15/11/2019 theintercept.com  14 min 🇬🇧 #164495

Comment la Guerre Hybride contre la Bolivie a réussi à opérer un changement de régime

The Coup That Ousted Bolivia's Evo Morales Is Another Setback for Latin American Socialism

A turbulent weekend roiled Latin American politics as a coup in Bolivia forced President Evo Morales aside on Sunday and, days earlier, former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio "Lula" da Silva was freed from prison.

Morales spoke Wednesday from Mexico City, where he is in exile, and expressed interest in returning to Bolivia in the wake of what he has described as a U.S.-backed coup d'etat. At the press conference, Morales encouraged the anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggle to continue and rejected self-declared interim President Jeanine Áñez. Past anti-Indigenous  comments from Áñez, a right-wing Christian, are coming to light, adding to the backlash she already faces from Morales's supporters. Nonetheless, Áñez has  vowed to call for new elections.

U.S. President Donald Trump's official  statement, meanwhile, praised the military coup in Bolivia and noted that the events leading up Morales's ouster "send a strong signal to the illegitimate regimes in Venezuela and Nicaragua that democracy and the will of the people will always prevail." What role the U.S. may have played in Bolivia is certainly less clear than the overt attempt at regime change in  Venezuela early this year.

Morales's journey into self-imposed exile marked the end of a remarkable era in Bolivian politics. The first Indigenous president in the modern Americas rode a populist wave to power in 2006, when Bolivia's Movimiento al Socialismo Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS rose amid a reshuffling of South American politics to the left in the wake of the Cold War's end. Part of this "pink tide," Morales's 14 years in power saw economic gains for many Bolivians. By 2017, Bolivia's middle class had grown dramatically, and the country of around 11 million people had the region's highest growth rate but at a cost. Deforestation rates in Bolivia spiked, and Morales pivoted to the center while embracing natural gas and mining projects.

The October 2019 election virtually guaranteed trouble for Morales's presidency long before it took place. Many in Bolivia viewed Morales as being "politically spent," anthropologist and Bolivia scholar Bret Gustafson  told the Intercepted podcast. "The movements had been co-opted by the state. And any dissent within the movements had been silenced," Gustafson said. "Those who had managed to become a part of the state and party structure remained loyal to Evo Morales."

Exiled former Bolivian President President Evo Morales waves upon arrival at the Historic City Hall in Mexico City on Nov. 13, 2019.

Photo: Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images

Morales's run for a fourth term was unconstitutional, according to the new constitution adopted by Bolivia in 2009. After losing a referendum to allow his candidacy in 2019, Morales approached Bolivia's Constitutional Court. Declaring that term limits violated Morales's "human rights," the court allowed him to run. Then came the race. In the two-round voting system, an election is determined after a candidate wins by 50 percent, or just by 40 percent if the candidate has a 10-point lead over the closest opponent. An outright win in the first round of voting was unexpected.

"The OAS is certainly being questioned, largely because of the role played by the United States and Brazil and Argentina."

During the vote count, results from the unofficial, preliminary count showed Morales falling short of the first-round victory. Opposition leader and former President Carlos Mesa alleged fraud when, after a tense delay, the newly released  official count showed Morales with just over a 10-point lead, easily securing a victory.

Violent opposition protests swept the country and the Washington, D.C.-based Organization of American States conducted an audit. In a statement, the OAS flagged "its deep concern and surprise at the drastic and hard-to-explain change in the trend of the preliminary results revealed after the closing of the polls" stoking the anti-Morales protests but offering little in the way of concrete evidence of fraud.

"The OAS is certainly being questioned," Gustafson explained, "largely because of the role played by the United States and Brazil and Argentina" a coalition of influential member states headed by right-wing governments "and the very outspoken role that Luis Almagro, the head of the OAS, has had trying to facilitate the ouster of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela."

Speaking Wednesday from Mexico, Morales said, "The OAS is not in the service of the people of Latin America, less so the social movements. The OAS is at the service of the North American empire."

