Bush In Latin America, Brazil-U.S. Ethanol Alliance, Opposing the U.S.-Costa Rica FTA, Mexican Water Wars

Dear Friends,

George Bush has packed off to Latin America, with the mission of cementing relationships with allies and regaining influence in the region. This issue of the Americas Updater begins with a critical look at the administration’s agenda within the current economic and political context. Next, our Southern Cone correspondent, Raul Zibechi, offers an in-depth view of the most important stop on Bush’s five-nation tour—Sao Paulo. Zibechi argues that there’s more to the ethanol alliance than an alternative energy agenda. From Brazil, Isabella Kenfield analyzes the impact of ethanol production on Brazilian rural areas and what could be in store in an ethanol future.

Eva Carazo, a writer and activist in Costa Rica, presents an analysis of the growing movement against Costa Rican ratification of the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). As the only country still to ratify, the battle over the agreement has shaken the usually docile nation and become an international litmus test on an increasingly unpopular economic model. Finally, Americas border environmental analyst Talli Nauman writes on competition for the use of scarce water in the Gulf of California region, and its implications for the binational environment.

For those of you new to the IRC Americas Updater—welcome! You can see that the bi-weekly bulletin offers a broad range of issues, but some things are constant. Over 90% of our material is original—you won’t find it anywhere else, unless it’s reprinted (we encourage spreading information and ideas). The virtual pages of the Updater present cutting-edge analysis from our web of contributors throughout the hemisphere, in our five issue networks: Environment and Sustainable Development, Trade and Economic Integration, Democracy, Immigration, and Right to Know. We rely on our own IRC analysts and partner organizations in each of these networks to provide perspectives that not only enrich our knowledge and understanding of the issues, but also encourage a vibrant North-South debate and the forging of shared citizen agendas.

We look forward to hearing from our readers. Please send comments to: americas@irc-online.org.

This Week in the Americas

Bush Tour Seeks to Drive a Wedge in Plans for Latin American Unity
By Laura Carlsen

President George W. Bush has embarked on a five-nation tour of Latin America—the most ambitious of his presidency—in an attempt to reassert U.S. leadership in a region where open hostility to his government and its foreign and economic policies is the norm rather than the exception.

The U.S. president hopes that espousing a new commitment to "social justice" will undermine Venezuela’s crusade for Latin American and Caribbean unity based on a rejection of U.S. dominance and the free trade model.

Bush’s trip seeks to build a new coalition of the willing, in the face of a coalescing group of nations that has declared itself unwilling to continue to follow the economic and political dictums of Washington. In his speech this week, Bush described the countries on his itinerary—Brazil, Uruguay, Colombia, Guatemala, and Mexico—as countries that have made "the right choices," as opposed to the tacit accusation that many of the rest of them are making the wrong choices.

The nations Bush is visiting are not well-positioned to receive a public figure so widely repudiated by their populations. Lula, engaged in a political balancing act between social programs for the poor and economic orthodoxy for the rich, risks taking a serious fall from being so closely related to U.S. interests. Colombia is embroiled in a human rights scandal that is exposing the government’s own connections to paramilitary operations that have been at least indirectly supported by U.S. aid to the country’s armed forces.

Mexico’s President Calderón will get a photo op with the president, praise for his ongoing drug crackdowns, and a commitment to immigration policy reform. But the presidential summit will take place outside Mexico City, where grassroots mobilizations against electoral fraud and anti-Bush demonstrations are capable of drawing tens of thousands of people.

So why risk a major tour now? Although they emphasize the social goals and deny that the tour is ideologically motivated, government officials have admitted that the president ‘ s trip seeks to contain the growing influence of Hugo Chávez.

The trip indicates rising U.S. concern about a consolidating left-center alliance in Latin America. The State Department has warned of a populist threat—including Venezuela, Bolivia, and Ecuador, with Argentina thrown in for good measure—and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says the U.S. government is committed to "ensuring that the peoples of the Americas are not abandoned to demagogues and authoritarians"—both frequent accusations against the Chávez government.

But as Chávez forges relationships built on infrastructure construction, financing, oil, and preferential trade, Bush is offering little to back up his bid to be the champion of social justice in the region. The 2007 aid budget for Latin America is down from past years and conditionality is way up.

Ironically, many of the specific measures to be highlighted during the tour look like a weak copy of the kind of measures Cuba and Venezuela have been carrying out for years, including offering medical services to the poor, but in this case through military teams and a floating clinic located on a U.S. Navy ship; scholarships to study in the United States; English lessons; and some housing construction. The rest include a round up of already existing programs and the extension of U.S.-based financial services in the region through loan and mortgage programs. These are not measures that are likely to win over the hearts and minds of Latin America’s poor.

They key to the campaign, though, lies in the consolidation of the relationship with Brazil. Brazil is Latin America’s powerhouse, and considered one of the four emerging economies that will rise to be major players within the next decades.

The ethanol alliance seeks to consolidate a new power line in Latin America that runs directly between the United States and Brazil, with the dynamic force being the transnational corporations with interests in both countries. If this alliance is consolidated it will erode the Bolivarian plan to integrate the continent with a model of state-regulated economies and Venezuelan oil. It would also undermine efforts to strengthen the Southern Common Market.

In the deal, Brazil gains capital to develop ethanol-producing technologies within its own borders and export them to Central America and Caribbean nations. In addition to investment and credits, the Sao Paulo industrialists are assured policies to extend agribusiness into the Amazon and other regions now populated by small farmers.

The United States gains greater independence from Middle East oil by importing more of the cheap Brazilian ethanol. It also begins to redraw the map of energy integration in Latin America based on Brazilian ethanol rather than Venezuelan oil and Bolivian gas, thus neutralizing the power of nations it considers uncooperative.

Cargill, one of the largest owners and operators of ethanol production in Brazil, and other agribusiness corporations, expands in the south while continuing to protect its corn interests in the north by maintaining U.S. import tariffs on ethanol. As mono-cropping for biofuels takes over huge tracts of land, small food farmers who have always resisted international market control of land and resources will become a species in danger of extinction.

None of these changes are really in the interests of Latin America’s poor or the U.S. public. Setting aside Chavez’s anti-American hype, Latin American countries helping each other out is not necessarily contrary to U.S. interests, if these are redefined in terms of stable, long-term relationships with its southern neighbors rather than by the destructive trade and security agendas that now dominate.

The attempt to isolate nations that are seeking more equitable forms of development—including Bolivia, Argentina, and Ecuador—may help forge a coalition based on the interests of the powerful but will exacerbate Latin America’s problems and further distance the United States from its neighbors.

Our foreign policy should place more value on principles—democracy, equitable development, well-being—rather than on ideological control, and it should be based on respect for the myriad form s of development being explored in the region . This is the foreign policy that the people throughout the Western Hemisphere deserve.

Laura Carlsen is director of the IRC Americas Program in Mexico City, where she has worked as a writer and political analyst for the past two decades. The Americas Program is online at http://americas.irc-online.org/.

 

New from the IRC Americas Program:

United States and Brazil: The New Ethanol Alliance
By Raúl Zibechi

George W. Bush’s trip to Latin America this month is the most ambitious attempt to reposition the United States in the region since the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas died in Mar del Plata in November of 2005. The trip, which includes Brazil, Uruguay, Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia, has a dual purpose: to counteract the growing influence of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez in the region and to form a strategic alliance with Brazil for the production of ethanol. Although it may not appear on the surface, the two objectives are profoundly related.

Ra

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