists, like zoellick and others, there is no chance that the republican gringos will care for the campesinos.

rather the republican gringos represent the 21st century version of SS Stormtroopers, Gestapo, and Nazi Germany, with their policies of brutally supporting right wing oligarchies in latin america, coups in latin america, and evil overthrowing of left leaning governments, who support the campesinos and the people of the lands, like Salvador Allende (Chile), Arbenz (Guatemala), and others in Latin America.

Republican gringos are the modern day version of the devil.
Farm Subsidies
written by Guest, February 11, 2005
great reading! (except the last hater, highly recognizable by the same wordage.) I thought the latest budget submitted this week does cut back on some of the subsidies. What will your Lula do if they actually do cut them back?
...
written by Guest, February 11, 2005
Terrif comments by most of the readers. At the exception of a pathetic comment in "theoretical" support of "campesinos, the other comments were intelligent and apt. At last paranoia is not rampant and realities have taken hold.
Prove Capitalism wrong?
written by Guest, February 11, 2005
"Decades of experience have disproved the theorems that democracy and development flow naturally from the center to the periphery. The model is even more unlikely to apply to “freedom.” ???

OK, then Castro, Chavez, and Lula can prove Capitalism wrong...?
...
written by Guest, February 15, 2005
brazil is a giant country in a continent full of smallr countries

yet brazil is such a mediocre nation, that america has to come in and take the lead with the smaller spanish speaking countries
because brazil is too busy being poorer, and more messed up than its already messed up smaller neighbors
...
written by Guest, February 15, 2005
f**k brazil a filthy s**thole full of aids, and poor hookers!!!

i rather have america trading with europe, than with brazil, brazil is crap
...
written by Guest, February 16, 2005
I think the USA is better off dealing with spanish speaking countries, which are smaller, and with less isues than brazil

brazil is too big and too full of issues, is like the india of the americas.
i think it would a big burden to carry brazil into the NAFTA

i like the option of chile, it's a wealthy, educated, middle class country, which much more links with america than brazil, is also more developed, its economy is smaller but it's because chile is 10 times smaller than brazil, and about 10 times less people, but relatively speaking chile, and chileans in general are far wealthier, and chile is far more developed than brazil.
lack of policy=benign neglect
written by Guest, February 23, 2005
...
written by Guest, February 23, 2005
this was an interesting article and the comments with the exception of a few were interesting. i think brazil is doing the smart thing by becoming involved in european trade. it is just simple business logic. if you only have one trading partner that partner can exert a great deal of influence on your business. if you can sell to a wide variety of partners then you gain more power yourself. if one partner becomes too demanding you can at least count on other income until he comes to his senses and acts fairly again.
i think the best thing for all of south america and latin america is to actively pursue trade world wide.
capitalism can indeed be wrong if unregu
written by Guest, February 24, 2005
First of all i don't think that Chavez is anticapitalist. i think the man realizes that his country has suffered institutionalized corruption at the highest levels of government for a great deal of it's history as has most of latin america. the poverty we see every where in this part of the world is a direct result of that. why should a nation not use revenues coming from national resources as a tide that lifts all ships? national resources belong to the citizens of that country. why should a select few be the only ones to benefit? as far as capitalism goes it is the only economic model that works. it is the only model that is fueled directly by peoples self interest and that is exactly why it is so successful. that it also exactly why it must be regulated. for a society to exist there must be laws that protect people from each other. a member of societies freedom should only extend to the point where he is not harming other people in that society. unregulated capitalism gives the super successful the power to seriously harm other members of society.

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack