According to US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, the US will help “legitimate governments” in Latin America, in order to prevent protests from “morphing into riots”.
From what we
are seeing this “legitimization” may be expanded to rest of the world.
Because Washington instigated destabilizing unrest goes on throughout
the world. We may as well call it “Operation Condor 2.0 – Expanded”. It
promises to become devastating, oppressive and murderous on all
Continents. A transformation from whatever ‘freedom’ may have existed to
neoliberal dictatorships bending towards neofascism.
The original
“Operation Condor” was a campaign by the United States to bring ‘order’
into her backyard, i.e. Latin America. In other words, it was a
repressive move that started in 1968 and concluded around the time of
the fall of the Berlin Wall. We are talking about more than 20 years of
right-wing repression, especially but not exclusively directed on the
Southern Cone of South America.
It included such military dictators like Jorge Rafael Videla in Argentina. He came to power in 1976 by a US supported military coup, deposing Isabel Martinez de Perón.
Comandante Videla stayed in power during five years until 1981, period
in which he brutally oppressed Argentinians, especially the opposition.
It is reported that during this period more than 30,000 people
‘disappeared’ – never to return. They were tortured and killed. Some of
the dissidents were dropped from helicopters into the Rio de Plata.
Another, better known dictator was Augusto Pinochet, who was directly helped by the CIA and then President Nixon’s National Security Adviser, Henry Kissinger
– to overturn the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende
in a bloody coup on 11 September 1973. Pinochet introduced as a first
in Latin America neoliberal economics through a group of economists from
the Economic School of Chicago, the so-called “Chicago Boys”. The
resulting austerity brought extreme poverty and famine to Chileans. The
ensuing 17 years were a horror, with over 40,000 people ‘disappeared’ or
outright murdered.
Other
countries that went through one or several “Operation Condor”
cleansings, included Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil, Bolivia, Uruguay,
Paraguay, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and possibly others. It was a
despicable and deadly period for Latin America. In all, an estimated
80,000 to 100,000 people were killed and some 400,00 taken as political
prisoners.
Secretary Pompeo’s words could not be clearer. He added that protests in Bolivia, Chile, Colombia and Ecuador reflect the “character of legitimate democratic governments and democratic expression. We’ll
work with legitimate governments to prevent protests from morphing into
riots and violence that don’t reflect the democratic will of the
people.”
Not to forget any invented villains, he added, the US will “continue to support countries trying to prevent Cuba and Venezuela from hijacking those protests.” He went on accused Russia of “malign” influence in Latin America and of “propping up” the democratically elected Venezuelan government of Nicolas Maduro.
Such remarks
come after the US-led November 10 military coup in Bolivia. Amazing that
nobody dares stand up and answer him. Are all afraid?
And this
especially in the light of having in Bolivia now an opposition dictator,
the self-declared interim President (much like Venezuela’s Juan
Guaidó), Jeanine Añez, who acts with impunity following
fascists and racist orders from Washington – indiscriminately killing
her own country-women and men – who happen to be indigenous people.
Although she promised new elections, Añez has not set a date, but rather
is undoing almost everything Evo Morales has achieved for the people of
Bolivia, by privatizing public assets and services, as well as
abolishing social safety nets by decree.
Pompeo concluded by saying there remains an “awful lot of work to do” in the region, meaning Latin America as the US’s “back yard.” He also warned against “predatory Chinese activities” in the region, which he claimed can lead countries to make deals that “seem attractive” but are “bad” for citizens.
The new
repression that we see in Latin America is not homogenous. In Chile at
the surface it looks like the protests started over a metro-fare hike of
the equivalent of 4 cents (US-dollar cents) – and then expanded
violently to oppose political and economic injustice in Chile, directed
against Chile’s neoliberal President, Sebastian Piñera. In Bolivia
protests are against an US-induced military coup; in Ecuador they are
directed against an austerity-inflicting IMF loan, in Colombia, they
appeared suddenly against the corruption and injustice of the Iván Duque
presidency; and in Brazil, against the neofascist austerity reforms by
Jair Bolsonaro. Copy cats? What’s good for our neighbors, is good for
us? – I don’t think so.
It looks much
more like a concerted effort by the US to enhance and bolster protests
from whatever side they come, to be able to install fully repressive
governments, of course, with the help of the US and her secret services –
funded by the usual NED (National Endowment for Democracy) and other
NGOs that would help install within the respective governments strong 5th Columns, so as to detect early warning signals and crackdown in time on any opposition.
“Operation Condor 2.0 Expanded” – Expanded
refers to similar violent protests going on in other parts of the world
– practically simultaneously. Take Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Ukraine,
Afgnaistan, and now France – no matter from which side they come –
repression and state of siege, if necessary, are of the order – total
repression, that is. All with the help of the US – and, not to forget
NATO. This is certainly a key justification to keep NATO alive – to
avoid opposition to spread and to risk abolishing the faltering US
hegemony.
