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As The U.S. Sleeps, China Conquers Latin America

beijingwalker

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As The U.S. Sleeps, China Conquers Latin America
10/15/2014 @ 6:37PM
Step aside, EU! China is set to become Latin America’s second-largest trading partner in two years. And 13 years later it will be king of the hill according to the journal China Policy Review. Yes, having locked up Asia and Africa, the ever-hungry Chinese dragon is salivating over what the U.S. at least used to consider its “back yard.” (You know, the Monroe Doctrine and all that.)

“Time is running out,” warns America’s Quarterly. “China has quickly become the largest trading partner for many South American nations and Chinese trade deals are much more amenable to Latin Americans.”

That’s bad news for the U.S. Ultimately, though, it’ll also be bad news for all of the Americas.

The costs to the U.S. are obvious. It’s no exaggeration to say Latin American trade is critical to our survival as an economic superpower. “As recently as 2006, America was the larger trading partner for 127 countries, versus just 70 for China,” noted an article in RT.com. “By 2011, the situation had changed drastically: 124 countries for China, 76 for the US.”

It added ominously, “The U.S. passed the baton [as the world’s largest trading partner] after 60 years ahead of the curve.” It also appears China will alsobecome the world’s largest economy by the end of this year.

The U.S. still maintains a big lead in Latin America, with $850 billion in combined imports and exports in 2013 versus $244 billion for China in 2012. But China has been closing the gap at a phenomenal pace. Since 2013 U.S. trade has increased about 250 percent, while China’s has increased about 25-fold–albeit from a much lower baseline.

Indeed, while last year total U.S. trade with Mexico did increase from $34 billion to $527 billion, in the rest of Latin America it decreased about $14 billion from $183 billion, according to the Census Bureau. Except for Mexico, the U.S. is performing dismally. That one nation accounts for over 60 percent of U.S. trade with Latin America. Yet Brazil’s economy alone is almost twice that of Mexico.

And five years ago guess who became Brazil’s largest trading partner?

Sino-Latin Exploitation

But as I said, this isn’t just bad news for the U.S. Having lived and traveled in Latin America extensively for several years, I’ve seen the evidence first hand.

China sends Latin America junk it wouldn’t dare send to the U.S. or Europe, charging as much or more. Umbrellas break at the hint of rain. I bought two pieces of luggage that fell apart on their second use. Add the 21-speed bike that cost more than the same model in the U.S. but had only 16 working gears. Bike shops in both Mexico and Colombia insisted that was normal, meaning to them it is. Yet China can get away with this because it has a plan–a published one–while America seems intent on forfeiting the game.

Part of that plan is strategic loans, generating good will that Beijing then uses to leverage favorable agreements. Between just 2008 and 2012, China lent over $80 billion to Latin American countries, according to the Global Economic Governance Initiative. Since 2009, Chinese loans to Latin America have exceeded those of both the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank.

That included two years ago promising a $10 billion credit line to the region for infrastructure projects–just what the area needs most. When I visited Costa Rica a decade ago I thought, “If this country improved its roads, it could make a fortune in increased trade and tourism.” Last year, China announced a $400 million loan to Costa Rica to do just that.

The quid pro quo?

Ninety-two percent of manufacturing exports from Latin American were in sectors where China was increasing its market share while the region was decreasing its share, or where the share was increasing for both sides but at a slower rate in Latin America. This according to the 2010 book The Dragon in the Room: China and the Future of Latin America, by Kevin P. Gallagher and Roberto Porzecanski.

“As commodity prices slide and the terms of trade decline, the lack of ability of Latin America’s manufacturers to compete with their Chinese counterparts poses a real threat to the long run growth of the region,” Gallagher toldForbes.com.

Growing Trade, Growing Fear

It’s not that Latino leadership is naïve. “We do not want to be China’s next Africa,” Neil Dávila, head of ProMéxico, Mexico’s federal agency to promote foreign commerce and investments, declared in a leaked cable. “In the past, we feared the predominance of the U.S. Now it’s the opposite,” said former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso in a 2011 interview. “It’s better for us for the Americans not to retreat too much to keep the balance.”

