How the US Continues to Manipulate Nicaragua
How the United States Continues to Manipulate Nicaragua's Economic and Polical Future
• U.S. intervention in Nicaragua
• “Radical Populism,” the basis for a new post-cold war U.S. national security doctrine, unfolds in region, providing a rationale for a new epoch of U.S. domination
• U.S. ambassadors throughout the region are Latin America’s new viceroys
Last April, the Nicaragua Network, a Washington-based solidarity group, “condemned” the intervention of U.S. Ambassador Paul Trivelli in Nicaragua’s election process. Arnold Matlin, of Nicanet’s board of directors, asserted that “what the U.S. government is doing in Nicaragua would be illegal if a foreign government tried to do it in the U.S.” The April 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations supports Matlin’s assertion, providing that representatives or diplomats “have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs of that state” to which they may be assigned. But regardless of international law, the U.S. has rarely felt constrained over intervening in the internal affairs of many countries, and for 150 years Nicaragua has borne the brunt of more interventions than almost any other country in this hemisphere. However, it is far from being alone.
Nicaragua, a Colony by any other Name
In the middle
of the 19th Century, the California Gold Rush attracted
early U.S. interest in developing a trans-oceanic route
through Nicaragua. Shortly after this, political unrest in
Nicaragua attracted U.S. interest in the internal politics
of the country. The result was that the U.S. came to employ
two kinds of intervention in Nicaragua, which established a
modus operandi for many years to come: first, a direct U.S.
invasion led by the soldier of fortune William Walker to
take control of the country; second, a political
intervention to assist ambitious Nicaraguan leaders who
offered Walker money and land grants to help them take
control of the government. Since then, the U.S. has acted
much as any other colonial power operating at that time:
stopping short of seizing and declaring Nicaragua a colony,
but still largely controlling its destiny. In Nicaragua,
there have been repeated interventions of various
descriptions, and virtually all of them for the professed
purpose of helping the Nicaraguan people, while at the same
time always promoting self-perceived U.S. security interests
in the region.
The most extensive and explosive
U.S.-backed intervention in Nicaragua was the effort to
remove the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN)
government that ruled the country throughout the 1980s.
Claiming that Nicaragua was a Moscow puppet and charging
that it was systematically supplying arms to the rebels in
El Salvador, the U.S. authorized assistance for anybody who
opposed the Sandinistas. Members of the country’s Somoza-era
National Guard, who had fled the country after the
dictatorship had been defeated, becoming the core cadres of
the opposition which came to be known as the contras (from
the Spanish term contrarevolucionarios). As the U.S. had
done in earlier interventions, the Reagan administration
enthusiastically assisted the contras, who habitually
conducted terrorist raids from occupied sites in Honduras to
frighten the civilian population into fleeing or joining up
with them. Some 30,000 civilians were killed as a result of
these raids.
A Low Intensity
Conflict
Called at the time a “low intensity”
conflict because U.S. soldiers weren’t formally involved or
being killed, the contras, with U.S. backing, and the
Nicaraguan authorities fought each other for a decade. In
proportion to Nicaragua’s total population, the casualties
which then ensued were almost equal to all the U.S.
casualties combined in all the wars which the U.S. fought
since its independence. The Nicaraguan economy was also
devastated, and the government was unable to fund or provide
adequate personnel for its social programs. After the war,
massive U.S. financial support and encouragement of the UNO
(United Nicaraguan Opposition) and its candidate, Violetta
Chamorro, were enough to defeat the Sandinistas in the 1990
elections. Although the FSLN remained a legitimate political
party after the war, it was unable to elect a president or
obtain a National Assembly majority in either of the
elections since 1990. Ironically, the U.S. played a
tenacious interventionist role in those elections,
determined never again to see a Sandinista jefe wearing the
presidential sash, by fair means or foul.
The U.S.
continues to rely upon almost all the methods previously
employs in Nicaragua – except for direct military invasion –
to influence, if not dominate, the country’s economics and
politics. But its methods have been modified by modern
international developments and control techniques. One is
the manipulation of the local economy that has been part of
a world-wide effort to impose the so-called “Washington
Consensus,” that has been forced on developing countries,
via procedures of the U.S. government, the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade
Organization. Developed by the renowned British economist
John Williamson of the Institute for International Economics
in 1990, its basic tenets are found in reforms calling for
economic deregulation, privatization, encouragement of
foreign investment, unrestricted movement of capital,
liberalization of trade policies, reduction in public
expenditures, etc. Also called “neo-liberalism,” these
“reforms” have been aggressively pushed as primary U.S.
foreign policy goals. The strategy has been to pressure
developing countries that are dependent on aid from the
international lending agencies and the U.S. to implement
Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) that spell out the
details of the required changes that a specific country must
make in order to be considered credit worthy.
According to The National Security Strategy of the
United States of America, March 2006, “History has judged
the market economy as the single most effective economic
system and the greatest antidote to poverty.” Therefore,
“the United States promotes free and fair trade, open
markets, a stable financial system, the integration of the
global economy, and secure, clean energy development.” In
other words, Washington has in effect invaded the economies
of many developing countries, including Nicaragua, using in
some instances a check book, in others a sword.
