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Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 12:41 AM Oct 2016

The Empire Strikes Back

The Empire Strikes Back
Posted on Oct 2, 2016
By Chris Hedges

A decade ago left-wing governments, defying Washington and global corporations, took power in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Venezuela, Uruguay, Bolivia and Ecuador. It seemed as if the tide in Latin America was turning. The interference by Washington and exploitation by international corporations might finally be defeated. Latin American governments, headed by charismatic leaders such as Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in Brazil, Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in Ecuador, won huge electoral victories. They instituted socialist reforms that benefited the poor and the working class. They refused to be puppets of the United States. They took control of their nations’ own resources and destinies. They mounted the first successful revolt against neoliberalism and corporate domination. It was a revolt many in the United States hoped to emulate here.

But the movements and governments in Latin America have fallen prey to the dark forces of U.S. imperialism and the wrath of corporate power. The tricks long practiced by Washington and its corporate allies have returned—the black propaganda; the manipulation of the media; the bribery and corruption of politicians, generals, police, labor leaders and journalists; the legislative coups d’état; the economic strangulation; the discrediting of democratically elected leaders; the criminalization of the left; and the use of death squads to silence and disappear those fighting on behalf of the poor. It is an old, dirty game.

President Correa, who earned enmity from Washington for granting political asylum to Julian Assange four years ago and for closing the United States’ Manta military air base in 2009, warned recently that a new version of Operation Condor is underway in Latin America. Operation Condor, which operated in the 1970s and ’80s, saw thousands of labor union organizers, community leaders, students, activists, politicians, diplomats, religious leaders, journalists and artists tortured, assassinated and disappeared. The intelligence chiefs from right-wing regimes in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay and, later, Brazil had overseen the campaigns of terror. They received funds from the United States and logistical support and training from the Central Intelligence Agency. Press freedom, union organizing, all forms of artistic dissent and political opposition were abolished. In a coordinated effort these regimes brutally dismembered radical and leftist movements across Latin America. In Argentina alone 30,000 people disappeared.

Latin America looks set to be plunged once again into a period of dictatorial control and naked corporate exploitation. The governments of Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela, which is on the brink of collapse, have had to fight off right-wing coup attempts and are enduring economic sabotage. The Brazilian Senate impeached the democratically elected President Dilma Rousseff. Argentina’s new right-wing president, Mauricio Macri, bankrolled by U.S. hedge funds, promptly repaid his benefactors by handing $4.65 billion to four hedge funds, including Elliott Management, run by billionaire Paul Singer. The payout to hedge funds that had bought Argentine debt for pennies on the dollar meant that Singer’s firm made $2.4 billion, an amount that was 10 to 15 times the original investment. The previous Argentine government, under Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, had refused to pay the debt acquired by the hedge funds and acidly referred to them as “vulture funds.”

More:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_empire_strikes_back_20161002

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The Empire Strikes Back (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2016 OP
Blah blah blah. iandhr Oct 2016 #1
Yep. Multiple grains of salt with anything Hedges says. stopbush Oct 2016 #2
I don't but it doesn't surprise me. iandhr Oct 2016 #3
I grew up in South America and know full well the evil the U.S. has done in Latin America. But... Nitram Oct 2016 #4

stopbush

(24,395 posts)
2. Yep. Multiple grains of salt with anything Hedges says.
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 12:47 AM
Oct 2016

Remember his asserting the occupy movement was here to stay, a force that would change the political landscape forever?

Nitram

(22,788 posts)
4. I grew up in South America and know full well the evil the U.S. has done in Latin America. But...
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 01:22 PM
Oct 2016

...this time around I'm afraid we can't pin all the blame on the U.S. There are powerful and corrupt right-wing forces in each of these countries that don't need the help of the U.S. to bring down socialist leaders. Brazil is the best example, perhaps, but it is true of all of them.

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