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Samizdat 2000
The American Beat-Up on Peru and Venezuela
by Christine Stone
5/26/00


Christine Stone practised at the English Bar as a lawyer specializing in
crime and civil liberties before setting up the British Helsinki Human Rights
Group with a number of academic and journalist colleagues in 1992. She has
written for a number of publications including The Spectator and Wall Street
Journal on Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union. Her column now appears
Thursdays on Antiwar.com.

Archived Antiwar.com articles by Christine Stone
The American Beat-Up on Peru and Venezuela
5/26/00
Sierra Leone and the Dogs of War
5/19/00
Is Britain Heading for Fraudulent Elections?
5/12/00
Last Year in Belgrade: Memories From a Visit
5/5/00
Hate – Speech and the New World Order
4/28/00
Slovakia: Mr. Meciar's Dawn Raid
4/21/00
A New Croatian Spring
4/14/00
The New World Order Turns Against an Old Friend
4/6/00
Kosovo's Borderlands
3/21/00
Georgia is on Everyone's Mind
3/2/00
McCain Rocks the Vote
2/9/00
The Sad Tale of Croatian Independence
1/28/00
Christmas in Kosovo
12/17/99
Macedonia: the Next Balkan Flashpoint
11/22/99
Some Thoughts on the Killings in Armenia – Who did it and Why?
11/1/99
    Peru is in crisis and its president, Alberto Fujimori, in danger of
losing power. Although he won the first round of the election held on 9th
April with 49.4% of the vote violence broke out soon afterwards with the main
contender, Alejandro Toledo crying foul. Observers from the Carter Center in
Atlanta, the National Democratic Institute (NDI) and the Organization of
African States (OAS) have added their voices of protest: there were
irregularities in the polling stations, faulty computers that had produced
numerous technical glitches and an unacceptably long counting of the vote.

Despite attempts to remedy the situation, Toledo and the observers remained
unconvinced that improvements had taken place. On Monday 22nd May the OAS
demanded a postponement of the second round scheduled for 28th May, otherwise
they would refuse to conduct any further monitoring. And, Toledo himself
indicated that he would not take part in the poll at all. The Peruvian
election authorities, on the other hand, deny the charges and say the vote
must go ahead.

What is going on?

The Americans have decided "absolutely" not to let Alberto Fujimori rule
again, I was told by a Peruvian academic. Even if he wins the election in the
second round "they will force him to resign." Peru's vice-president,
Francesco Tudela, has stated that US/Peruvian relations have been deeply
wounded by the "unprecedented interference by Washington in [Peru's] election
process"…

But is this an "unprecedented interference"? The Americans have fomented
trouble in Central and South America for as long as anyone can remember but
recent events in Peru more closely resemble the tactics used in Eastern
Europe, the Balkans and the former Soviet Union over the past 5 years.
Wherever possible, the Americans have tried to remove those governments and
leaders they deem to be disagreeable through the ballot box rather than coup
d'etats. In most cases, the sheer weight of the opposition: the US government
and the CIA aided by their European allies and numerous (allegedly)
non-governmental organizations all massaged by a compliant press easily
achieve their goal. What can a handful of poverty-stricken Albanians or
Slovaks do against such an onslaught?

The most perfect example of the beat-up, and the one most closely resembling
the tactics being used today in Peru, occurred in Albania just four years ago
this May. Parliamentary elections were held pitting the governing Democratic
Party under its leader and the country's president, Sali Berisha, against the
Albanian Socialists (former Communists). Like Alberto Fujimori, Berisha was a
charismatic figure who had succeeded in turning around the devastated
Albanian economy producing some of the highest growth figures in the former
Communist bloc. He had also proved to be an obedient ally of the Americans –
cooperating with them over the war in Bosnia and maintaining a 'hands off'
policy towards neighbouring Kosovo, something demanded by the US at the time.

But to those who keep a close eye on events it was obvious that the US had
turned against Berisha and wanted him out. Allegations of human rights abuses
(always a useful pretext for demanding change) intensified and reports
started to appear in the press early in 1996 from pre-election monitors that
the election would not be conducted fairly.

It is true that many Albanians had lost out from the Berisha reforms but it
was also true that they were not ready to re-elect the very people who had
given them 45 years of the most hard-line Communism in Europe. Perhaps the
international community was too eager to believe its own propaganda for, it
became apparent as polling day unfolded that the opposition was not going to
win. As the count was underway the Socialists pulled their election officials
out of the polling stations and deemed the elections void. Hard on their
heels, a group of monitors from the OSCE issued their own statement refusing
to take any further part in the process.

