The process of popular and social emancipation has started to gather force in
If the appointment was nitric acid for the Creole oligarchy and the conservative sector of the armed forces, imagine the unease in the CIA and Southern Command of the imperial army.
From the time of the military coup orchestrated by the CIA in July 1963, 22 governments, military, interim and democratic, never dared to question the power of “the company” in
Philip Agee, the famous agent who left the CIA in
At the end of 1989, the
At the beginning of 2001, a popular uprising defeated the Christian Democratic President, Jamil Mahaud, mentor of dollarisation and the
On accepting charge traditionally reserved for retired Generals, Javier Ponce showed his courage and patriotism. The post has consequences. In January 2007, the Defence Minister, Guadalupe Larriva, and her daughter of 17 years died in a helicopter crash near the Manta base. The accident aroused suspicion similar to that caused by the death of Roldós, as critical of the militarist policy of Ronald Regain in Central America as Larriva was of Plan Colombia in the Andean region.
Javier Ponce joined the unorthodox Left early. He knows the social movements and popular organisations in
More than the three published novels, the essay ‘And morning found them in power’ is a sad and beautiful reflection on the difficult them of “identity”. “The mestizos,” he wrote, “ we hardly but view them with suspicion… We criticise in them the least symptom of racism, as if it such purity of the soul were possible in the victims of half a millennium of racism…”
In ‘Seated between two chairs’
The new Defence Minister of Ecuador proves the saying that military matters are too sensitive to leave them exclusively in military hands. Why not a poet? But now Javier Ponce must write his greatest poem: dealing with the CIA agents in Ecuador.
According to a report published by a Quito newspaper, Army Intelligence receives between $16 and $18 million annually from the CIA for “information exchange”. In the past, the poet-minister declared that the national police was “practically financed and controlled by the North American embassy in this capital”.
About the bombing of the FARC camp, the minister added that the CIA and some military commanders fully knew what would happen that day and hid the information “to mislead the political establishment”.
The distinguished Ecuadorian, Benjamín Carrión (1897–1979) wrote: “If we cannot, neither should be a political, economic, diplomatic and even less – much more than even less –military power, we can be a great cultural power, because our history authorises and encourages us to do so”. Proposal which, I’m sure, Javier Ponce has engraved on his forehead.
Source: La Jornada
Translated from Spanish by Supriyo Chatterjee. More Latin America reports at http://nuestrosricos.blogspot.com/
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