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In El Salvador, Cautious Optimism On What a Progressive Win Would Mean for U.S. Relations

By Roberto Lovato, New America Media. Posted March 14, 2009.


Bush-era policies like CAFTA and the Iraq War have turned Salvadorans against the U.S. and its allies in the ARENA government.

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SAN SALVADOR -- El Salvador’s election on March 15 is an occasion for Salvadorans to consider future relations with the United States and the new Obama Administration. How the new president and his advisers respond to these elections could be an early measure of U.S.-Latin American relations. And it may also be an opportunity for Obama to begin fulfilling his campaign promise to “lead the hemisphere into the 21st Century.”

As much as he appreciates the change of U.S. administrations, philosophy student Carlos Ramirez, 24, who was sitting beneath a tree near the central plaza of his school, the University of El Salvador in San Salvador, expressed concern that the administration has only made a brief statement of neutrality on the widely-watched elections here. Ramirez and others, including more than 33 U.S. congressmembers who sent Obama a dear-colleague letter about the Salvadoran elections, fear a repeat of 2004. Then, Bush Administration officials intervened in the Salvadoran elections, suggesting that a victory by the opposition party would endanger the legal status of Salvadoran immigrants in the United States and would prohibit remittances they send home.

“I want Obama to understand that there are some students here -- a minority, I would say -- who still have the ‘80’s attitude of permanent confrontation with the United States that we see in campus protests against the Iraq war, CAFTA [Central American Free Trade Agreement] and other policies,” said Ramirez. “But most of us are open to re-thinking the relationship with the United States. We all recognize that all of us, including the United States, are in a profound crisis and extremely interdependent, as you can see in issues like immigration, trade and security. We’re open and now it’s up to Obama to define his position, and the elections are a good place to start.”

Ramirez’ open-but-cautious attitude is the product of both political maturity and the Bush era policies toward Latin America that bred alienation from the United States. Viewed from this perspective, Sunday's elections have significance beyond the tiny country of 7 million. How the Obama Administration deals with El Salvador’s hotly contested elections and their aftermath will communicate much about what this country and Latin America can expect from him.

The policies of post-World War II presidents in the United States, both Republican and Democratic, make many Salvadorans wary of Obama, even though they give him high popularity ratings, says Edgardo Herrera, an international relations expert at the university.

“If it is truly committed to improving relations with El Salvador and the rest of Latin America, the Obama Administration should remember what we say about justice here,” said Herrera. “Justice is like a snake. It only bites the barefoot poor, not the rich who have shoes.” He thinks the United States is not in sync with ideas about justice on the Salvadoran street. He cites an annual opinion poll conducted by Central American University since 2003. “Every year Salvadorans are telling the United States they do not like its policies, including the Iraq war, the CAFTA and the dollarization of the country’s currency,” Herrera said. “Rejection of these policies has turned the Salvadoran electorate against the ARENA government-and the United States.”

For Robert White, former ambassador to El Salvador in the Carter Administration and President of the Center for International Policy, the challenge of U.S.-El Salvador policy before and after Sunday’s elections is to foster autonomy and self-determination. “Although the country may be small and its economy heavily dependent on remittances from the United States," White said, "it is still important for that country to demonstrate its policy independence. Many questions have been raised by some of the Salvadoran government’s past actions.”

White, who is in El Salvador as an elections observer, recalled how the Bush Administration influenced El Salvador’s “extraordinary rapid recognition of the 2002 coup regime in Venezuela, which I believe lasted less than 48 hours.” The leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) is leading the right-wing ARENA party, which dominated politics for 20 years. Should the FMLN win, White said the U.S. should “treat it as a normal event in a democracy.”

Ramirez agreed. “The best thing Obama can do is to engage us in this time of transition and expectation,” he said. “If he were to visit us, he would see immediately that what he needs to do is simply help us reconstruct the campus and the country as the Uniteds States did in Europe and Japan after World War II.”

Go here for Roberto Lovato's illustrated dispatches from El Salvador.


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See more stories tagged with: cafta, el salvador, fmln, el salvador election, arena, edgardo herrera, central american universi, robert white, center for international , san salvador

Roberto Lovato, a frequent Nation contributor, is a New York-based writer with New America Media.

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View:
Of course Bush wanted it recognized
Posted by: inanaturallight on Mar 14, 2009 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"the Bush Administration influenced El Salvador’s “extraordinary rapid recognition of the 2002 coup regime in Venezuela".
Who do you think financed the coup? American business interests working in concert with the CIA were behind it.
Greg Palast's "The Assassination of Hugo Chavez" is an excellent documentary about what the US thought of democracy in Venezuela.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

We've Cut Deals With Communists and Socialists Before: Do It Again
Posted by: johnwinthrop on Mar 14, 2009 9:15 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
El Salvador citizens have been lucky and favored by the US govt: many now in the US legally can thank specific refugee legislation that only benefits El Salvadorians. However, many El Salvadorians, who are quite populous in areas like LA and the tri-jurisdictions around Wash DC, are illegal aliens.
Significant social services, law enforcement and education costs are incurred by this needy population with a relatively low education level and with significant health needs.

Perhaps the El Salvador govt of the left can clamp down on emigration and repatriation from illegals? Obama and Clinton can finance projects in El Salvador in return. El Salvador is relatively small, so US aid would go much further there than in Mexico or Columbia.

