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**http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/22/international/americas/22bolivia.html?hp&ex=1137992400&en=77d639bb48248519&ei=5094&partner=homepage


Bolivia's Leader Solidifies Region's Leftward Tilt 
By JUAN FORERO and LARRY ROHTER
Published: January 22, 2006

TIWANAKU, Bolivia, Jan. 21 - When Evo Morales, an Aymara Indian and former head 
of the Bolivian coca growers union, is sworn in as president on Sunday, it may 
be the hardest turn yet in South America's persistent left-leaning tilt, with 
the potential for big reverberations far beyond the borders of this landlocked 
Andean nation. 

 
David Mercado/Reuters
Evo Morales, right, donned ancient Indian garb for a traditional ceremony 
Saturday at the ruins of Tiwanaku, Bolivia's pre-Incan capital. 

 
  
Bolivia's Shift to the Left 
While mostly vague on details, and recently moderating his tone, Mr. Morales 
promises to transform Bolivia and "end the colonial and neoliberal model," as 
he put it on Saturday in an elaborate ceremony at the sacred ruins of this 
pre-Incan civilization.

He has said he would "depenalize" cultivation of coca, the prime ingredient for 
cocaine, which Washington has spent hundreds of millions of dollars and more 
than two decades trying to eradicate. 

He pledges to inject the state in Bolivia's oil and natural gas industry, 
troubling the multinational energy companies that first flocked here in the 
late 1990's, even though Mr. Morales recently said he would not expropriate 
foreign holdings.

He has disparaged American-backed free trade policies, and seems certain to 
stand as the southernmost outpost of a new anti-American nexus with Cuba and 
Venezuela, whose president, Hugo Chávez, has become among the Bush 
administration's most ardent critics.

Any and all of those steps in a country where coca tracts and rich energy 
holdings give it a strategic importance far outweighing its tiny population 
could unsettle Washington and the region. 

Bolivia's gas reserves, the continent's second-largest, help power South 
America's largest economies. Brazil has plowed $1.5 billion into energy 
investments in Bolivia and worries about rising drug and crime problems in its 
urban slums if Bolivia's coca crop is not controlled.

Mr. Morales is at least the seventh Latin American leader to take power since 
2000 from the left, a varied crop that ranges from Chile, Brazil, Argentina, 
Uruguay and Ecuador to Venezuela, with strong leftist contenders surging in 
Peru and Mexico, both of which will also hold elections this year.

His success is also the most prominent example of Latin America's recent 
democratic revolutions. Throughout the region, the indigenous and the poor, 
increasingly mobilized by frustration with Washington-backed economic 
prescriptions, have used the ballot box to put in place a group of leaders more 
representative of their interests for the first time in nearly five centuries. 
With the exception of Mr. Chávez, who is bankrolled by Venezuela's oil wealth, 
most of the continent's other left-leaning leaders, like Luiz Inácio Lula da 
Silva of Brazil, have pursued pragmatic policies once faced with the real task 
of governing. 

In recent weeks, Mr. Morales has toned down some of his more strident language 
and struck a more accommodating note with American officials. But in Bolivia's 
case, political analysts here say, it is far harder to know exactly how Mr. 
Morales might rule. 

Mr. Morales, a former congressman, is untested as an executive and known less 
as a pragmatist than as a fiery orator and protest leader. Several of his 
associates, including Vice President-elect Álvaro García and Carlos Villegas, 
who will oversee economic planning, are leftist academics with no experience in 
government.

"There could be realism and pragmatism in their policies, or they could allow 
ideology to guide them," said Roberto Laserna, a political analyst with San 
Simón University in Cochabamba, the city where Mr. Morales makes his home. "But 
we do not have a way to gauge their management experience."

What is clear is that Mr. Morales's compelling storybook rise to power has 
brought this isolated country of nine million people the kind of international 
attention it has rarely received. A former llama herder who saw four siblings 
die in childhood, Mr. Morales won Bolivia's Dec. 18 election in a landslide not 
seen since the country's return to democracy in 1982.

The first Indian elected president in a country where most people are 
indigenous, Mr. Morales, dressed notably casually in an open-collar shirt and 
sweater, embarked on a 10-day world victory tour. He met this month with the 
President Jacques Chirac of France, President Hu Jintao of China and Prime 
Minister José Luis Rodríguez of Spain. 

On Saturday, in a ceremony attended by tens of thousands of Aymara and Quechua 
Indians at this archaeological site some 14,000 feet above sea level, Mr. 
Morales donned the replica of a 1,000-year-old tunic similar to those once used 
by Tiwanaku's wise men, was purified in an ancient ritual and accepted the 
symbolic leadership of the myriad indigenous groups of the Andes.

"We are not alone," Mr. Morales told the crowd. "The world is with us. We are 
in a time of triumph, a time of change."

On Sunday, for his official state inauguration, he expected about a dozen 
foreign leaders, far more than have ever attended a Bolivian inauguration.

Part of that solidarity stems from his role as representative of a new Latin 
American pole in global politics, as the region coalesces as a counterpoint to 
unpopular United States policies. More and more Latin American countries are 
taking exception to Washington's economic prescriptions and those of the 
International Monetary Fund. Some are strengthening ties with China, which is 
investing heavily in the region.

Many have refused to go along with Bush administration demands to exempt 
Americans from criminal prosecutions at the International Criminal Court at The 
Hague. No South American countries have sent soldiers to support the war in 
Iraq. And anti-American criticism has become political sport, as opinion 
surveys give President Bush the lowest standing in Latin America of any 
American president in the region's history.


