Title: HUGO, GEORGE, AND THE WAR ON TERROR
1HUGO, GEORGE, AND THE WAR ON TERROR
2 3ORIGINS
- Economiclack of growth (through 2003), poverty
and inequality, frustration with Washington
Consensus
- Politicalweakness of representative
institutions, inattention to poor, persistence of
corruption
- Internationalwar in Iraq, opposition to Bush
policies and growing distaste for American society
4GWB AND LATIN AMERICA
- Lack of high-level attention
- Abandonment of negotiations with Mexico for
immigration reform
- Overriding concern with support for
anti-terrorist campaign (not democracy)
- Hubs, spokes, and FTAs
- Politicization of drug war
- Awaiting Fidels demise
- Opposition to Chávez and the Pink Tide
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6BUSH AND THE PINK TIDE
- Strategy of inoculation
- Circumvention through FTAs
- Cultivation (and cooptation?) of Lula
- The presidential tour (March 8-14)
- Carefully selected sitesBrazil, Uruguay,
Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico
- Rhetoric of social concern
- Only deliverable ethanol agreement
- The Chávez counter-tour
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9 10- Uses language of the street (including the Arab
street)e.g., the devil speech
- Sits atop petroleum (now 100 per barrel)
- Puts money where his mouth is
- Breaks established rules of the game
- Plays off resentment of Bush, U.S. power
- Challenges Washington Consensus and FTAA
- Goes for high stakes
- Seeks rearrangement of prevailing world order
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12THE BOLIVARIAN REVOLUTION
- Domestic agenda
- Strengthening state
- Redistributing wealth
- Monopolizing power
- Global agenda
- Opposing U.S. hegemony
- Building continental solidarity
- Becoming leader of developing world
- Consolidating oil-producing alliances
13INTERNATIONAL UNCERTAINTIES
- Continuing strength of conservative or rightist
tendencies in Latin America
- Role of Braziland discovery of oil reserves
- Lulas relationship with GWB
- U.S. presidential election
- Trends in global economy
14DOMESTIC WEAKNESSES
- Judiciary, rule of law and due process
- Absence of representative institutionse.g.,
courts, legislature, unions
- Concentration of presidential power
- Chávezs own charisma
- Economic inefficiencies
- NB defeat in November 07 referendum
15THE ODD COUPLE
- Georges gifts to Hugo
- discourse on democracy (e.g., Second Inaugural)
- caricature of ugly American
- unpopularity of foreign policies
- inattention to Latin America
- And Hugos reciprocation
- exaggerated rhetoric
- potential threats to neighboring countries
- authoritarian tendencies
- Q1 What will Hugo do without George?
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- Q2 What about oil?
16DOES HUGO POSE A MILITARY THREAT?
- The surrounding neighborhood?
- The continental balance?
- Self-defense?
- Destabilization of neighbors?
- Containment of domestic opposition?
17Table 1. Basic Statistics Venezuela and
Regional Neighbors, 2005 Population ____
____Active-Duty Military (000s)________
__Country____ (Millions)__ Army Navy
Air __Total__ __GDPb__
Venezuela 26.6 34 18
7 82a 140.2
Brazil 186.4 189 49
65 303 796.1
Colombia 45.6 178 22
7 207 122.3
Ecuador 13.2 37 6
4 47 36.5
Peru 28.0 40 25
15 80 79.4
a Includes 23,000-member National Guard.
b Billions of USD at current prices.
18Active-Duty Military Personnel Venezuela and
Regional Neighbors, 2005
19 Military Spending Venezuela and Regional
Neighbors, 2005
20U.S. POLICY ALTERNATIVES
- 1. Continue containment of chavismo and pink
tide
- 2. Engage Chávez and allies directly
- 3. Cultivate allies (e.g., Bolivia, Nicaragua,
Ecuador)cut slack for Brazil as regional
leaderand isolate Venezuela
- NB On hegemony and inattention
21WHAT DIFFERENCEDOES IT MAKE?
- Why does Latin America matter?
- Geography
- Market opportunities
- Potential terrorist movements?
- Regional peace Tacit subsidy for U.S. projection
in the world arena
- A counter-intuitive hypothesis the Pink Tide,
hemispheric peace, and American power