The Mango Tango Bush's Secret Biotech Deal In New Delhi

March 10th, 2006



Pamela Drew




President Bush announced that Americans would soon be eating India's
farmed mangoes, but he failed to explain why. It has a lot to do with
why he's willing to negotiate on the nukes. The real power in the US
is biotech and the US and India have another, more covert deal made
especially for them.




While many in Congress and the American press have questioned the
President's nuclear deal with India, no one has looked at what the
bio-techs are getting. As always, the hidden agenda tells more than
the stated one. In the Bush playbook it has always been a resource
grabbing strategy. In this case food is definitely on the table. It is
a 1000-crore project called the Indo-US Knowledge Initiative in
Agricultural Research and Education.




The announcement in the Indian press read, "Promising a second "green
revolution," US President George W. Bush was cited as announcing
Friday an investment of 130 million dollars to boost Indian
agriculture and biotechnology as he wrapped up a visit here, stating,
"By working together, the United States and India will develop better
ways to grow crops and get them to market and lead a second green
revolution."

American press covered the protests surrounding the President's visit
as general anti-US sentiment. Sure there's some of that. Many
Americans share their anger over US policies. But in India, much of
the protest relates directly to the loss of farms and depressed
economy caused by Monsanto's Bt cotton. Monsanto is a known enemy.

Indian farmers have suffered terribly with the introduction of
genetically modified cotton. The Bt variety GM crop yields have been
so terrible there have been widespread economic losses, record farm
failures. The GM cotton is cited as the leading cause of suicide among
India's farmers.

That is no problem for the bio-techs who sweep in and snatch up the
land just as they're doing in America. The rate of loss for family
farms in America is 350 family farms per week. That's the "green
revolution" Bush style. That's the American lifestyle the trade deal
will share with India and why many in India are angry and protesting.

The President went on to add, "We are establishing a new
30-million-dollar science and technology commission that will fund
joint research in promising areas like biotechnology".

Anyone who has spent time on Capitol Hill knows that Commissions are a
way to have your friends look into something and fix the results. What
they can't fix they classify. The Warren Commission investigated
Kennedy's shooting before half of America was born and we still don't
know what they found. That's the type of commission the President's 30
million dollars is setting up for India.

The "Indo-US Knowledge Initiative" means that the bogus science funded
through industry front organizations, we Americans have, can now take
hold in India. With the proper "tools" they can improve the way they
do their math and science. The math tracks the profits, and the
science finds what ever it needs to, so the math works out. The Bush
team and K Street created the environment for everything from ENRON's
accounting to cancer causing hormone milk in the school lunch programs
and others can learn.

The "green revolution" is about profits for the bio-techs and the
India deal is a sweet package. Bush has promised the approval of new
varieties of 'Frankenfoods' grown in India for export to the US. This
coupled with the Congressional attack on the food labels will assure
no Americans can know what any of the profiteers are feeding us. It
also gives India access to the vast US food markets. It's a way of
thanking us for our jobs.

Specifically what the deal in New Delhi involved was installing
Monsanto's hand picked henchmen in the key positions with India's
research and regulatory boards. While the strategy is the same
everywhere Monsanto and the Bushwackos go, the names change. From my
view it's easiest and best to use the words of the local experts to
summarize the situation.

"There is a complete blackout at the top about what's going wrong.
This is the worst agrarian crises since Independence," says Devinder
Sharma an agricultural scientist, who is also a food policy analyst on
the forum for biotechnology and food security.

Sharma says the Initiative's board is dominated by large
multinationals like Walmart and Monsanto, who are all set to determine
the Indian agricultural research agenda.

"The American IPR regime offers patent holders rights to life form,
plants and seeds, so there is also the threat of losing rights to
indigenous genetic resources. There is also the additional fear that
India could become the dumping ground for all the genetically modified
crops that there are no takers for in Europe and many other parts of
the world," Sharma says.

When President Bush announced on Friday that Americans would soon be
eating India's famed mangoes, he failed to explain why. Maybe now it
will be in perspective.

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