Our depression demands that business as usual stops. Employment of illegal El Salvadorians must end by use of electronic verification and denial of public contracts or subcontracts(often the case) to businesses(like Verizon, for example) that hire large numbers of illegal El Salvador and Central American workers.

An aggressive information policy in our high schools is needed to inform students that if they are illegal, they have no future in the US. But if they are legal,or are not interested in college(which many aren't despite the robotic pressure the teachers unions and school boards put on kids0 there are good paying blue collar jobs available after HS graduation for LEGAL residents. African American community organizations will work hand in hand with business and govt to put African American youth at the head of the line after 450 years, and illegals from Mexico and southward on a bus back to San Salvador.

No amnesty for illegal "immigrants". NO paying a fine that most can't or won't pay anyway. No going to the "back' of the line to provide a "path" to citizenship.

Does any serious businessman or immmigration official really believe those who grabbed US construction and repair jobs are going to the back of any line?

Let's rebuild America. For Americans.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

cafta, nafta
Posted by: petron on Mar 15, 2009 11:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both of these 'trade agreements' should either be scraped or drastically reformed. I think what is need is Fair Trade not so call 'free trade'. Also You need them to be open, no secret groups to override sovernanty, human rights,worker rights need to be strenghted as with envirnomental protections

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Poor old John Winthrop ...
Posted by: goodsensecynic on Mar 15, 2009 11:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... he just can't see that the issues in El Salvador and throughout Central and South America are not just about immigration to the USA.

From the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which announced American hegemony over the entire Western Hemisphere, through the Spanish-American War at the turn of the previous century, and on to US-sponsored assassinations, civil wars and hideously cruel military dictatorships throughout the 20th century, the deaths and the poverty visited upon citizens from Chile to Nicaragua and beyond are the direct result of US economic exploitation and military intervention.

I am old enough to recall being naive enough to be impressed by John F. Kennedy's "Alliance for Progress" that led to little more than the invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965. I was especially charmed by the thousands of Americans who joined the Peace Corps rather than the Green Berets and (mainly) set a legitimate example for people who imagined a strategy more ennobling than "death squad" in the Western Hemisphere, torture in the Middle East and napalm in south-east Asia as effective instruments of American foreign policy.

I am no longer naive. But it is not utterly impossible that some of the enthusiasm displayed by young Obama voters might spill over into practical action in support of progressive movements in Central and South America.

As for the new administration, I remain cautiously pessimistic about its intentions. I see no immediate prospect of a plan that would recognize the desperate need for economic and ecologically sound plans for development south of the US-Mexican border. Nonetheless, shifting sides from the generals to the new generation of imiginative and innovative social democratic leaders is, after all, the only sensible way to assist in bringing necessary reform and thereby to slow the alleged threat of illegal immigration.

Oh yes, and by the way, maybe Mr. Obama can also find it in his arsenal of intellectual superiority to notice that the War on Drugs works no better that strategic alliances with right-wing dictators, international corporate interests and the global criminals engaged in arms sales and drug cartels.

Growing prosperity in Latin America and the de-criminalization of recreational drugs are both elements of a comprehensive and coherent plan for a better future.

Now, that would be change I could be persuaded to believe in.

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U.S.A. is not America
Posted by: mexobserver on Mar 16, 2009 1:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To johnwinthrop I dedicate these lines. I am Mexican. In school I learnt America is the American continent, so-baptized after Amerigo Vespucci succeeded in circummnavigating it, thereby demonstrating it was a new CONTINENT, WHICH WAS CALLED AMERICA IN HIS HONOR. No matter if you are a Christian or if you aren't, the USA must overcome centuries of unwarranted privilege-ism and racism, you started out being refugees, so arrogant your ancestors almost perished for not asking help from willing American natives, then you arranged alliances with UK, then you massacred people the Bible said were your neighbours, i.e. your brothers, the American natives. THEY, and not your ancestors, were the true Americans. At any rate, The U.S.A. must recognize their crimes toward us true American peoples from Río Bravo down along the centuries, starting with your arrogant self-styling as "Americans" and claiming "America for the Americans", thereby driving Europe away and keeping for yourselves this continent we all live in as your sphere of influence. So your rantings against true Americans like Salvadorans (and NO HUMAN BEING IS ILLEGAL), or Mexicans, are unwarranted. No justice will be known in this continent until you recognize that Salvadoran, Mexican, Honduran, Guatemalan, etc. so-called "aliens" (as if they fell from another planet) as ECONOMIC REFUGEES, which they all are. And their presence, mainly in the US's territories which were once robbed from Mexico in 1846, is due almost exclusively by the practice of the Savage Capitalism-cum-"free" trade-greedy-ism that you worship. In fact, with the reaffirmation of NAFTA & its illegal offshoot, the SPP, you have allowed Bush & his co-conspirators to condemn us to poverty. So I would suggest you conduct yourselves, if not in a truly Christian manner, then in a just-foreign-policy manner, and recognize and repair all the damages you have done to us all from Rio Bravo down --yes, down to the tip of Argentina and Chile, in a never-ending search for markets since the 1820s and physical, economic and moral quasi-destruction. It's really so blind and/or hypocritical to ask "why do they hate us"?
I as a Mexican am not "anti-American". how could I be? I even have USamerican friends. They are decent USAmericans, and all that they and we decent Americans are, is anti-US-Empire-ists

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