However, despite the hullabaloo created by the OSCE monitors (many of whom
had connections with Albania during the Hoxha regime), other election
observers – myself and my colleagues included – failed to confirm their
extreme criticisms. The situation was difficult for Berisha's Democrats – the
State Department's spokesman at the time, Nicholas Burns, regularly demanded
fresh elections in the months that followed – but the result was allowed to
stand.
Other ways had, therefore, to be found to destroy Berisha and his party. In
January 1997 violence broke out in Albania over the collapse of pyramid
lending schemes. By March this had become an overall insurrection. The
government was forced to resign and fresh elections were called for June. The
Socialists duly won them and the US was happy. Happy, yes, to have restored
the successors to Enver Hoxha's Communist Party to power including many who
had held top-level posts in the old regime.


In the past three years Albania has become a byword for crime, drug and
people smuggling – an economic basket-case barely kept going with loans from
abroad. The number of people fleeing the country, often under the pretext of
being Kosovan refugees, is a testament to the success of the present (U.S.
supported) government's policies.

Now, let us turn to Peru. Alberto Fujimori came through as the outsider to
win Peru's presidential election in 1990. In doing so he broke, as it were,
the mould of Peruvian politics which had been dominated by the military,
corporatist leftism and a caucus of right-wing families with old, colonial
roots.

Everyone knows about the 7,649% rate of inflation, the drugs and the violent
insurrection by Sendero Luminoso guerrillas that faced Fujimori at his
election. They also know that the president combated these problems with
remarkable success. "There is no question that Mr. Fujimori has been an
extraordinarily successful leader" confirms Peter Hakim in the Christian
Science Monitor on 24th February 2000. He continues "one notable triumph of
his administration was to restore personal security to Peru's ordinary
citizens by defeating two virulent guerrilla movements ...another was
conquering hyperinflation …since his first election…Peru's economy has grown
by an average 5% a year." We also learn that Fujimori solved the border
dispute with Ecuador and assisted the Americans in their war on drugs by
reducing the production of coca by one third.

Ordinary Peruvians would agree. "He's the best thing that ever happened to
us" says an Indian woman to the Washington Post's Anthony Faiola on 22nd
March. "Ten years ago I had to hide from the guerrillas. But he made us safe."

What, then, is the problem? Apparently, Fujimori is "not a democrat." Even
worse, according to the Washington Post, "people still care more about bread
than democracy." "Poor people," that is.
Various bits and pieces are then dredged up to support this thesis: the
president's suspension of the constitution (the so-called autogolpe) in 1992;
the constitutional impropriety of standing for office for a third term and
the lack of press freedom.

Suffice to say that the constitution was suspended at the height of the
terrorist threat in 1992 when Shining Path guerrillas had infiltrated Lima
from the countryside and were blowing people up and dynamiting their bodies
in the street. Criticism relating to whether or not the constitution permits
Fujimori to seek a third term in office is a bit ripe coming from pundits in
the United States who never batted an eyelid when presidents Eduard
Shevardnadze of Georgia and Milan Kucan of Slovenia did precisely the same
thing. As for a free press, there are numerous opposition newspapers in Peru
including the leading dailies El Comercio and La Republica as well as
influential magazines like Caretas. In fact, the media in Peru is a great
deal more diverse than it is in the US

However, as with Albania in 1996 Peru's economic miracle has had its losers.
And, no doubt, there are people who would genuinely like a change. There were
also those, including the leftists, Catholics with liberation theology
instincts and the old right who had always viewed Fujimori – who appealed to
a wide range of Peruvians including Protestants and peasants – as an
outsider. In a part of the world with still-stifling social mores, snobbery
was never far from the surface.

None of this though explains the virulence with which both Republicans and
Democrats in the United States have turned on Peru. Conservatives like Elliot
Abrahams, Reagan's assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs,
and Senator Jesse Helms have attacked the Fujimori regime. Helms and two
other senators have threatened Peru with being an "outcast" over the
allegations of electoral fraud.

But is Alejandro Toledo really Jesse Helm's cup of tea? Despite the fact that
he has been reinvented by spin-doctors as a poor, Indian shoeshine boy he is
an American-educated economist whose globalist credentials have been honed by
years of working for the World Bank and as a business school professor; a
leftist who burbles on about his happy, hippie days in Hashbury Heights while
at Stanford University in the 1970s. More revealingly, Toledo was one of a
handful of hostages released by Tupac Amuru guerrillas during the siege of
the Japanese embassy in the winter of 1996-7 deemed suitable to negotiate
with the Peruvian government. It is alleged that some of those around him are
connected with the Shining Path.

