Minding the Backyard: Washington's Latin America Policy After the Cold War

Burt, Jo-Marie

In what for lack of a better term has come to be dubbed the post-Cold War era, progressives seeking to understand the "new world order" have found themselves grappling with a paradox. With the...

...there would be no more Mobutus, no more Pinochets...
...Now, ten years after the end of the Cold War, when so many pundits still champion the "end of history" and the "sole superpower" status of the United States, it is a good time to examine in depth how Latin America fits into this novel yet familiar new world order, and how Washington looks at Latin America...
...With the end of the Cold War, something definitive had clearly changed...
...Behind the dropping of the Cold War veil and all the very real changes that would follow, another key aspect of the international order remained very much in place-the global capitalist system enshrined at the end of World War II and codified in institutions like the IMF, GATr and the World Bank...
...6 NACIA REPORT ON THE AMERICASREPORT ON U.S...
...politicians wary of being deemed "soft on drugs" became inextricably tied to those of the Pentagon, SOUTHCOM, military suppliers, and a host of other security-related outfits that stood to make a tremendous amount of money fighting a nebulous drug war...
...And in Latin America, U.S...
...How can we understand these shifts and the underlying continuities therein...
...strategic policy...
...Take U.S...
...Klare outlines the contours of this blueprint, highlighting the military dimension as well as the philosophical underpinnings of what U.S...
...The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the subsequent break-up of the Soviet Union transformed international politics...
...Coletta Youngers and J. Patrice McSherry point out that despite its pro-democracy rhetoric, Washington has devised a series of new rationales to support the region's armed forces, even when they engage in brutal acts, as in Colombia, or when they threaten to undermine democratic governments, as in Peru...
...For the final issue, we have invited prominent Latin American progressives to analyze the changing face of U.S...
...domination in Latin America since the end of the Cold War, the impact of that domination on the region, and the ways Latin Americans today understand-and are resisting-the colossus of the North...
...democracy assistance"-the promotion of democracy by financing independent groups in political and civil society, including political parties, media outlets and non-governmental organizations...
...Indeed, the postwar economic order created by the United States and its European allies to ensure hegemony of the liberal Western democracies and capitalist world economy remains at the core of the international system in which we live today...
...Surely this is a dramatic shift from the days when Washington happily supported dictators (like Somoza and Batista) and brutal military regimes (including those of the Southern Cone in the 1960s and 1970s), conspired to overthrow progressive governments engaged in reform (as in Guatemala in 1954, the Dominican Republic in 1965, Chile in 1973, and Grenada in 1983), and intervened directly to defeat revolutionary governments and movements (successfully in Central America in the 1980s and unsuccessfully in Cuba since 1959...
...There was even talk of a "peace dividend" and the forging of a "new world order...
...Yet intervention has taken on new forms-forms at times so subtle that they barely seem like intervention at all...
...W hat about the U.S...
...Youngers analyzes what has become the central ideological justification for U.S...
...Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) and then the Pentagon adopted the war on drugs as its defining task in the region...
...We should not be fooled, Michael Klare tells us in the opening article of this issue, by the lack of vigorous public debate on U.S...
...there would be no more Vietnams, no more El Salvadors...
...presidential administration and its policies toward Latin America...
...global preeminence forever...
...William Robinson and Doug Henwood both offer insights into the paradox of the post-Cold War order...
...From the late 1940s to 1980s, this aspect of the international order remained largely obscured by the more tangible clashes between the two superpowers, the perils of bipolarity, and the nuclear stalemate...
...Understanding this blueprint sets the stage for us to better grasp the implications of this newly assertive hegemony for Latin America, the focus of the remainder of this Report...
...global dominance...
...Containment" was replaced by "enlargement," a policy favoring the expansion of "free trade and free elections...
...military presence-and increasingly, intervention-in Latin America: the so-called war on drugs...
...Seems innocuous enough...
...Latin America policy...
...drive for global dominance remains firmly entrenched...
...The United States may no longer support dictators and may champion the virtues of democratic governance, but Jo-Marie Burt is Assistant Professor of Politics at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia and a member of NACLA's Editorial Board...
...Ultimately, both suggest, Washington's promotion of democracy--defined narrowly as free elections-is little more than a mask for the pursuit of transnational economic interests...
...Nor would there be a need for Washington to support two-bit dictators and brutal military regimes because they were reliable allies in the battle against Communism...
...officials see as the "rightness" of U.S...
...foreign policy...
...it has simply taken on new forms and new ideological justifications...
...POLICY the U.S...
...Unraveling these forms and laying bare these new justifications is the purpose of this NACLA Report, the first of a three-part series to critically examine U.S.-Latin American relations in the post-Cold War era...
...But Washington and its European allies were hard at work forging the relationships and institutions that would oversee this order, establishing mechanisms that would ensure the global dominance and domestic tranquility of the Western liberal democracies by securing an open, capitalist world economy...
...interventionism is alive and well...
...But on closer view, such assistance tends to be directed toward groups championing a pro-United States, free-market agenda, and can substantially reshape the region's politics...
...This first of three Reports over the next year on U.S.-Latin American relations in the post-Cold War world is meant to provide crucial context for understanding the changes and continuities of this new, as yet unnamed era...
...It is this paradox of change and continuity that has confused observers of the post-Cold War era, leading many-a few skeptical progressives aside--to assume that international conflict was a thing of the past, and that Washington would cease its imperial ways...
...So, even as the superpower rivalry that so dominated the post-World War II period evaporated just a few years after the razing of the Berlin Wall, this less obvious, less dramatic aspect of the international order remained very much in place...
...As Robinson argues, free markets make the world available to capital, and free elections make it safe for capital, by creating a more stable, predictable world environment...
...NACLA thanks her for her collaboration on this report...
...No longer would world affairs be dominated by superpower rivalry and a succession of Third World "proxy wars...
...Yet there has been something disturbingly familiar about the post-Cold War era...
...This is hardly a new phenomenon-Washington has been engaged in such low-intensity interventionism since the end of the Cold War (as in Italy, when it financed the Christian Democrats to crowd out the Communist Party...
...But it has taken on new dimensions in U.S...
...And assuring this world order remains the defining aspect of U.S...
...And by using the dubious "narcoguerrilla" theory to link the war on drugs with the war against "terrorism," the interests of U.S...
...She outlines how, in the face of declining budgets and a drifting sense of mission, first the U.S...
...This is the ultimate bipartisan issue, one on which "there is absolutely no disagreement in Washington...
...A new military and strategic blueprint for the post-Cold War era is being forged, and its goal, says Klare, is "to maintain U.S...
...defense of democratic governance in Latin America...
...In the second issue, slated for late 2001, NACLA will analyze the new U.S...

Vol. 34 • November 2000 • No. 3


 
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