by Nidia Diaz
05-07-06
To be uneasy is one of the human sensations that they have possibly never
experienced given how difficult it is to battle with. So much the master of all
situations and so sure of having control over everything human and divine, the
empire’s representatives feel as if something is squirming beneath their feet
and burning them.
It is there, south of the Rio Grande, in that up until now enormous, folkloric,
apathetic and servile place that they made theirs by blood and fire and where,
with the exception of the irredeemable Cuba, nobody who dared to defy them --
and there were more than a few -- did so successfully.
However, the 21st century is witness to how the politics of divisiveness,
discredit and subversion via which Washington has managed to dominate Latin
America to date, are coming up against the will and awareness of entire peoples
who have decided to assume their own destiny and have found in solidarity and
integration the finest arms to reverse centuries of domination and colonization
which have left them with a dramatic social debt.
It is no coincidence that the Republican administration of George W. Bush fears
the integrationist efforts that, headed by Bolivarian Venezuela, are taking
place on the continent.
It is not hard to imagine the face of the US president and his closest
collaborators every morning on receiving a briefing as to how the world is
doing, when this is the news being repeated with some frequency in their former
backyard. They cannot understand how even strategic allies -- Colombia, for
example -- are committing themselves to these efforts that are the expression of
an undying need to fulfil popular will and defend a position of sovereignty.
In this context, Colombia and Venezuela are to begin the construction of a
230-km gas pipeline to extend from La Guajira to Maracaibo, with a solid
aspiration to reach Panama, a country with which, moreover, President Hugo
Chavez signed a letter of intent for the construction on Panamanian soilof large
fuel storage deposits.
Central America, China and other Asian nations will be able to buy Venezuelan
gas once the works are completed in May 2007. In the same spirit, the Venezuelan
and Ecuadorian ministers of energy have signed two oil agreements sealing a
strategic alliance that will allow PdVSA to participate in the upgrading of
Ecuador’s Esmeraldas refinery. It also anticipates the exchange of Ecuadorian
crude for Venezuelan derivatives for as long as the former’s refineries do not
cover the domestic need for diesel, lubricants and gasoline.
Plans likewise include the refining in Venezuela of Ecuadorian crude, precisely
that extracted from Block 15, formerly operated for profit by US Occidental.
Integration efforts that are taking place between Venezuela and other
countries and these countries among themselves, as is the case of the energy
agreements signed by the presidents of Argentina and Bolivia, Nestor Kirchner
and Evo Morales, respectively, and which had a moment of special significance on
July 4 in Caracas, when the leaders of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay
met to make effective the inclusion of the nation of Bolivar as a full member of
Mercosur.
And we are not talking here of protocol agreements, of a simple number and
multiplication of documents, but that the letter and spirit of each one of them
is based on a new concept that has humans and not the market as its principal
beneficiary.
It is a new kind of integration model; it is cooperation on just and
equitable bases that take into account not only the asymmetries of the economies
within it, but economic complementation. We are talking of PetroCaribe, of
Petrosur, of the Grand Gas Pipeline of the South, of Operation Miracle in the
field of public health, of the educational "Yes, I Can Do It" program via which
millions of Latin Americans are becoming literate. We are talking of those
efforts that make us invincible because they have human beings, their needs and
hopes at the heart of their objectives.
It is this union currently being constructed without conditions, pressure or
masters that is feared by the empire and against which all their worn out
manoeuvres are beginning to be dashed.
Integration is advancing and with that the support of the people for the
leaders who are making it and will make it possible. As I write these lines,
opinion polls are giving Hugo Chavez an unbeatable popular support of 79.6 % of
the vote, while the opposition has lost its first opportunity to agree on a sole
candidate with a view to the presidential elections on December 3.
In Andean Bolivia, Evo Morales “Movement toward Socialism” gained the majority
of seats in the new Constituent Assembly which is to re-found the country with a
new Constitution, and autonomist aspirations were buried by No-votes at the
ballot booths.
In Argentina, Menemism with all its load of submission and servility to
neo-liberalism and to Washington has suffered a new defeat by losing La Rioja --
its last bastion -- in Party elections, and in Brazil, no adversary would obtain
more votes than President Lula if elections were to take place now.
Thus Latin America is advancing, in the face of Washington’s unease.
Source: http://www.granmai.cubasi.cu