We are,
indeed, in the midst of a new “Operation Condor”; or “Operation Condor
2.0 – Expanded”. Full repression worldwide. In preparation of the next
planned global recession, planned by the US-led western banking and
financial sector. A recession that will likely outdo whatever we have
known in the recent past, and make the 2008 /09 downfall look like a
walk in the park. The repression now, it is hoped, will prevent people
from going on the barricades when they suffer the next cut in salaries,
pensions and other social services, already at an unlivable level.
Authoritarianism and tyranny must be efficient and total with a
para-military police, enhanced by the armed forces, if necessary. It’s
going to be another transfer of assets and social capital from the
bottom to the top.
This has been
sensed perhaps intuitively by the French – who have been protesting in
the form of Yellow Vests against Macron’s regime for more than a year –
and now in the form of a CGT- syndicate organized open-ended general
strike. Repression is massive – an estimated 1.5 million people in the
streets of the major French cities, all public transportation disrupted.
There have even been rumors that the police forces may also join the
strike, because they realize they are part of the oppressed and abused
by Macron’s neoliberal austerity policies. This is reflected by the four
times higher suicide rates among police officers, as compared to the
average French.
China and
Russia beware. The rogue nation and bulldozer won’t stop necessarily in
front of your borders. To the contrary, they may seek any entry they can
get – as they are already doing in China with Hong Kong, not letting go
despite the various concessions already made by HK’s Chief Executive,
Carrie Lam, supported by Beijing; and also in the autonomous Region of
Xinjiang, with the mostly Muslim Uyghur people, many of whom are being
recruited by the CIA across the border from Afghanistan, trained and
funded to cause destabilizing unrest.
In view of all
of this, President Putin’s recent overture to Israel, especially to PM
Netanyahu, is worrisome. Netanyahu is by all accounts part of the
repressive wave engulfing our Mother Earth, and, in addition, with his
cruel policies against Palestine, he may be considered a mass-murderer.
*
Note to readers: please click the share buttons above or below.
Forward this article to your email lists. Crosspost on your blog site,
internet forums. etc.
Peter Koenig is an economist and geopolitical
analyst. He is also a water resources and environmental specialist. He
worked for over 30 years with the World Bank and the World Health
Organization around the world in the fields of environment and water. He
lectures at universities in the US, Europe and South America. He writes
regularly for Global Research; ICH; RT; Sputnik; PressTV; The 21st
Century; Greanville Post; Defend Democracy Press, TeleSUR; The Saker
Blog, the New Eastern Outlook (NEO); and other internet sites. He is the
author of Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental Destruction and Corporate Greed – fiction based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank experience around the globe. He is also a co-author of The World Order and Revolution! – Essays from the Resistance. He is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
The original source of this article is Global Research
According to US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, the US will help “legitimate governments” in Latin America, in order to prevent protests from “morphing into riots”.
From what we
are seeing this “legitimization” may be expanded to rest of the world.
Because Washington instigated destabilizing unrest goes on throughout
the world. We may as well call it “Operation Condor 2.0 – Expanded”. It
promises to become devastating, oppressive and murderous on all
Continents. A transformation from whatever ‘freedom’ may have existed to
neoliberal dictatorships bending towards neofascism.
The original
“Operation Condor” was a campaign by the United States to bring ‘order’
into her backyard, i.e. Latin America. In other words, it was a
repressive move that started in 1968 and concluded around the time of
the fall of the Berlin Wall. We are talking about more than 20 years of
right-wing repression, especially but not exclusively directed on the
Southern Cone of South America.
It included such military dictators like Jorge Rafael Videla in Argentina. He came to power in 1976 by a US supported military coup, deposing Isabel Martinez de Perón.
Comandante Videla stayed in power during five years until 1981, period
in which he brutally oppressed Argentinians, especially the opposition.
It is reported that during this period more than 30,000 people
‘disappeared’ – never to return. They were tortured and killed. Some of
the dissidents were dropped from helicopters into the Rio de Plata.
Another, better known dictator was Augusto Pinochet, who was directly helped by the CIA and then President Nixon’s National Security Adviser, Henry Kissinger
– to overturn the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende
in a bloody coup on 11 September 1973. Pinochet introduced as a first
in Latin America neoliberal economics through a group of economists from
the Economic School of Chicago, the so-called “Chicago Boys”. The
resulting austerity brought extreme poverty and famine to Chileans. The
ensuing 17 years were a horror, with over 40,000 people ‘disappeared’ or
outright murdered.
Other
countries that went through one or several “Operation Condor”
cleansings, included Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil, Bolivia, Uruguay,
Paraguay, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and possibly others. It was a
despicable and deadly period for Latin America. In all, an estimated
80,000 to 100,000 people were killed and some 400,00 taken as political
prisoners.
Secretary Pompeo’s words could not be clearer. He added that protests in Bolivia, Chile, Colombia and Ecuador reflect the “character of legitimate democratic governments and democratic expression. We’ll
work with legitimate governments to prevent protests from morphing into
riots and violence that don’t reflect the democratic will of the
people.”
Not to forget any invented villains, he added, the US will “continue to support countries trying to prevent Cuba and Venezuela from hijacking those protests.” He went on accused Russia of “malign” influence in Latin America and of “propping up” the democratically elected Venezuelan government of Nicolas Maduro.
