With the nationalization of Bolivia’s natural gas and petroleum resources
President Evo Morales, the country’s first Indian president, is
dramatically reshaping his country’s destiny. On 1 May he proclaimed "an
historic day has arrived. Now the gas and oil that flows from our land
will no longer belong to foreigners." This came just after his return from
Havana, Cuba where he signed the People’s Trade Agreement with Fidel
Castro and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela.
Until these dramatic steps, it was somewhat unclear what direction Morales
was moving in during his first three months in office. He and his foreign
minister held at least four talks with the US ambassador David Greenlee in
which both sides seemingly extended the olive branch. As Greenlee said in
March after one meeting, "we have a constructive dialogue with the
government of Bolivia over a wide range of themes and mutual interests."
Two factors compelled Morales to seize the country’s national resources
and to realign the country internationally: the militancy of the country’s
peasant, worker and indigenous movements, and the decision of the United
States to foist free trade agreements on Colombia and Peru that severely
damaged Bolivian exports to other Andean nations.
Evo Morales and his political party, MAS, the Movement for Socialism, took
power in January 2006 with a clear popular mandate. Social uprisings,
starting in 2000, demanded that the state nationalize the country’s
natural gas and petroleum so the lucrative profits of these industries
could be used to help lift South America’s poorest country out of poverty.
Three presidents resigned or were forced out of office by these popular
protests.
Until 1 May, some of the country’s popular movements felt that Morales had
reneged on his campaign promises as he did little more than state that
Bolivia already “owned its resources.” His approval ratings dropped from
80 to 68 percent. But as one observer in La Paz notes, “Evo is a masterful politician.” Morales chose this moment to act because of the elections for the Constituent Assembly that are scheduled for July. The assembly will have the power to redraft the country’s constitution and reshape its political institutions.
As Vice-President Alvaro Garcia Linares has noted, the goal of MAS is "to
achieve hegemony," and the Constituent Assembly is central to this
process. Bolivia has been unstable for years because of poverty, military
revolt s, and the conniving of the country’s political elites as they loot
the public treasury. As in Venezuela prior to Hugo Chavez’ election, the
traditional parties are viewed as bankrupt. Evo and MAS want to breathe
new life into the country’s political and social institutions, to give voice to the country’s indigenous poor who have been exploited by the “caras,” the faces of white oppression that have dominated Bolivia since the Conquest.
With the government’s expropriation decree, fifteen corporations have been
nationalized, with foreign capital from a wide variety of nations,
including the United States, Spain, Great Britain, Brazil, France and the
Netherlands. Seizing control of these enterprises goes to hand in hand
with Bolivia’s audacious steps in the trade arena. MAS and Morales view
neo-liberalism, US trade agreements, and corporate-driven globalization as
major ob stacles to the country’s development. This year Colombia signed a
so called “free trade agreement” with the United States that is particularly harmful to Bolivia. Sixty percent of Bolivia’s major agricultural export, soy beans, currently go to Colombia. The US-Colombian accord means that cheap, subsidized US grains will flood Colombia, driving out Bolivian soy production.
Peru has also just signed a trade agreement with the United States that
will have an adverse impact on Bolivian exports to Peru. These accords
have ruptured the thirty-seven year old Andean Community of Nations, a
trade pact that included Venezuela and Ecuador as well as Bolivia. Hugo
Chavez announced in April that Venezuela is withdrawing from the pact
because the United States has “fatally wounded” the community. Evo has
also stated tha t Bolivia is reconsidering its membership.
This discontent with the Andean community led to the signing of the
People’s Trade Agreement between Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia on 29
April.
The accord is particularly favorable to Bolivia as Cuba and Venezuela have
agre ed to take all of Bolivia’s soy production as well as other
agricultural commodities at market prices or better. Venezuela will also
ship oil to Bolivia to meet domestic shortfalls in production while Cuba
will send docto rs to Bolivia.
The trade agreement and the nationalization of Bolivia’s natural resources
mark a dramatic shift in hemispheric affairs. Morales is serving notice on
Washington that he is becoming part of a radical bloc of nations in Latin
America that are no longer subservient to the United States.