Editor's Comment: In classic Petras fashion, he defines the issues and provides key insight into the pitfalls of the peace-plan-traps often set to devour mass social and revolutionary movements. Whether considering the current "peace accords" taking place between FARC and the Colombian government or another recycling of the "peace process" in the Middle East, Petras analysis and "lessons to be drawn" from his case study of the FMLN in El Salvador are essential for those sitting at the negotiating table, for those populations in whose interest they are said to act and for international observers.
- Les Blough, Editor
"Peace
agreements which disarm the insurgents and maintain the military, which
sustain the economic ruling class and its control over all the
strategic sectors of the economy, results in the continuation of neo-liberal policies, US military bases and the incorporation of former guerilla leaders into a corrupt, reactionary political system." |
(Lessons from El Salvador for the Columbian FARC)
In Memory of
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Manuel Marulanda
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Farabundo Marti |
Augusto Sandino |
Introduction
It is commonly assumed that “peace agreements” between pro-US rightwing
regimes and leftwing insurgents lead to peace, justice and greater
security. A number of peace agreements which were signed and
implemented in the 1990’s in Central America, South Africa, Philippines
and elsewhere provide us with ample data over two decades to confirm or
reject this commonplace assumption.
We will examine the case of El Salvador where a powerful guerilla
movement (FMLN) signed off on a peace accord in 1992.
Method of Evaluating the Peace Accord
In approaching the analysis of the Peace Accord it is important to begin
by focusing on the evolution of the FMLN – the ideological,
organizational and political changes that led to the negotiations, the
eventual pact with the rightwing regime and the socio-economic and
political results. The second part of the essay compares and contrasts
the socio-economic and political results and policies which followed
from the pact and how they affected the mass of the people. This allows
us to see who benefited and who lost; what socio-economic class and
political structures emerged; what foreign policies were followed.
The third section of the paper will focus on drawing lessons
which can be learned from the El Salvador experience which are
applicable to the current Colombian peace negotiations between the FARC
and the Santos regime.
The FMLN: From Socialist Revolution to Capitalist Electoralism
In 1980 four major guerilla groups joined forces to form the Farabundo
Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN). The leading component, the FPL,
envisioned a prolonged struggle, uniting the guerilla and mass
movements in a common anti-imperialist and social revolutionary
struggle. The lesser allies, led by the Communist Party envisioned a
two stage “democratic to social revolution”.
"FMLN leaders
emphasized political incorporation into the electoral system,
legalization of the FMLN, the opening of negotiations without any prior
agreements and a willingness to work within the capitalist-electoral
framework." |
In a little over two years, the three minority components, the ERP, the Communist Party, the RN shifted FMLN policies, eliminating
the struggle for socialism based on workers and peasants in favor of a
‘democratic revolution’, which included the “progressive modern
bourgeois”. As the struggle continued, the internal alignments of the
FMLN favored a further turn to the ‘center’.. FMLN leaders emphasized political incorporation into the electoral system, legalization of the FMLN,
the opening of negotiations without any prior agreements and a
willingness to work within the capitalist-electoral framework. When
negotiations began the FMLN dropped its demand for dismantling of the
military, the expropriation of the leading financial, banking,
commercial and mining interests and accepted a “truth commission” which
would “examine” war crimes – the mass murder of over 75,000 civilians.
By 1992 when the peace agreement was signed, the ex-guerillas, the El
Salvadorian regime and the US government hailed it as a “great
historical turning point opening the country and people to a new era of
peace and prosperity”. Most leftist academics and journalists joined
the chorus hailing the “pragmatism” and “flexibility” of the leaders of
the FMLN. European social democrats, especially the Spanish Socialist
regime offered training courses to the ex-guerillas, on the ways and
means of acting in government and municipal affairs.
Evaluating the Politics of the FMLN in Opposition and Government
Once the FMLN leaders turned from armed struggle and mass mobilization to electoral politics, they directly benefited:
many were elected to public office and secured middle class living
standards. As Congress people, political advisers, staff assistants and
mayors, the FMLN elite received substantial salaries, bought homes in
middle class neighborhoods, new automobiles and obtained security guards
for protection.
Most FMLN politicos retained a social democratic ideology and mouthed
radical rhetoric. Some, like the former head of the ERP, Joaquin
Villalobos allied with the rightwing, denounced the popular movements,
received a scholarship to Oxford and became a consultant for murderous
death squad regimes in Colombia, Philippines, North Ireland and
elsewhere.