There’s no reason the U.S. needs to retreat at all. It has all sorts of natural advantages including good will (nobody here likes China; they like gringos just fine), linguistic similarities, a progressively shared heritage, and vastly shorter trade routes. Colombia is closer to Los Angeles than Los Angeles is to New York.

But while China carefully implements its strategy, the U.S. remains clueless. Seriously so. When I was living in Mexico, I did a phone interview with the co-chair of the primary U.S.-Latin America free trade coalition. “How are things in South America?” he asked me (emphasis added.) You can bet the Chinese know where Mexico is located.

America needs an intelligent, aggressive, integrated policy of discovering what its southern neighbors want and accommodating them so that all sides gain. Or soon that heat wave coming up from the south will be fire from the mouth of the dragon.

As The U.S. Sleeps, China Conquers Latin America - Forbes
 
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China sends Latin America junk it wouldn’t dare send to the U.S. or Europe, charging as much or more. Umbrellas break at the hint of rain. I bought two pieces of luggage that fell apart on their second use. Add the 21-speed bike that cost more than the same model in the U.S. but had only 16 working gears. Bike shops in both Mexico and Colombia insisted that was normal, meaning to them it is. Yet China can get away with this because it has a plan–a published one–while America seems intent on forfeiting the game.

Well, well, look who is talking!

Latin America & Coups: A Historical Retrospective on Regime Changes


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Image: Luis Chávez

“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
George Santayana 1906

We’ve heard several reports lately regarding foreign involvement in regime change around the world. Most recently accusations relating to foreign funding of opposition groups in the Ukraine and Venezuela open the door for a long overdue discussion on this topic. Just how much blame can be attributed to interference of foreign governments in regime changes worldwide? Well, it’s difficult to answer that question without empirical proof. We are slowly learning new information regarding how governments have meddled in the past so that’s a good place to begin to understand the present.

An article published by The Guardian in August 2013 revealed for the first time that the CIA admitted its involvement in the Iranian coup of 1953 that overthrew prime minister Mohammad Mosaddeq. 60 years after the United States toppled the democratically elected government of Iran, we finally have proof by way of CIA documents that were declassified and published from the US national security archive at George Washington University. The 1953 overthrow of Mosaddeq may be the earliest incident that we currently have evidence of US meddling in foreign regime change. For the purpose of this article we will examine the lengthy history of coup d’etats in Latin America (which alone is enough material for several novels.)

Mother Jones published an article in January 2014 revealing foreign involvement in the Dirty Wars of Argentina. Amemo discovered by Martin Edwin Andersen implicates Henry Kissinger of giving the “Green Light” for Jorge Videla, then dictator of Argentina to commit some of the most horrific human rights abuses ever seen in South America. This leads to speculation of US involvement in several South American regime changes since the “National Reorganization Process” as it was called when it began in Argentina 1976 affected not only Argentina but also spread to the rest of the southern cone of South America. Military dictatorships were installed during this time in Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay.

Although this article was published recently, Kissinger’s involvement in The Dirty Wars was revealed in the book “Dictador” (Dictator in Spanish) published in 2001. The book describes a meeting between Argentine foreign minister César Guzzetti and Henry Kissinger in June of 1976 where Kissinger said,

“Hagan lo que tengan que hacer, pero háganlo rapido”

(Do what you have to do, but do it quickly).

That command initiated the kidnapping, torture and mass murder of an estimated 30,000 Argentine activists and dissidents which are now known as Los Desaparecidos, or “The Missing” most of whose bodies have never been recovered.

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Image: Carlos Latuff

Just how much the US government has meddled in the affairs of foreign nations is yet to be discovered, but we thought it might be a good time to publish a historical list for reference purposes of all coups that have taken place in Latin America. This list may be incomplete, if we have missed a coup please let us know and we will add it to the list.