Intervention Takes Many Forms
The other form of
intervention that has been modified by modern international
developments, is the influence on the selection and election
of governments in countries that have more or less
democratically-rooted political institutions, or at least
seem to. Nicaragua is an outstanding example of this kind of
intervention, particularly since the Sandinista regime came
to an end in 1990 as a direct result of a massive
introduction of U.S. funds aimed at buying the elections.
Washington’s intervention in Nicaragua has been quite
blatant and has included economic assistance for selected
candidates and/or political parties, assisting in writing
constitutions and drafting legislation, arranging for the
publication of articles about local politicians and
candidates in U.S.-subsidized Nicaraguan media, pressuring
local leaders and groups to mold their policies to reflect
U.S. interests and threatening anti-U.S. political leaders,
including pushing them from power.
The question, of
course, is why the U.S. is now trying so hard to influence
the November 2006 elections in Nicaragua, a poor country
with only slightly more than five million people, and few,
if any, strategic assets. Most importantly is the fact that
during the past few years, U.S. intervention in Latin
America has been crafted as part of a strategy of countering
what is called “radical populism.” By this, the foreign
policy makers in Washington are referring to the “demagogic
and anti-democratic” activities of leaders like Fidel Castro
of Cuba and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. The National Security
Strategy of the United States of America, 2006, lists among
the “remaining regional challenges,” Venezuela, where “a
demagogue awash in oil money is undermining democracy and
seeking to destabilize the region,” and Cuba, where “an
anti-American dictator continues to oppress his people and
seeks to subvert freedom in the region.” For Washington,
Nicaragua stands out as an obvious target for such
destabilization and subversion because the Sandinistas now
pose a serious challenge to the U.S.-backed government.
“Radical Populism”
The concept of radical
populism has been attributed to former Commander-in-Chief of
the Southern Command, General James Hill, who testified to
the House Armed Services Committee in March 2004, that the
U.S. is now facing two types of threats in the region:
“traditional” and “emerging.” Traditional threats are from
“narcoterrorists and their ilk,” and poses threat to “law
and order…from urban gangs and other illegal armed groups.”
But the emerging, and more dangerous, threat is “radical
populism in which the democratic process is undermined to
decrease rather than protect individual rights.” The radical
populists are “tapping into deep-seated frustrations of the
failure of democratic reforms to deliver expected goods and
services. By tapping into these frustrations, which run
concurrently with those caused by social and economic
inequality, the leaders are able to reinforce radical
positions by inflaming anti-U.S. sentiment.”
Radical
populism is also presented as a U.S. national security
threat that must be countered by higher levels of military
and police aid and, as well as, increased U.S. military
presence in the region. General Bantz Craddock, who
succeeded General Hill, carried the new concept further by
coupling it with the War on Terror that he said should be
this country’s highest priority. He also accused President
Hugo Chavez of trying to influence the outcomes of elections
in Nicaragua and Peru, and of exporting radical populism all
over the hemisphere. “There is a destabilizing effect
throughout the region. I believe that the worrying aspect is
what is being exported…is radical populism to immature and
unstable democracies.”
More startling in its import,
is a recent article by the noted Central American
specialist, Prof. William LeoGrande, of American University.
Leogrande asserts that the U.S. Army War College Strategic
Studies Institute published a monograph on radical populism,
claiming that the populists are anti-democratic,
anti-American, and a threat to U.S. security and that
Washington should work to “preempt” their coming to power
and be prepared to deal militarily with any “burst of
populist turbulence.” Thus, radical populism has replaced
the Communist threat as the perceived new enemy of stability
and democracy, or at least the democratic formula that
Washington regards as best for this Hemisphere.
Defining Private Enterprise
Threats to the economic
and free trade aspects of U.S. policy toward Nicaragua are a
second important element of concern. This was indicated in a
February talk, in which Mark Culliname, Economic Officer at
the U.S. embassy in Managua, stressed private investment and
economic development as factors to help achieve political
stability and progress. “You can equate economic development
and political stability. If you have one, the other follows
pretty quickly.” As part of economic reform, the Central
America-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR),
that was approved by the Nicaraguan National Assembly over
the strong opposition of the Sandinistas, will provide new
market access, while international cooperation and aid is
being spent to improve schools and infrastructure. The
implication here is that economic aid will be forthcoming
only if the government continues on the path toward
free-trade democracy.
Upcoming
Elections
Currently, Nicaragua’s electoral picture
features four leading candidates for the presidency in
November. The FSLN’s choice is its perennial candidate
Daniel Ortega, who was president from 1986 until 1990.
Populist Ortega is evidently obsessed with winning the
presidency, probably in large part because he decisively
lost in his last three attempts to do so. Herty Lewites,
former mayor of Managua, a Jewish businessman and veteran
Sandinista, was originally a serious contender for the FSLN
nomination. He was denied the opportunity to challenge
Ortega, who, as the real boss of the FSLN, induced the party
to bypass its usual primary election and expel Lewites.
