From The
Idiot Factor:
Events in Nicaragua are
troubling to say the least. I have read one newspapers account after another
and they all paint a bleak picture of what is happening in Nicaragua .
The articles focus mainly on growing authoritarianism by President Daniel
Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo, violent protests against his government
and the same kinds of economic problems we see now in Venezuela .
After 1979, there were many leftists as
myself who flocked to support the Sandinista Revolution. This was a Marxist
government that had a thriving democracy as well as the kinds of public works
and programs to fight poverty that we had come to expect from a Marxist
revolution. The Sandinista’s seemed to be Marxist as Cuba ,
but they were far more democratic. This was the kind of Revolution that western
Marxists had hoped for the entire 20th century. This seemed to be the most
democratic Marxist revolution that every existed. That is excluding elected
leaders such as Salvador Allende, who also attempted Democratic Marxism, but
relied entirely on the electoral system of Chile .
The Sandinistas had an actual revolution, such as Cuba or Mexico .
During this time we had President
Ronald Reagan who took power in the US and
he made it a priority to try and destroy the very revolution so many of us
worked to support. He armed a CIA manufactured guerrilla army and waged open
war on the Sandinistas. He instituted a blockade and sabotaged their economy.
He had the CIA and other US officials
try and manipulate Nicaragua ’s
elections. He finally had some success in 1990, where Violeta Barrios de Chamorro won the
presidential election. It was victory for Reagan and a bitter defeat for US
progressives.
For many of us there was always hope
that the Sandinistas could come back into power in a later election. That
seemed to happen when Ortega came back to power, winning the presidential
election in 2007. At the time left-leaning governments were being elected in
many Central and South American countries. As with many third-world Marxist
parties, such as in Mozambique and Angola in Africa , the Sandinistas
were now calling themselves democratic socialists rather than Marxists. And
still many of us hoped the election of Ortega would return Nicaragua to
a left-leaning country once again.
What is happening today in Nicaragua is
not positive at all. Suddenly a place that held great promise for American
(meaning the hemisphere, not just the US )
leftists seems to be fading fast. Ortega is trying to create what looks like a
one party state. But this is not a leftist party state as we have seen in Cuba .
Ortega has moved to the right on many issues. He has slashed social programs
that were the pride of the Sandinista Revolution. He has banned abortion to win
favors of Christian right-wing groups. His authoritarian actions, such as
banning opposition parties, have led to anti-government protests from both the
left and right. His actions may actually be pushing the country’s population
away from supporting socialism or Marxism. From, NACLA “Nicaragua’s
Authoritarian Turn is Not a Product of Leftist Politics”:
Civil society, which emerged as a vibrant political sphere in
the 1990s, has suffered under the Ortega administration. For instance, Ortega
has targeted feminist non-governmental organizations, many of them founded by
onetime Sandinistas, with policies that monitor and limit their outside
funding. These efforts have been accompanied by a vitriolic campaign in FSLN-controlled media, accusing
Nicaraguan feminists of money laundering, CIA collusion, pornography, and
promoting illegal abortions. Attempts by former Sandinistas to develop
opposition parties like the Sandinista Renovation Movement have been met with
similar responses. A cursory review of Ortega’s policy positions shows that his
administration no longer enacts the values that once defined the Sandinista
Revolution. As Sandinista Vice President of Nicaragua from
1985 to 1990, Sergio Ramírez, writes in his memoir Adiós Muchachos,
the party has been “entirely replaced by the personal will of Daniel himself
and his wife, Rosario Murillo.” What we are witnessing today is not the return
of Sandinismo but the rise of Orteguismo.
There are reports in the mainstream
press of protesters carrying blue and white flags. Right-wing protest movements
often use a national color and then mix it with white. Many of these people
seem similar to the right-wing protesters of Venezuela and
they are no doubt hoping to push Nicaragua back
into the kind of bourgeois government they had before the revolution. The US is,
once again, trying to use legitimate protests to re-establish the kind of
imperialist control they had in Nicaragua before
the Sandinista Revolution. By coincidence the US now
has a right-wing populist president similar to Roland Reagan. Again
from, NACLA:
The New York Times covered the destabilization campaign
extensively, making the editorial board’s claim that “allegations of
corruption” led to the Sandinista electoral defeat appear myopic at best.