We are also including “accidents” which brought about regime changes such as the separate plane crashes of Jaime Roldós of Ecuador and Omar Torrijos of Panama in 1981. According to John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hitman, both incidents were planned CIA assassinations. Perkins’s information regarding the 1953 coup of Mosaddeq in Iran corroborates the information that was recently declassified in August 2013, so we feel his information regarding assassinations in Latin America is also accurate.

b8c0822d6ee9b9ec60155a50a226957b.jpg

Without further ado… a list of US-initiated/supported coups in Latin America from 1943-present:

1943 – Argentina

1945 – Brazil, Venezuela

1948 – Venezuela

1952 – Cuba

1953 – Colombia, Guyana

1954 – Paraguay, Guatemala

1955 – Argentina

1956 – Honduras

1958 – Venezuela

1962 – Argentina, Dominican Republic

1963 – Guatemala, Ecuador, Honduras

1964 – Brazil

1966 – Argentina

1968 – Panama

1970 – Bolivia

1972 – Honduras

1973 – Uruguay, Chile

1975 – Peru, Honduras

1976 – Ecuador, Argentina (National Reorganization Process begins)

1978 – Honduras

1980 – Bolivia

1981 – Ecuador (Roldós assassinated), Panama (Torrijos assassinated)

1987 – Argentina

1988 – Argentina, Haiti (twice June & September)

1989 – Panama, Paraguay

1991 – Haiti

1992 – Venezuela, Peru

1993 – Guatemala

2000 – Ecuador

2002 – Venezuela

2004 – Haiti

2009 – Honduras

2010 – Ecuador

2012 – Paraguay
 
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That’s bad news for the U.S. Ultimately, though, it’ll also be bad news for all of the Americas.

I'm gonna literally throw up if I see anymore comments like that from another US writer.

- "China is rising in Latin America but it's sending crap"
- "China is rising in Africa but it's imperialist"

Oh just stop man. Just stop. Latin America was a US backyard in the past and still is. By being US backyard what did Latin America got? More humiliation? Like "Oh my God do you have computers in Brazil?". Yes they do. And it is most probably sold by Lenovo, since it's the market leader there. And internet? Yeah it's infrastructure is most probably made by Huawei.

Africa was a EU backyard in the past and still is. By being an EU backyard what did Africa got? More humiliation? Like "Oh we should help these poor africans, let's send them our used clothes.". They don't need your clothes anymore. Because thanks to China infrastructure is becoming more and more developed day by day. Guess what European Bourgeois, they will be able to produce their own clothes, even might sell them to you, thanks to that infrastructure made by CHINA!

Does the west really need to act like the rich kid in town who just shows fake emotion and sympathy to the rest?
 
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Well, well, look who is talking!


Without further ado… a list of US-initiated/supported coups in Latin America from 1943-present:

1943 – Argentina

1945 – Brazil, Venezuela

1948 – Venezuela

1952 – Cuba

1953 – Colombia, Guyana

1954 – Paraguay, Guatemala

1955 – Argentina

1956 – Honduras

1958 – Venezuela

1962 – Argentina, Dominican Republic

1963 – Guatemala, Ecuador, Honduras

1964 – Brazil

1966 – Argentina

1968 – Panama

1970 – Bolivia

1972 – Honduras

1973 – Uruguay, Chile

1975 – Peru, Honduras

1976 – Ecuador, Argentina (National Reorganization Process begins)

1978 – Honduras

1980 – Bolivia

1981 – Ecuador (Roldós assassinated), Panama (Torrijos assassinated)

1987 – Argentina

1988 – Argentina, Haiti (twice June & September)

1989 – Panama, Paraguay

1991 – Haiti

1992 – Venezuela, Peru

1993 – Guatemala

2000 – Ecuador

2002 – Venezuela

2004 – Haiti

2009 – Honduras

2010 – Ecuador

2012 – Paraguay

USA coups = 34 (by year count); = 45 (by country count)
:devil: :tdown:
China = 0, None, nada coup on S Am :angel::enjoy:

and the OP's article said

There’s no reason the U.S. needs to retreat at all. It has all sorts of natural advantages including good will (nobody here likes China; they like gringos just fine), linguistic similarities, a progressively shared heritage, and vastly shorter trade routes. Colombia is closer to Los Angeles than Los Angeles is to New York.

It brings shameless Americans to a new low! :o::bad:
 
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The OP's article is filled with US propaganda. It constantly cherry picks the bad relations between China and Latin America. It also cherry picks the good relations between the US and Latin America.
 
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