Such remarks
come after the US-led November 10 military coup in Bolivia. Amazing that
nobody dares stand up and answer him. Are all afraid?
And this
especially in the light of having in Bolivia now an opposition dictator,
the self-declared interim President (much like Venezuela’s Juan
Guaidó), Jeanine Añez, who acts with impunity following
fascists and racist orders from Washington – indiscriminately killing
her own country-women and men – who happen to be indigenous people.
Although she promised new elections, Añez has not set a date, but rather
is undoing almost everything Evo Morales has achieved for the people of
Bolivia, by privatizing public assets and services, as well as
abolishing social safety nets by decree.
Pompeo concluded by saying there remains an “awful lot of work to do” in the region, meaning Latin America as the US’s “back yard.” He also warned against “predatory Chinese activities” in the region, which he claimed can lead countries to make deals that “seem attractive” but are “bad” for citizens.
The new
repression that we see in Latin America is not homogenous. In Chile at
the surface it looks like the protests started over a metro-fare hike of
the equivalent of 4 cents (US-dollar cents) – and then expanded
violently to oppose political and economic injustice in Chile, directed
against Chile’s neoliberal President, Sebastian Piñera. In Bolivia
protests are against an US-induced military coup; in Ecuador they are
directed against an austerity-inflicting IMF loan, in Colombia, they
appeared suddenly against the corruption and injustice of the Iván Duque
presidency; and in Brazil, against the neofascist austerity reforms by
Jair Bolsonaro. Copy cats? What’s good for our neighbors, is good for
us? – I don’t think so.
It looks much
more like a concerted effort by the US to enhance and bolster protests
from whatever side they come, to be able to install fully repressive
governments, of course, with the help of the US and her secret services –
funded by the usual NED (National Endowment for Democracy) and other
NGOs that would help install within the respective governments strong 5th Columns, so as to detect early warning signals and crackdown in time on any opposition.
“Operation Condor 2.0 Expanded” – Expanded
refers to similar violent protests going on in other parts of the world
– practically simultaneously. Take Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Ukraine,
Afgnaistan, and now France – no matter from which side they come –
repression and state of siege, if necessary, are of the order – total
repression, that is. All with the help of the US – and, not to forget
NATO. This is certainly a key justification to keep NATO alive – to
avoid opposition to spread and to risk abolishing the faltering US
hegemony.
We are,
indeed, in the midst of a new “Operation Condor”; or “Operation Condor
2.0 – Expanded”. Full repression worldwide. In preparation of the next
planned global recession, planned by the US-led western banking and
financial sector. A recession that will likely outdo whatever we have
known in the recent past, and make the 2008 /09 downfall look like a
walk in the park. The repression now, it is hoped, will prevent people
from going on the barricades when they suffer the next cut in salaries,
pensions and other social services, already at an unlivable level.
Authoritarianism and tyranny must be efficient and total with a
para-military police, enhanced by the armed forces, if necessary. It’s
going to be another transfer of assets and social capital from the
bottom to the top.
This has been
sensed perhaps intuitively by the French – who have been protesting in
the form of Yellow Vests against Macron’s regime for more than a year –
and now in the form of a CGT- syndicate organized open-ended general
strike. Repression is massive – an estimated 1.5 million people in the
streets of the major French cities, all public transportation disrupted.
There have even been rumors that the police forces may also join the
strike, because they realize they are part of the oppressed and abused
by Macron’s neoliberal austerity policies. This is reflected by the four
times higher suicide rates among police officers, as compared to the
average French.
China and
Russia beware. The rogue nation and bulldozer won’t stop necessarily in
front of your borders. To the contrary, they may seek any entry they can
get – as they are already doing in China with Hong Kong, not letting go
despite the various concessions already made by HK’s Chief Executive,
Carrie Lam, supported by Beijing; and also in the autonomous Region of
Xinjiang, with the mostly Muslim Uyghur people, many of whom are being
recruited by the CIA across the border from Afghanistan, trained and
funded to cause destabilizing unrest.
In view of all
of this, President Putin’s recent overture to Israel, especially to PM
Netanyahu, is worrisome. Netanyahu is by all accounts part of the
repressive wave engulfing our Mother Earth, and, in addition, with his
cruel policies against Palestine, he may be considered a mass-murderer.
*
Note to readers: please click the share buttons above or below.
Forward this article to your email lists. Crosspost on your blog site,
internet forums. etc.
Peter Koenig is an economist and geopolitical
analyst. He is also a water resources and environmental specialist. He
worked for over 30 years with the World Bank and the World Health
Organization around the world in the fields of environment and water. He
lectures at universities in the US, Europe and South America. He writes
regularly for Global Research; ICH; RT; Sputnik; PressTV; The 21st
Century; Greanville Post; Defend Democracy Press, TeleSUR; The Saker
Blog, the New Eastern Outlook (NEO); and other internet sites. He is the
author of Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental Destruction and Corporate Greed – fiction based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank experience around the globe. He is also a co-author of The World Order and Revolution! – Essays from the Resistance. He is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
The original source of this article is Global Research
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