Deputy Senate Speaker Jeanine Áñez, center, accompanied by Luis Fernando Camacho, second from left, speaks from the Quemado Palace's balcony in La Paz, Bolivia, after proclaiming herself the country's new interim president in a session of Congress that failed to reach a quorum, on Nov. 12, 2019.

Photo: Jorge Bernal/AFP via Getty Images

Though the role of external forces in the coup remain unclear, even the mere opportunity for the Bolivian right to surge is owed to domestic factors. Namely, support for Morales had eroded even among his most loyal constituencies:  Indigenous communities.

Following the election, those communities came under attack. A right-wing Christian opposition figure named Luis Fernando Camacho led violent protests targeting Morales's Indigenous supporters and elected officials. An agribusiness and natural gas tycoon dubbed "Bolivia's Bolsonaro," Camacho is aligned with the Civic Committee movement and comes from an elite family with influence in the natural gas distribution business.

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Anti-Indigenous racism played a role in the violence. "Camacho is like many on the right wing in eastern Bolivia, who consider themselves white or white-ish," Gustafson explained. "There is a long history of anti-Indigenous racism and a long history of fascist political organizing in Bolivia that is very much wedded to symbols of Christianity." Indeed, videos posted to social media showed anti-Indigenous coup supporters  burning Bolivia's Indigenous Wiphala flag and opposition leaders brandishing ostentatious  Bibles.

Despite the political chaos of the past month, Gustafson pointed to the strength of Bolivian social movements. "Whatever government emerges out of this, if it takes some 'neoliberal position' or attempts to restore the kind of racist model of rule that characterized the country for centuries," he said, "the social movements in Bolivia are going to give them a really hard time."

Luiz Inácio "Lula" da Silva, Brazil's former president, greets supporters outside of the Sindicato dos Metalurgicos do ABC in São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil, on Nov. 9, 2019.

Photo: Pedro Vilela/Getty Images

Last Friday, in Brazil, one of Morales's main Latin American political allies, Luiz Inácio "Lula" da Silva, was released after a year and a half in prison. Lula, a contemporary of Morales's among the leaders of the resurgent Latin American left, would most likely have won Brazil's 2018 presidential election. But a disputed, politically-tinged corruption conviction prevented him from running and allowed the right-wing opposition to guide far-right Jair Bolsonaro to victory.

"There was massive corruption inside this anti-corruption probe that has really changed Brazilian politics in a fundamental way over the last five years."

The judge that presided over Lula's case, Sérgio Moro, has been at the center of a  major investigation by The Intercept. Co-founder Glenn Greenwald explained on Intercepted that, essentially, Moro was not a judge. "He was secretly commanding the prosecutorial task force, not just in Lula's case, but in many, many others. The prosecutors were constantly violating their ethical constraints, trying to profit off of the fame that they got from winning." Greenwald said. "There was massive corruption inside this anti-corruption probe that has really changed Brazilian politics in a fundamental way over the last five years."

Lula returned to the political scene rejuvenated after his release from prison, Greenwald said. Calling Morales's ouster a coup, Lula  tweeted a statement of support for the Bolivian president: "It is unfortunate that Latin America has an economic elite that does not know how to live with democracy and the social inclusion of the poorest." Bolsonaro, for his part, has  dismissed that a coup occurred in Bolivia.

Lula's statement was one among a global chorus of left-of-center politicians who spoke out against the coup. On Sunday, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.,  tweeted, "There's a word for the President of a country being pushed out by the military. It's called a coup." While many Democratic presidential candidates have remained silent, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.,  tweeted, "I am very concerned about what appears to be a coup in Bolivia, where the military, after weeks of political unrest, intervened to remove President Evo Morales."

Much of the U.S. mainstream media, meanwhile, has been  reticent to  call what happened in Bolivia a coup. "I think it's amazing that U.S. media outlets just explicitly refuse to call it a coup and are going out of their way to say everything but," Greenwald told Intercepted. "It just shows how in U.S. discourse, 'democracy' means putting a leader in place who serves U.S. interest, and 'tyranny' or 'dictatorship' means a leader even if they're democratically elected who refuses to."

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Contact the author:

 Elise Swain email protected theintercept.com@eliseswain

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