Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09LAPAZ519
2009-04-03 21:02:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy La Paz
Cable title:  

MORALES PARROTS CHAVEZ ON G20, CRITICIZES OBAMA

Tags:  PGOV PREL KDEM PHUM PINR ENVR ASEC BL ECON 
pdf how-to read a cable
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C O N F I D E N T I A L LA PAZ 000519 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/03/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL KDEM PHUM PINR ENVR ASEC BL ECON
SUBJECT: MORALES PARROTS CHAVEZ ON G20, CRITICIZES OBAMA

Classified By: A/EcoPol Chief Brian Quigley for reasons 1.4 (b, d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L LA PAZ 000519

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/03/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL KDEM PHUM PINR ENVR ASEC BL ECON
SUBJECT: MORALES PARROTS CHAVEZ ON G20, CRITICIZES OBAMA

Classified By: A/EcoPol Chief Brian Quigley for reasons 1.4 (b, d)


1. (C) Summary: During a press conference at the
Presidential Palace, Bolivian President Evo Morales on April
3 repeated almost verbatim Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's
criticisms of the G20 summit agreement from a day before.
Morales added his own doubts regarding President Obama,
saying he "did not hope for much" from Obama. Post notes
Morales continues to take political cues (and talking points)
from his mentor Chavez. End summary.

- - - - - - -
Plagiarism 101
- - - - - - -


2. (U) A day after Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ridiculed
the G20 summit's attempt to address the global economic
downturn with pledges to lend more than a trillion dollars to
struggling countries, President Evo Morales followed suit,
matching Chavez's tone, commentary, and penchant for vibrant
imagery. While in Iran, Chavez said the G20's actions was
like using "the same medicine that's killing the patient -
more money for a bottomless pit. I did not expect such
unreasonable and silly decisions would be taken at the G20
summit." Chavez went on to say that enlarging the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) by USD 500 billion was like
"entrusting beef to vultures." On April 4, Morales said in a
press conference that the financial pledges were "like giving
money to the wolves, or entrusting the care of the flock to
the wolves. The wolf is not going to keep the sheep, it will
devour them."


3. (U) More prosaically, both leaders agreed that the IMF and
developed countries were acting only in their own interest,
and that until the current capitalist structure is
dismantled, the situation would only get worse. "You have to
understand, it is impossible to regulate the financial
monster spawned by the capitalist system," said Chavez.
Morales added: "It is not possible that the countries of
capitalism, which caused the financial crisis, are now the
same ones with the solution. As long as we do not touch the
structural points of capitalism, it will be difficult to
resolve the financial crisis."


4. (U) Chavez called the IMF "one of the great guilty ones
behind the crisis" and said the IMF and the World Bank were
"tools of imperialism." Morales noted there was euphoria
within the IMF and rich nations because they had achieved
their goal of injecting more money in the system to promote
speculative capitalism. "If we want to solve economic
problems, we must first end the free market, then speculative
capitalism."

- - - - - - - - - - - -
Morales Criticizes Obama
- - - - - - - - - - - -


5. (U) Morales departed from Chavez's script to make a
hodgepodge of accusations against the United States and
President Obama. As a segue from his comments on speculative
capitalism, Morales noted Bolivia had experienced ten percent
inflation during the first months of 2009 but blamed it on
more such "speculation." He added "if we begin to control
the economy as a state, it is possible to confront the
crisis." Morales observed that the USG has "the objective to
say President Morales is not reducing (drug trafficking); he
is increasing cocaine production. (But) the DEA is not
important and we do not need them now. How great it would be
for the fight against narcotrafficking to not be controlled
from the United States, with its political interests. I
understand they have their interests, but if they want to
change they should not be sending troops to the Middle East
and should listen to the countries of the world that have
requested an end to the blockade of Cuba." Morales also said
he did not believe Obama could change the world financial
structure, and that he "did not hope for much" from Obama.

- - - -
Comment
- - - -


6. (C) Morales has long made political hay out of supposed
USG "imperialist" desires to use Bolivia as a source for
cheap raw materials and a dumping ground for finished goods,
invoking everything from dependency theory to CIA
conspiracies. Far from a call for "fair trade," Morales says
he wants nothing less than the abolition of capitalism and
the free market, to be replaced by his vision of a state-run
economy. End comment.
URS