Toledo also boasts a Belgian-born wife from whom he has been separated for
some time but who has, nevertheless, been co-opted into the presidential
campaign. Mrs. Toledo, Eliane Karp, is supposed to appeal to native Peruvians
with her mastery of the Quecha language; "the force of the Inca" she says,
can help her husband to form "a great government."

If the situation were not so serious it would be very funny. These people are
straight from central casting with their folk dancing, flattop Indian caps
and invocations of the Incas. But the Toledos' agenda isn't all from a
brochure for holidays in Machu Pichu. Ms. Karp has a radical feminist
message, not unlike Hillary Clinton's we are told. Her husband, meanwhile, is
promising the earth to the peasants, including higher wages and the creation
of thousands of jobs. Enough, as Fujimori points out, to reactivate the
chronic inflation he has curbed over the past 8 years. But, the world of
Jesse Helms is given the passing nod when the candidate promises other kinds
of audiences that he will cut taxes and speed up privatisation.

If Toledo were ever to become Peru's president these promises would go the
same way as similar election proposals have done in places like Croatia and
Slovakia. Last week the Croat government announced a hike in taxes and
reneged on its election promise to reduce VAT from 22% to 19%. The Slovak
government never built the 500,000 flats promised in their 1998 election
programme – Slovakia now has the highest rate of unemployment in Europe. No
matter – the lavish promises helped their respective governments to electoral
victory.

Why should anyone – least of all conservative-minded American politicians-
wish to bring such a person to power? Why would the United States want to
destabilize a country where the threat of renewed guerrilla activity and drug
production (the two feed upon the other) still lurks?

Accusations of dictatorship and a 'democratic defecit' are sheer bunkum when
put next to some of the places and people supported by the US government.
Perhaps it is the fact that Fujimori has bought Russian MIGs for the Peruvian
airforce or, as George Szamuely suggested, that various privatizations have
not been awarded to the right cronies of those in the White House and
Congress.

The explanation cannot be sought in terms of left and right. To understand
this one has to look north to where another Latin American election is
scheduled to take place on 28th May – unless it, too, falls prey to technical
problems. After coming to power in 1999 Hugo Chavez is putting himself
forward for election. Chavez has also sidelined the old Venezuelan apparat
(including the Catholic church) and appealed directly to the poorer sections
of the community where he has garnered enormous popularity. He, too, is hated
by the United States who have also produced an opponent more to their tastes
from among Chavez's former supporters.

OAS election observers are also present in Venezuela uttering their
Cassandra-like warnings of fraud and computer failure. It seems that the the
Venezuelian government hired a Nebraska firm, Election Systems and Software
to supply computer technology for the election. Leaving aside the fact that
co-opting an American supplier in the circumstances is an act of national
suicide, the wretched machines do not seem to work. As in Peru, we are told
that the tabulation of ballots and results cannot be trusted.

Who is responsible for all these technical problems in Peru and Venezuela
which never seem to happen anywhere else? Or, when they do, are conveniently
overlooked by the State Department. An Associated Press article "Los Hackers
on the Loose" by Margarita Martinez published on 15th February may help to
explain the problem. "In Latin America" she says the internet " is easier
than elsewhere to break into.".. "The security portals are extremely weak."
In fact, on the day her article appeared Peru's election office Internet
pages were crippled. "Seven of the 27 attacks registered in Peru over the
past six months originated in the United States" according to the president
of the National Informatics Society, Caesar Vargas.


The outcome of all this is that Fujimori will be toppled, probably by public
unrest. The OAS and the other (independent) observers in Peru were silent
when Toledo's supporters wreaked havoc after the first round of the election,
throwing rocks and stones and setting fire to the gates of the presidential
palace. Similar acts of violence have occurred at the president's campaign
rallies. The mob will come to the rescue as it did in Albania.

In Venezuela the public may be less open to manipulation and the Americans
may have to rely on disaffected members of the military to depose Hugo
Chavez, something they are rather queasy about nowadays. Whichever means are
chosen, both men will both have to go. It seems that the United States
demands rule by puppets rather than real human beings, whatever their
political complexion. The future of democracy and the rule of law in Latin
America is truly in peril. And no one is able or prepared to do anything
about it.

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