Cuito Cuanavale and the liberation of the Americas
by
toni
solo
Cuito Cuanavale is located in southern Angola where two rivers meet.
In 1987 it was a strategic point where the Angolan armed forces and
their allies regrouped following a failed offensive. They were besieged
there by forces of the South African apartheid regime and its local
allies. The battle lasted from October 1987 until June 1988. In Western
Bloc countries, Cuito Cuanavale and its meaning have almost disappeared
from the record.
In the West, two accounts of the battle tend to prevail. One is the
ridiculous version of the forces who supported the apartheid regime.
This version argues that the apartheid army never sought to capture
Cuito Cuanavale. They suffered very few casualties and little loss of
material. They were undefeated.
Another more sophisticated version drops the absurd idea that the
forces of the apartheid regime did not suffer a serious reverse at
Cuito Cuanavale. They argue the battle was a stalemate. Neither side
got what they wanted. Both sides exhausted themselves and, as a result,
negotiations took place, nobly facilitated by the Western powers.
Among all that has been written on Cuito Cuanavale, the most
impressive thing is the general silence about how this complex event
signalled the final defeat of apartheid in South Africa. The battle's
most important aspect was its strategic context. The apartheid forces
and their backers in Washington and London knew that if they broke the
Angolan and Cuban forces at Cuito Cuanavale it would be a catastrophic
defeat not just for the Angolan government, but also for the Cuban
Revolution and their Soviet allies, comparable to the defeat of the Red
Army in Afghanistan.
But it was the forces of apartheid and their allies in the
governments of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher who lost. They
failed to break the Angolan and Cuban forces at Cuito Cuanavale. While
the apartheid military forces wore themselves out there, Cuban and
Angolan forces with Soviet and East German advisers and troops of the
Namibian South West Africa People's Organization regrouped and
advanced towards Angola's frontier with Namibia, then illegally
occupied by the apartheid régime in Pretoria.
That advance created a front of more than 400km, impossible for the apartheid forces to defend without unacceptable levels of casualties and material losses. It threw into crisis the hypocritical policy of President Reagan and his foreign policy team. It forced the apartheid régime in Pretoria to negotiate an end to its occupation of Namibia. Beaten strategically, the apartheid regime's military high command had to make concessions to civilian leaders, effectively losing their grip on policy and power. It was a decisive moment towards the end of apartheid in South Africa.
Cuito Cuanavale - Banquo at the neocolonial feastOverseas, the political representatives of the corporate elites launched wars and coups against entire peoples, as in Afghanistan, Iraq, Haiti and Lebanon. They supported fraud and covert action electoral tricks in countries of the former Soviet Union and in important local US allies like Mexico, Colombia and Peru. They continue to support repressive countries in many parts of the world so as to guarantee their strategic interests.
They shamelessly exploit the unjustifiable, obsolete rules of the UN Security Council. Doing so, they have stripped that organization of its legitimacy. By means of blackmail and bribery they strongarm unjust policies through the various multilateral trade and financial institutions they have controlled since the end of World War Two.Varieties of resistance
The fundamental inhumanity of Western Bloc governments and their
allies is on plain view in Palestine, where they support Israel's
colonialist régime in its occupation and piecemeal annexation of
Palestinian land. There, a racist apartheid system is reproduced to
oppress and harrass the Palestinians. The parallels with what the
Western Bloc powers tried to do in southern Africa at the time of Cuito
Cuanavale are strong.
Only time will tell whether the second Lebanese war will have a
similar significance in south-west Asia to that of Cuito Cuanavale in
southern Africa. The resistance of Hizbollah, of Hamas, of Syria and
Iran to the military, economic and diplomatic aggression of the US
government, Israel and the governments of the European Union, operates
in a context even more dangerous than the one confronting the
revolutionary governments of Angola and Cuba at the end of the 1980s in
southern Africa.
On the other side of the world, in the Americas, Western Bloc
imperialism has encountered another kind of resistance but one equal in
its popular reach to the resistance in south-west Asia. It too is a
resistance that has suffered many setbacks along with indisputable
achievements. It is impossible to view positively the inherent
asymmetry in the imposition of neoliberal "free trade" deals on the
peoples of Central America and the Dominican Republic. The bilateral
investment treaty between the US and Uruguay also shows the
vulnerability of small countries' economies up against powerful
markets.
The collaboration of the governments of Chile, Bolivia and Brazil
in the military occupation of Haiti in support of the imperialist coup
against the country's democratically elected President, Jean Baptiste
Aristide, is shameful. The electoral fraud in Mexico and the murderous
repression in Atenco and Oaxaca demonstrate the hypocrisy of offical
"democratic" discourse from the Organization of American States
template. In some countries, for example Chilean government policy
against the Mapuche, the repression of
indigenous groups perpetuates 500 years of colonialism.
Against all that, one can celebrate the survival by Cuba's socialist government of 50 years of US terrorism and economic boycott, as well as the unbreakable spirit of popular resistance in Mexico and of indigenous peoples throughout the Americas. The defeat of the US-bankrolled Plan Colombia by the FARC and the subsequent series of scandals have finally confirmed what everyone knew already about the intimate links between President Uribe's narco-terror government and drugs-dealing, mass-murdering paramilitary gangs. Progressive electoral victories in Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Venezuela through 2005 and 2006 also confirmed widespread recognition by broad sectors of Latin America's peoples of the catastrophic effects of Washington Consensus style "free trade".