"Once the FMLN
leaders entered the parliament and prioritized electoral politics, the
pressure on the ruling classes was relieved, mass struggle declined and
land reform ended" |
The urban
and rural mass movements were virtually abandoned by the FMLN turned
electoral party. During the mass uprising between 1980 – 1990, the
peasants secured a land reform, public employees’ salaries increased,
and popular organizations proliferated as the government and US
attempted to undercut the mass base of the insurgency. Once the FMLN
leaders entered the parliament and prioritized electoral politics, the
pressure on the ruling classes was relieved, mass struggle declined and
land reform ended. The trade unions received scant support from the
FMLN politicos. The FMLN led by Shafik Handel pursued an alliance with
the “modern bourgeoisie” to “isolate” the “traditional” landowning
oligarchy”, to stabilize democracy and ensure their position in Congress
as a “loyal opposition”. In 2009 the FMLN won the presidency running a
neo-liberal Christian Democrat Mauricio Funes and gained a plurality in
Congress.
Salvadorian Society After the Peace Pact
The FMLN signed the so-called peace pact without any democratic dialogue with their members, without consulting the mass social movements; they discarded the major structural reforms which thousands of militants fought for and died. Instead they ‘consulted’ their own interests in a parliamentary career. They dictated their settlement to their middle level cadres, expelled critics and directed the masses to acquiesce
offering them more phony and broken promises “to continue the
struggle”. They reneged on promises for jobs, income and land
redistribution; the ‘reform’ of the military and judicial processes
against officials involved in massive human rights violations never took
place.
"Over 25,000 mostly
young people are members of drug gangs. El Salvador has the second
highest rate of violent homicide in the Americas." |
From 1992 to 2013, El Salvador continues as the country with the second worst inequalities in Latin America. Unemployment especially for young people continues to exceed over 50%. Over 60% of the “working population” does not have
formal employment. They work without pensions, health plans, vacations
or social security, mostly in low paid “services”, i.e. street vendors,
domestic servants etc. Over 2.5 million Salvadorians were forced to
migrate to other countries for lack of opportunities. The young
guerilla fighters were abandoned by their guerilla leaders. Some were
offered land, but without training, credit, extension services, they
turned to urban and rural drug gangs. Over 25,000 mostly young people
are members of drug gangs. El Salvador has the second highest rate of
violent homicide in the Americas. In fact more Salvadorians have been murdered in the aftermath
of the “Peace Pact” (1992-2012) then were killed during the civil war
(1980-91).From March 2012 when the two principle gangs signed a truce
the killings have sharply declined.
The Peace Agreement set up a “Truth Commission” to uncover and prosecute war crimes
and human rights violations. Instead the Generals and military elite
were granted an amnesty. The Commission lacked financial and political
support and no war criminals, even those identified with the most
egregious crimes were ever tried let alone sent to jail.
The main beneficiaries of the Peace Pact were the ‘modern bourgeois’ –
the banking, commercial, agro-business, maquiladora elite – who reaped
high profits, paid little taxes, received state subsidies and exploited
cheap labor in the maquiladoras. Private security companies prospered
as the new rich ruling class – including the “new rich”, FMLN
elite-hired an army of private guards armed with automatic rifles and
sub-machine guns, to protect their homes, businesses, private clubs and
resorts.
"The FMLN leaders
live in modern apartments and houses, protected by three meter walls
covered with broken glass and barbed wire, with paved streets and
flowered gardens." |
El Salvador is a neo-liberal paradise’ before and after the Presidential victory of the FMLN; free trade agreements, low wages, no-union, low paid maquiladora workers, in the free trade zones are the centerpiece of FMLN economic policy.
The so-called “Democratic Revolution” has been emptied of any socio-economic content. The social distance
between the leaders of the FMLN and their business contractor allies on
the one hand and the masses on the other is abysmal. The FMLN leaders
live in modern apartments and houses, protected by three meter walls
covered with broken glass and barbed wire, with paved streets and
flowered gardens. The majority of poor Salvadorians live in crowded
hovels, on unpaved streets, controlled by armed drug gangs and corrupt
police officials.
The FMLN regime has supported the US and EU free market agreement in
Central America and US military bases. Their “free trade policies”
undermine small and medium producers .Ther military ties to the Pentagon
strengthen the US military position against Venezuela and Ecuador.
Political Consequences of Peace Pact
"In the aftermath of
the peace pact, the mass organizations have diminished in size and
militancy; leaders have been co-opted by the
FMLN elite." |
During the civil war, the class struggle raised class consciousness, enhanced independent
class organization and forced the ruling class and its US ‘mentors’ to
make concessions including a land reform for peasants and wage increases
for labor. In the aftermath of the peace pact, the mass organizations
have diminished in size and militancy; leaders have been co-opted by the
FMLN elite. Centralized political control over social movements
ensures conformity to neo-liberal policies. FMLN attempts to legitimize
its embrace of the current socio-economic order by citing its “glorious
and heroic guerrilla past”.