As varied as the region is, no other part of the world has seen as uniform a 
shift in its political landscape.
Mr. Morales, however, has already had to find middle ground between the 
explosive populist talk that helped propel him to power and a pragmatic path 
that will help Bolivia's tiny $9.5 billion economy grow, said Nancy Birdsall, 
president of the Washington-based Center for Global Development, which studies 
economic issues affecting developing countries.

In a 2002 interview, Mr. Morales told The New York Times that the solution to 
Bolivia's economic troubles was "communal socialism," having peasant communes 
run mineral and metals mines and agriculture. Mr. Morales, while railing at 
globalization, now says that trade agreements can work, if fair to both sides, 
and that foreign investment is needed. 

Since calling Mr. Bush a "terrorist" in December, he has sounded a more 
conciliatory tone. He noted this week that he, too, had been the target of 
harsh barbs from American officials.

"Everything here is pardoned," Mr. Morales said. "We are in new times. Let us 
start talking, not in a dialogue of submission, but to find solutions."

Among those who will advise Mr. Morales is Juan Ramón Quintana, a moderate 
academic who has worked extensively with international organizations and 
governments. "There is still the perception of Evo Morales as a radical 
leader," he said in an interview. "But Evo Morales is undergoing an important 
transformation. We all believe that he can become a statesman."

The United States, too, has been more accommodating. Thomas Shannon, the 
assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, recently told 
reporters that Washington wanted dialogue with Mr. Morales and to continue 
"positive relations" between the two countries. 

On Saturday night, he and the American ambassador, David Greenlee, met with Mr. 
Morales to lay the groundwork for future discussions. "We want the Bolivian 
people to succeed, and for the Bolivian people to succeed, this government has 
to succeed," Mr. Shannon told reporters after the meeting. "It's a 
democratically elected government, and we hope that we're going to be in a 
position to work with them."

Still, if the Bush administration decides that Mr. Morales is pursuing policies 
that run counter to American interests, either in trade or on drug policy, aid 
could be frozen or cut - and the United States is this country's largest donor. 
It has provided $655 million from 2000 to 2004, two-thirds of it for 
development, and is considering a Bolivian request for $600 million to build 
roads.

Solidarity aside, for Bolivia's neighbors, too, Mr. Morales's ascension creates 
new challenges as well that are hardly mitigated by the fact that most are led 
by nominally leftist governments. The main concern is assuring access to 
Bolivia's vast natural gas reserves.

More than any other country, Brazil has vital economic interests to protect. 
About half the natural gas consumed in Brazil comes from Bolivia, one third of 
Bolivia's exports go to Brazil, and Brazilian companies are the largest group 
of investors in Bolivia, led by the state-dominated oil company Petrobras.

So Brazil has watched with concern as Bolivia has become increasingly unstable 
in recent years. President da Silva's government has been careful not to arouse 
Bolivian nationalism, reacting calmly to Mr. Morales's statements that he is 
seeking "partners, not bosses" in developing its gas reserves. 

When Mr. Morales visited Brazil this month, Mr. da Silva invited Bolivia to 
become a full member of Mercosur, the South American trade union that Brazil 
dominates. Membership, some analysts in the region say, could constrain any 
Bolivian temptation toward radicalism.

"We have the advantage, in that we are not run by a Brazilian Bush but a 
president whose origins, like those of Morales, are in the labor movement and 
who wants to avoid excessively dramatic conflicts," said Helio Jaguaribe, a 
leading Brazilian foreign policy analyst.

The stakes are high for Argentina, too. Until now, Bolivian governments have 
provided it with gas at below market prices. Mr. Morales said during a visit to 
Buenos Aires this week that he planned to end that arrangement, a step that is 
likely to add inflationary pressures. 

But Bolivia's most prickly relations will be with Chile, even with the election 
last week of the Socialist Michelle Bachelet as president. Chile's victory in a 
19th-century war that cost Bolivia its coastline continues to bedevil the 
relationship. Mr. Morales has even criticized Chile's capitalism and close 
relations with the United States, and anti-Chilean sentiment remains rampant 
here.

"The United States wants to convert Chile into the Israel of Latin America," 
Mr. Morales charged in a newspaper interview that has been widely quoted in 
Chile. The two countries have not had full diplomatic relations since the 
1970's, and Mr. Morales led a campaign against a pipeline that would have sent 
Bolivian gas to Mexico and the United States via a Chilean port.

Still, Mr. Morales has invited Chile's departing president, Ricardo Lagos, to 
the inauguration, the first Chilean leader to visit Bolivia for such an 
occasion in decades. Ms. Bachelet has said she favors greater integration 
between Chile and its poorer neighbors.

Indeed, Mr. Morales begins his term with good will - and wariness - all around. 
Venezuela has pledged diesel fuel and energy cooperation, while Spain has 
offered debt relief, according to Bolivian officials. Other countries have 
pledged stronger ties. 

Mr. Morales, while welcoming trade with countries as far away as Belgium and 
South Africa, has been besieged by requests from countries with investments 
here to ensure that Bolivia maintains a healthy environment for foreign 
companies.

Mr. Morales has tiptoed around them so far. But there is little doubt he will 
also give more authority to the state, remaking some ministries and creating 
others. "The state needs to be the central actor to plan economic development," 
he explained.

< 
Juan Forero reported from Tiwanaku for this article, and Larry Rohter from 
Buenos Aires.


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