No single factor explains the 1990 electoral defeat that brought
the Sandinista Revolution to a close. Certainly, the fledgling Sandinista state
made significant errors as it sought to remake the highly unequal society it
inherited from the Somoza regime. The Sandinista’s early approach to governing
indigenous and Afro-descendant communities on the Caribbean coast
was one of the most serious. But these missteps are overshadowed by the
tremendous resources and energy the U.S. dedicated
to sabotaging the revolution. As Nicaraguan poet and former Sandinista Gioconda
Belli writes in her memoir of the revolutionary years, “I will never cease to
be appalled at the utterly venomous, unwarranted manner in which the United
States acted toward a tiny country that simply tried to do things its own way,
even if this meant making its own mistakes.” A massive propaganda campaign
against the revolutionary state paired with diplomatic pressures to isolate the
country were followed by $400 million USD in aid to the Contra insurgency, the mining of Nicaraguan harbors, and a debilitating U.S. trade embargo. The New York Times covered the
destabilization campaign extensively, making the editorial board’s claim that
“allegations of corruption” led to the Sandinista electoral defeat appear
myopic at best.
It is not surprising to see that the
mainstream press is covering Nicaragua as
it is covering events in Venezuela .
They are blaming everything on leftwing politics. For an example see “Op-Ed: Nicaragua’s
democracy is falling apart,” Los Angeles Times.
Also from NACLA:
“The recent events in Nicaragua have
garnered attention from mainstream media outlets in the U.S. ,
decades after international press corps flocked to the country to cover the
Sandinista Revolution and the Contra War that followed. While Nicaragua has
faded from public consciousness, old political narratives about the country and
the Latin American Left die hard. Nowhere is this more evident than the
recent New York Times editorial, ‘Dynasty,’ The Nicaragua Version.
Authored by the Times editorial board, the
piece tells a story that reflects U.S. political
interests as well as a good deal of amnesia about our country’s history of intervention
in Nicaragua .
Focusing on the corruption of the Latin American Left as an explanation for
rising authoritarianism, the board laments the democratic deficit that now
exists in the country. The analysis, steeped in a heady dose of American
exceptionalism, omits U.S. efforts to
squelch democratic aspirations in Nicaragua and
misses the true tragedy of events: Ortega’s betrayal of the revolutionary Left
and the vision of a more just society it represented.”
Also from NACLA, there
is this:
What the New York Times editorial board misses
is that the corruption and authoritarianism unfolding in Nicaragua is
not a failure exclusive to the contemporary FSLN. Ortega’s efforts to establish
a family dynasty are distressing, but he is hardly unique. The revival of the
strongman role reflects a political tradition of caudillismo in Nicaragua .
The Sandinista Revolution offered a short-lived challenge to that tradition.
Even with the mistakes made by its leadership, the revolution’s vision of
popular democracy and embrace of liberation theology’s preferential option for
the poor created a democratic opening in the 1980s that was once unimaginable. U.S. efforts
to crush this opening are a shameful product of our interventionist policy in
the region.
The editorial board closes by noting dire conditions in Honduras , El Salvador , and Guatemala , which have led
citizens of these countries to flee their homes for an uncertain future in the
U.S. Nicaragua has been spared the worst of the violence that plagues postwar
Central America, but all four countries share a crippling legacy of U.S. intervention.
After the Cold War, the focus shifted to counternarcotics, and the U.S. helped
to remilitarize the region to fight the drug war. At home, border
militarization and the criminalization of immigration has added another layer
of violence to our historical entanglement with our neighbors to the south. For
the rest of the world, our interference in Latin America has had similarly
destructive consequences. Historian Greg Grandin writes that the region, as a
workshop for U.S. empire,
has served as a testing ground for interventionist strategies and
counter-insurgency tactics used in Southeast
Asia, Africa, and the Middle
East .
There is no mistake that we are witnessing an authoritarian turn
in Nicaragua .
But if we are to understand how and why this happened we cannot ignore the role
of U.S. intervention.
Rather than chiding the Latin American Left for its corruption or
anti-democratic tendencies, we would do well to consider how the U.S. presence
in the region has diminished democracy and promoted violence and suffering. Any
effort to understand contemporary Central
America demands an honest reckoning with this
history. And while we too lament the growing authoritarianism of
the Sandinista state, a critical reexamination of U.S. policy in Central America is long overdue.
Once again there are problems on both
sides. Ortega has set himself up as a
dictator and it seems more based on his personal greed and hunger for power and
not for the benefit of the poor in Nicaragua .
However his opposition is mostly taken over by right-wing forces and shills for
US imperialism. We don’t want to endorse this Charlton, but we don’t want to
unwittingly end up supporting the efforts of US imperialism.
The US government
under Trump is trying to overthrow Ortega and the Sandinistas, trying to
portray this as freedom vs. socialism. Real socialism is not anti-freedom and
that needs to be pointed out by the people of this country. Congress people
such as Ilhan Omar have stood up to the tyrant Trump and spoke out against him.
We all need to do the same. Many people in this country realize that being
socialist is not the same as being anti-freedom.
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