The Crisis of Nicaragua: A Tragic Story of Deception, Opportunism and Russian Involvement
Luis FleischmanIID
Nicaragua is experiencing a
crisis that began in April with a mass demonstration that started as a
protest against social security reform and it quickly extended to
rebellion against government corruption and tyrannical tendencies. The
president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, is defending his fraudulent,
corrupt and dictatorial regime with an iron fist. More than 350 people
were already killed and thousands were wounded as a result of government
repression.
On July 16th, the United
Nations, the U.S. and several countries in Latin America issued
statements condemning the violence and calling for it to stop
immediately. Meanwhile, Ortega’s reaction was to approve a law that
declares damage of public and private property as an act of terrorism
and punishes it accordingly. The idea is to criminalize the protests and
even “upgrade” them to the status of “terrorism”.
Ortega’s repression is part of a pattern
that is part of the painful legacy of the regional authoritarian
tendencies sparked by the emergence of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela in 1999,
which was followed by the rise of a chain of regimes that used Chavez
as a model, including Nicaragua.
These dictatorships have adopted
different styles. The Venezuelan and Bolivian regimes are openly
revolutionary and hostile to business, capitalism and the United States.
Other dictatorships hide behind a pragmatist attitude while
consolidating a despotic political regime. One such regime is the
Nicaraguan one.
Indeed, Ortega managed to deceive his
people and the world by accommodating the business class and maintaining
free trade agreement with the United States. The business class had no
problem with Ortega as long as its interests were not harmed. A tacit
agreement was established between Ortega and the business sectors. Thus,
Ortega guaranteed the proper environment for business investments while
the entrepreneurs looked the other way as Ortega consolidated a
dictatorship by securing its indefinite reelection through fraud,
corruption and subjugation of the institutions of democracy and the
judicial system.
Thus, Ortega established a sort of
Chinese model of government where it kept a dictatorship with Marxist
and socialist justification while legitimizing it through a sort of
pro-business economy. Nicaraguan entrepreneurs even managed to lobby U.S
Congress against the Nicaraguan Investment Conditionality Act (NICA
Act). The NICA Act, would require the President to oppose certain loans
by international financial institutions that would benefit the
government of Nicaragua until the Nicaraguan government takes effective
steps to combat corruption and promote democracy, free speech, civil
society and rule of law. The bi-partisan NICA Act passed the House of
Representatives but it is still being held in the Senate, presumably
under the pressure of lobbyists.
However, with the protests that began in
April, this pact between business and government seems to be breaking
down. For Ortega, the maintenance of the dictatorship is the priority.
The business class was betrayed and now they are paying heavily for
their naiveté. The illusion of separation between economics and politics
is over.
Repression in Nicaragua is being carried
out through the use of para-military forces, gangs, thugs and the
Nicaraguan army. Following the Cuban and Venezuelan models, Ortega
targeted the military in order to secure its loyalty. Ortega established
a direct relation with top generals and they supported Ortega’s
indefinite reelection. Furthermore, Ortega also enabled the indefinite
reappointment of the army chief of staff and gave the military all kinds
of economic privileges. The army has become an economic power with
investments in the stock market, the hotel industry, the health sector,
real estate, and other industries.
Thus, reports that army officers and soldiers have a role in the current repression comes as no surprise.
These individuals have been seen using
heavy military weapons. According to reports, most deaths were reported
to have been caused by high-caliber weapons usually used by the
military.
Russia is playing an important role in
the arming of the Nicaraguan army, particularly since 2015. Indeed, in
the last three years Russia has been providing sophisticated weaponry to
Nicaragua that according to reports have included T-72 tanks, war
boats, warplanes, and powerful bombs.
Russia would play the role of guarantor
of Ortega’s dictatorship and would become its strategic ally as well.
Russia is planning now to train Nicaraguans in the fight against “drug
trafficking and terrorism” but that could well be a façade to train
guardians of the regime. The Venezuelan and Nicaraguan peoples might be
forever condemned to live in a situation similar to that of Cuba, namely
enslaved to the caprices of an unending dictatorship.
Russia views the Nicaraguan and the
Venezuelan regimes as allies against the United States and as such as
bastions of Russian influence in the Western hemisphere. Russia is also
close to Iran. Iran is close to the drug cartels and already has a
strong and solid presence in the continent and very strong relations
with Venezuela and Nicaragua. We may be condemned to live with this
nefarious influence in our neighborhood.
Before President Donald Trump met with Vladimir Putin on July 16th,
the outgoing Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos urged Trump to
demand Putin to cease his support of the Venezuelan regime. This
subject-matter was probably not discussed during the meeting.
Russia is a greater challenge than
President Trump is willing to admit. Latin America is only a portion of
that challenge but important enough to take it seriously.
Published by Center for Security Policy on Wednesday July 18th, 2018
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