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President Obama never ceases to amaze.
"He can't fire teachers and Tomahawks [missiles] at the same time." But he did it, as [comedian] Jon Stewart said (The Daily Show, March 22).
The domestic-needs budget will get sliced, Obama repeatedly stated the government has no money, and then ordered the armed forces to fire hundreds of tomahawk and cruise missiles – and the U.S. lost a jet bomber. The Tomahawk replacement cost -- for the first day of firing alone -- will cost upwards of $71 million (Fox.com March 20).
The first week of
"no-fly-zone" war against Libya could cost $1 billion.
He flew to
Brazil and there announced he had found this new war opportunity, which
he couldn't resist. One Washington cynic thought Obama had a secret
agenda: to replace Henry Kissinger as the most unworthy Nobel Peace
Prize recipient in history.
Brazilian President Roussef stated her
strong opposition to using military means in Libya and Brazil abstained
on the UN resolution authorizing armed intervention. Breaking political
protocol, Obama used his visit there to justify his new war.
Disrespectful? Insensitive? Or just another ugly American
performance?
As war raged in Libya, Obama signed a nuclear energy pact
with Chilean President Piñera just as the Japanese government informed
Tokyo residents of dangerous radiation levels in their drinking water
and spinach.
Obama waxed eloquent on the marvels of increased trade
between the U.S. and its Latin American neighbors, but probably forgot
that some of those big Latin American sales were for large weapons
shipments, a primary export of our great country. He also vowed to
pursue the drug war through a rehab and education focus, without
mentioning that tens of millions of U.S. users – not addicts – will not
avail themselves of such services and that attempting to spray crops and
catch narco-traffickers has yielded zilch (not the name of a new drug) –
but only for a little more than a century. Hey, give `em time.
Chile
shows, he orated, it is possible "to transition from dictatorship to
democracy — and to do so peacefully." He wasn't old enough to remember
how in September 1973 the U.S. government helped Chileans make the
transition from democracy to dictatorship. But General Pinochet and his
military fascists only ruled for 17 years, four years longer than
Hitler. Needless to say Obama did not refer to the democratically
elected government of Dr. Salvador Allende that the U.S. government
helped overthrow through force and violence.
Nor did he opine on U.S.
spooks and cops, diplomats and bankers rushing to support military
dictatorships in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay and much of
Central America. Over decades they slaughtered, tortured and exiled
their dissenters. The U.S. closed its doors to most of those fleeing
from those nasty U.S.-backed dictatorships.
He refrained from telling
how U.S. troops invaded the Dominican Republic. In Haiti, U.S. diplomats
kidnapped and exiled its president. Indeed, after seven years of forced
exile, the twice-ousted Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide almost
didn't return home. As Air Force One headed south with the first
"black" President, the White House tried to persuade South Africa to
keep Aristide from boarding a plane for his native Haiti.
Exiles also
eluded Obama's speech. That ugly stuff belongs in history's garbage can
where its redolence cannot spoil the sweet rhetoric of democracy.
Reality is a bit different unless democracy includes narco-states
(Mexico, Colombia, Central America) whereby tens of thousands die in gun
battles, or pervasive malnutrition, lack of medical care and jobs that
plague the lower continent. For Obama, the stain on this near-perfect
hemisphere is Cuba.
As President Raul Castro freed the last political
prisoner arrested in 2003 for taking money, goods and services from the
U.S. government, and announced a vast expansion of privatization, Obama
demanded: "Cuban authorities must take some meaningful actions to
respect the basic rights of their own people — not because the United
States insists upon it, but because the people of Cuba deserve it, no
less than the people of the United States or Chile or Brazil or any
other country deserve it."
During the few days he spent south of the
border, he used political platitudes that resonate with a 2012
re-election campaign. He enunciated new "solidarity" without reference
to Latin American regional economic, political and military
collaboration — without their northern Big Brother's help.
Even in the
last stop of his presidential tour, in El Salvador, Obama avoided Latin
America's issues, like how printing ever more U.S. dollars devalues the
dollar supply in these countries. He also avoided talking about how U.S.
protectionist policies worked against Latin American exports, and how
U.S. subsidies for agri-business screwed Latin American agriculture.
A
Univision journalist in San Salvador asked Obama about Operation "Fast
and Furious." No one had briefed him on how DEA agents provided Mexican
narco-trafficking gangs with high-powered weapons with hidden GPS
signals so the Mexican army could locate and destroy the gangs. Oops!
The gangs removed the devices.
Obama reassured Salvadorans that those
anti-drug smoothies — forget their tiny error in Mexico — would invest
$200 million to set up a fool-proof "regional security initiative" to
stop drug trafficking, gang violence and Central American migration to
the United States.
Democracy will get strengthened by military and drug
agencies: the new U.S. solidarity with South America.
Change you can
believe in!
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March 30, 2011 Progreso Weekly
Saul Landau's film, Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up?
featuring the Cuban Five is distributed by cinemalibrestudio.com.
Nelson
Valdes is Professor Emeritus, University of New Mexico.
PROGRESO WEEKLY
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