Corrupt FMLN politicos evoke their past role as “guerilla commanders”
to cover up their current corrupt links to the economic elite. Whenever,
a trade union goes on strike for higher wages or better working
conditions, such as the health, educational or municipal workers, the
FMLN leaders accuse them of “politics” or “aiding” the bourgeois
opposition. The FMLN has become a bureaucratic political machine
driven by elite factions fighting for positions of power and privilege
within the neoliberal state bureaucracy.
In the face of the abject failure of the FMLN and its government to
attend to the most elementary needs of the urban poor and peasants,
several hundred NGOs, funded by US AID and EU regimes, and set up by
middle class professionals have established local self-help projects,
that enrich the NGO leaders, undermine local social movements and fail
to reduce poverty.
Given the lack of peace, security, and social justice and the decline of
social movements, is it any wonder that tens of thousands of
Salvadorian flee their country every year? There are over 2.5 million
Salvadoreans living abroad, over 90%in the USA.
Why the Peace Pact Failed
From any objective analysis, it is clear that the peace pact signed by
the FMLN has failed to meet the most minimum socio-economic and
political demands of its mass supporters. Despite great sacrifices and
untold examples of personal heroism, the great mass of Salvadorians were
defrauded of any
positive outcome. The powerful movements were dismantled by decree of
the guerilla commanders. The top leaders who dictated policy either
because collaborators with the US military (Villalobos) or allies of the
so-called “progressive” bourgeoisie.
Various lessons can be drawn.
- A militant military past is no guarantee of progressive socio-economic commitments after a negotiated settlement.
- A peace agreement dictated by an elite is likely to sacrificemass socio-economic interests in order to secure political respectability.
- Foreign ‘radical’ allies, like Cuba, have their own political interests in securing regional stability and peace, which may not coincide withthe socio-economic needs of a revolutionary mass movement.
- Peace agreements must include the direct influence of the representatives of mass popular movements and incorporate their demands.
- Peace
agreements which disarm the insurgents and maintain the military, which
sustain the economic ruling class and its control over all the
strategic sectors of the economy, results in the continuation of neo-liberal policies, US military bases and the incorporation of former guerilla leaders into a corrupt, reactionary political system.
- A
peace pact that does not lead to massive public investments in jobs,
public works, agrarian reform and other productive activity will result
in unemployed armed young people turning to violent crime and drug
trafficking.
- Ex-guerilla
leaders who promote their electoral careers and work within the system,
adopt neo-liberal policies--- as numerous examples demonstrate. In
Colombia for example Antonio Navarro Wolff formerly of the M-19 became
an ally of then President Alvaro Uribe’s death squad regime when he was
governor of Nariño. Teodoro Petkoff, the Venezuelan ex-guerilla, became
the architect of the IMF austerity program of President Caldera.
Joaquin Villalobos the former Salvadorian guerilla leader of the ERP
became an adviser to the CIA and any murderous regime which paid his
lucrative consultation fees.
The people’s movements must establish their socio-economic priorities and presence in any “peace process”. Incorporation of the guerillas into the electoral system should have the lowest priority.
The vast majority of the workers, peasants and students want peace that is accompanied
by structural changes in the socio-economic system. This includes
expropriation of fertile, irrigated land; the end of trade union
repression and new labor laws protecting large scale unionization;
doubling the minimum wage and the formation of workers’ committees to
oversee management.
"Above all a peace
agreement requires the democratization of the state: the dismantling of
Special Forces, counter-insurgency programs, advisory missions and
foreign military bases." |
Large scale public program to create employment require new progressive taxes
on the rich to provide financing of infrastructures and productive
enterprises. Environmental agencies composed of ecologists, Indian and
peasant leaders need to be empowered to regulate mining operations and
to enforce an equitable distribution of tax receipts and royalty payments.
Above all a peace agreement requires the democratization of the state: the dismantling
of Special Forces, counter-insurgency programs, advisory missions and
foreign military bases. The abject failure of the FMLN to change
Salvadorian society and improve the socio-economic position of the
masses was directly linked to their insertion in the capitalist state
and subordination to the neo-liberal economy.
The Stage Theory
The
“stage theory” of FMLN guru Shafik Handel argued that “capitalist
modernization and democracy” in alliance with the modern bourgeoisie was
the ‘immediate goal’ and socialism was for the “distant future”. This
“stage theory” overlooked the fact that the “modern bourgeoisie” was structurally tied
to the traditional landowning, banking and imperial elites and was not
in any way committed to any so-called “democratic revolution”. The
FMLN, discarded socialism, never achieved
a “democratic revolution” and ended up presiding over a crime infested,
impoverished country in which the political elite joined the same
country clubs as their former class enemies.
Conclusion
It behooves the FARC to carefully study the negative lessons
of the past, the disastrous peace agreements of Central America, the
MR-19 surrender to the narco-state, in order to pursue a peace agreement
that consults and benefits the majority and not simply secures seats
in Congress.
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