Towards solidarity-based integrationAmong all these developments, the theme of integration is
inescapable. Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa said recently, "It is
fundamental. We have a common destiny and we
ought to seek a common future. The integration of the 21st
Century so as to raise the productivity of small countries, like
those in Latin America, is a necessity for survival. We don't want this
cruel neoliberal globalization that is crushing us. Only together can
we confront it and sustain a presence in the global context. For that
reason, I think integration is inescapable and necessary, fundamental;
but, I repeat, not the neoliberal integration that wants to convert us
into one big market, rather an integration in the spirit of Bolívar and
in accord with the vision shared by the region's current presidents. An
integration that turns us into a great nation, into citizens of Latin
America, not just Latin American consumers." (6)
The empire's tool box
To block this integration (which is perhaps the first effective
combination by countries of the South to defend themselves against the
imperialist powers), the Western Bloc and its Pacific allies are
deploying their usual toolkit. Via their private transnational
corporations they use bribery and corruption to weaken governments.
They apply extortion of all kinds through heavily conditioned
bilateral "aid" and debt and also through their multilateral progeny,
the
World Bank, the IMF, the Inter-American Development Bank, the WTO
and adjuncts of these outfits like the International Centre for the
Settlement of Investment Disputes, a pendant of the World Bank.
As they have always done in the past, they abuse their power and
influence in international forums like the UN and the Organization of
American States. They manipulate certain kinds of non-governmental
organizations to intervene in electoral processes. They organize and
fund rallying-points of opposition disguised as "civil society". They
support corporate media wars featuring constant, disingenuous
manipulation of the "freedom of expression" motif.
In appropriate regions, like Santa Cruz in Bolivia, Guayaquil in
Ecuador or Zulia in Venezuela, they foment spurious separatist
movements. They
harrass and bully vulnerable countries to approve extortionate trade
and investment agreements. By means of fixed bases, joint manoeuvres,
anti-narcotics
cooperation and specialised training programmes, they consolidate and
strengthen their military presence.
From Americanism to opportunism
The media war occupies an especially prominent place in the ancien
régime's campaign to deny self-determination to Latin America's
peoples. The process of constructing false beliefs and pseudo-knowledge
is probably the most critical part of the war against participative,
democratic integration in Latin America. Those most opposed to that
process are always multinational corporate capitalism's local allies.
Many of these are still submerged intellectually and culturally in an
Americanism that sees everything from the racist ideological
perspective of the United States elites. They are sisters and brothers
in spirit of the Unita and Renamo leaders who allied with the racist
apartheid South African régime in the 1980s
They produce quasi-news retailed to media outlets in Western
Bloc and allied countries as a reliable account of events in Latin
America. That transaction strengthens Americanist ideology in the
imperial centres. Later, the same ideological production line recycles
the quasi-news, returning the modified product to its origins
as commentary and analysis. Once back home again, the product serves to
consolidate, justify
and feed the process that produced the original quasi-news in the first
place. That is perhaps the most important way the imperialist media
stitch-up of Latin American affairs happens, all neatly pressed and
apparently seamless.
Another segment of those opposed to participative integration in
Latin America and the Caribbean recognise that the economic power of
Brazil, China, India and Russia changes the contemporary equation of
global geo-politics. In the context of a broad offensive to protect
their influence by the United States, the European Union and their
allies, whose outcome is at best uncertain, more savvy local proxies
follow the global corporate elite and hedge
their bets. They know very well Western Bloc leaders are likely to
manage the collapse of their own economies' credit bubble to engender
economic and
political crisis in countries like Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador and
Nicaragua before Latin America's next electoral
round.
For the global corporate elites, economic crisis presents useful
opportunities to make even more money and to accumulate even more
unaccountable power. In order to face the electoral challenges between
2009 and 2011 from a position of
strength, progressive and popular forces in Latin America and their
leaders will need to show great coherence and consistency.
Looking back over twenty years, Cuito Cuanavale remains as relevant as
ever. Marking the
definitive defeat of racist elitism in southern Africa, it remains an
unsurpassed example of revolutionary
organization and solidarity.
NOTAS
1. "America Latina, rumbo al posneoliberalismo", Entrevista a Emir
Sader, secretario
ejecutivo del consejo latinoamericano de ciencias sociales, Luis
Hernandez Navarro, La Jornada, en Rebelion 13-10-2007
2. "Naciones del ALBA acuerdan seis nuevos
proyectos de integracion", Ora/VTV/PL , Aporrea 21/09/07
3. "Presidentes de Argentina y Ecuador firman acuerdos
bilaterales", Prensa Latina 20/9/2007
4. "Correa: Banco del Sur sera la antesala para una moneda comun
suramericana"
Carolina Bonell/VTV, Aporrea, 12/10/07
5. " Ecuador pide oficialmente su regreso a la OPEP", Agencias, Aporrea
18/10/07
6. "Un dialogo con Rafael Correa, Presidente del Ecuador", Rebelion,
19-09-2007