Global Research, July 08, 2016
Amid raging corruption, social pathologies and
outright political thuggery, a new gang of vassal regimes has taken-over Latin
America. The new rulers are strictly recruited as the protégé’s of US financial
and banking institutions. Hence the financial press refers to them as the “new
managers” – of Wall Street.
The US financial media has once again provided a
political cover for the vilest crimes committed by the ‘new managers’ as they
launch their offensive against labor and in favor of the foreign and domestic
financiers.
To understand the dynamics of the empire’s new
vassal managers we will proceed by identifying (1) the illicit power grab (2)
the neo-liberal policies they have pursued (3) the impact of their program on
the class structure (4) their economic performance and future socio-political
perspectives.
Vassals as Managers of Empire
Latin America’s current vassalage elite is of longer
and shorter duration.
The regimes of longer duration with a historical
legacy of submission, corruption and criminality include Mexico and Colombia
where oligarchs , government officials and death squads cohabitate in close
association with the US military, business and banking elites.
Over the past decades 100,000 citizens were murdered
in Mexico and over 4 million peasants were dispossessed in Colombia. In both
regimes over ten million acres of farmland and mining terrain were transferred
to US and EU multinationals.
Hundreds of billions of illicit narco earnings were
laundered by the Colombian and Mexican oligarchy to their US accounts via
private banks.
The current political managers, Peña in Mexico and
Santos in Colombia are rapidly de-nationalizing strategic oil and energy
sectors, while savaging dynamic social movements – hundreds of students and
teachers in Mexico and thousands of peasants and human rights activists in
Colombia have been murdered.
The new wave of imperial vassals has seized power
throughout most of Latin America with the direct and indirect intervention of
the US. In 2009, Honduras President Manuel Zelaya was ousted by a military coup
backed by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Zelaya’s program of agrarian
reform, regional integration (with Venezuela) and constitutional elections was
abolished. Zelaya was replaced by a US vassal, Roberto Micheletti who proceeded
to murder several hundred landless rural workers and indigenous activists.
Washington moved to organize a constitutional cover
by promoting a highly malleable landowner, Porfirio Lobo Sosa to the
presidency.
The State Department next ousted Paraguyan President
Francisco Lugo who governed between 2008-2012. Lugo promoted a moderate
agrarian reform and a centrist regional integration agenda.
With the backing of Secretary of State Clinton, the
Paraguayan oligarchy in Congress seized power, fabricated an impeachment
decree and ousted President Lugo .He was briefly replaced by Vice President
Federico Franco (2012-2013).
In 2013, Washington backed, the capital,
Asuncion’s, notorious crime boss for President, one Horacio Castes – convicted
for currency fraud in 1989, drug running in 1990, and most recently (2010)
money laundering.
The Honduras and Paraguayan coups established (in
miniature) the precedent for a new wave of ‘big country’ political vassals. The
State Department moved toward the acceleration of banking takeovers in Brazil,
Argentina and Peru.
In rapid succession, between December 2015 and April
2016 vassal managers seized power in Argentina and Brazil. In Argentina
millionaire Mauricio Macri ruled by decree, by-passing constitutional legality.
Macri fired scores of thousands of public service workers, closed social
agencies and appointed judges and prosecutors without Congressional vote. He
arbitrarily arrested social movement leaders – violating democratic procedures.
Macri’s Economic and Finance Ministers gained
millions of dollars by ‘buying into’ multinational oil companies just prior to
handing over private options on public enterprises.
The all-encompassing swindles and fraud carried out
by the ‘new managers’ were covered up by the US media,who praised Macri’s
professional team.
Moreover, Macri’s economic performance was a
disaster. Exorbitant user fees on utilities and transport for consumers and
business enterprises, increased three to ten-fold, forcing bankruptcy rates to
soar and households to suffer light and gas closures.
Wall Street vulture funds received seven billion
dollar payment from Macri’s managers ,for defaulted loans purchased for pennies
over a dollar ,twenty-fold greater then the original lenders.
Data based on standard economic
indicators,highlights the worst economic performance in a decade and a half.
Price inflation exceeds 40%; public debt increased
by twenty percent in six months. Living standards and employment sharply
declined. Growth and investment data was negative. Mismanagement, official
corruption and arbitrary governance, did not induce confidence among local
small and medium size businesses.
The respectable media, led by the New York Times,
theFinancial Times, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post falsified
every aspect of Macri’s regime. Failed economic policies implemented by bankers
turned cabinet ministers were dubbed long-term successes; crude ideologically
driven policies promoting foreign investor profiteering were re-invented as
business incentives.
Political thugs dismantled and replaced civil
service agencies were labelled ‘a new management team’ by the vulgar propaganda
scribes of the financial press.
In Brazil, a phony political power grab by
Congressional opportunists ousted elected President Dilma Rousseff. She was
replaced by a Washinton approved serial swindler and notorious bribe taker,
Michel Temer.
The new economic managers were predictably
controlled by Wall Street, World Bank and IMF bankers. They rushed measures to
slash wages, pensions and other social expenditures, to lower business taxes
and privatize the most lucrative public enterprises in transport,
infrastructure, landholdings , oil and scores of other activities.
Even as the prostitute press lauded Brazil’s new
managers’, prosecutors and judges arrested three newly appointed cabinet
ministers for fraud and money laundering. ‘President’ Temer is next in
line for prosecution for his role in the mega Petrobras oil contracts scandal
for bribes and payola.
The economic agenda by the new managers are not
designed to attract new productive investments. Most inflows are short-term
speculative ventures. Markets, especially, in commodities, show no upward
growth, much to the chagrin of the free market technocrats. Industry and
commerce are depressed as a result of the decline in consumer credit,
employment and public spending induced by ‘the managers’ austerity policies.
Even as the US and Europe embrace free market
austerity, it evokes a continent wide revolt. Nevertheless Latin America’s wave
of vassal regimes, remain deeply embedded in decimating the welfare state and
pillaging public treasuries led by a narrow elite of bankers and serial
swindlers.
Conclusion
As Washington and the prostitute press hail their
‘new managers’ in Latin America, the celebration is abruptly given way to mass
rage over corruption and demands for a shift to the political left.
In Brazil, “President” Temer rushes to implement big
business measures, as his time in office is limited to weeks not months. His
time out of jail is nearing a deadline. His cabinet of ‘technocrats’ prepare
their luggage to follow.
Maurico Macri may survive a wave of strikes and
protests and finish the year in office. But the plunging economy and pillage of
the treasury is leading business to bankruptcy, the middle class to empty bank
accounts and the dispossessed to spontaneous mass upheavals.
Washington’s new managers in Latin America cannot
cope with an unruly citizenry and a failing free market economy.
Coups have been tried and work for grabbing power
but do not establish effective rulership. Political shift to the right are
gyrating out of Washington’s orbit and find no new counter-balance in the
break-up of the European Union.
Vassal capitalist takeovers in Latin America
generated publicist anesthesia and Wall Street euphoria; only to be rudely
shocked to reality by economic pathologies.
Washington and Wall Street and their Latin America
managers sought a false reality of unrestrained profits and pillaged wealth.
The reality principle now forces them to recognize that their failures are
inducing rage today and uprisings tomorrow.
The original source of this article is Global
Research
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