Afterwards, Lewites joined a protest party, the Sandinista
Reform Movement (MRS), and now has become one of the leading
Nicaraguan contenders for the presidency.
The Liberal Constitutional Party (PLC), led by former President Arnoldo Alemán – who was convicted of stealing almost $100 million in public funds – has a relatively unknown and weak candidate, former Vice President José Rizo, as its presidential standard bearer. After his nomination, Rizo commented “I am the one who will send [Ortega] to his fourth and final defeat.” The fourth candidate is Eduardo Montealegre, now of the National Liberal Alliance-Conservative Party (ALN-PC), who was denied the PLC’s nomination by Aleman. Montealegre, an investment banker, was the Minister of the Presidency and Minister of Foreign Relations during Aleman’s Presidency. He was educated in the United States, is strongly pro-U.S., and has endorsed the U.S. free trade position. Although the U.S. State Department probably prefers Montealegre among the four candidates, it will probably ultimately lend its support to Rizo because he is the candidate of a leading legitimate political party, with perhaps a better chance of winning. There are indications that the U.S. will help finance a coalition to back Rizo’s campaign.
Just how is the
U.S. intervening in the electoral affairs of Nicaragua at
this time? Current Ambassador, Paul Trivelli, has reached
new heights for institutional arrogance and assertiveness.
For example, in April he sent letters to Nicaraguan
conservative party leaders as well as presidential
candidates offering them financial and technical assistance
worth some $16 million and proposing that a primary election
be held to unify all right-wing parties behind one
presidential candidate. The PLC leaders chose not to meet
with Trivelli, but they remained unanimously behind Rizo.
Montealegre’s ALN-PC leaders met with the Ambassador as
well, but they insisted that no alliance with the PLC would
be possible as long as Aleman runs the party. Accused of
intervening in Nicaragua’s political affairs, Trivelli
insisted that his efforts were just “part of my job.”
Nicaragua’s El Nuevo Diario (as quoted by the Nicaragua
Network) lashed back that “the U.S. intervention was so
blatant that even some right-wing sectors felt awkward and
had to reject the offer.”
Trivelli was recently
interviewed by a highly regarded Nicaraguan journalist,
Carlos Chamorro, who pointed out that no foreign diplomat
had acted with such “belligerence” in Nicaragua’s politics
since the U.S. occupation of the 1930’s. Trivelli’s answer
was “I am not going to stop defending democracy – that is
part of our policy and it will continue to be part of our
policy.” When asked what the U.S. would do if Daniel Ortega
should win a clean democratic election, Trivelli answered
that the U.S. cooperates with all democratically elected
governments with “sensible” economic policies and a
willingness to cooperate with the U.S. on security matters.
However, he also commented in March that “Ortega is a tiger
who has not changed his stripes,” who therefore must be
defeated.
More U.S. “Democratization” on the
Way
That there are implied threats coupled with U.S.
offers to help with the elections, is shown in a statement
by former Assistant Secretary of State for Western
Hemisphere Affairs, Roger Noriega, last July: “The
Nicaraguan people probably value their relationship with the
United States, but also value their own wellbeing and I
believe that they recognize that with a Sandinista
president, the country would sink like a stone and reach
depths such as that of Cuba; and that the economy would
probably be affected.”
Another sly threat against the
status quo was seen in a statement by U.S. Director of
Intelligence John Negroponte (former Ambassador to Honduras
in the 1980’s who actively promoted the Honduras-based
contras), who in March said “U.S. intelligence services are
closely observing the presidential election processes
in…Nicaragua.” There is thus a very real fear that the U.S.
has sent intelligence agents to Nicaragua to observe their
electoral process, as it did in the Atlanti c coast area of
the country last year. The reaction of former foreign
minister Francisco Aguirre was sharp: “We want them to
respect us as a country and not to intervene.”
There is no doubt that the election campaign, which officially will begin in the high summer, will become much more heated, and that the U.S. will do and say far more to influence its outcome. The U.S. put a great deal of effort into influencing all of Nicaragua’s previous elections: no stone was left unturned as Washington continues to treat Nicaragua as its satrapy – and favorite Banana republic. Washington has played a similar role in elections in other countries over the years, where it was feared that voters might possibly choose anti-U.S. candidates who, as presidents, might threaten the goals of the “community” of nations united behind the “Washington Consensus.”
There has
also been a marked negative reaction on the part of the
Nicaraguan population to the U.S. intervention, which has
been apparent in almost every opinion poll. Daniel Ortega
currently has emerged as a leading contender. This may not
mean very much because older Nicaraguans will remember the
devastation that was poured on their country by the U.S. in
the 1980’s and may now have to think twice before casting
their ballots for more of the same. Most Nicaraguans
understand very well what the dark side of U.S. attention to
their country can be, and it’s a burden many of them are not
prepared to bear.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Senior Research Fellow Frank Kendrick, Ph.D.
June 22,
2006