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Plurinational State of Bolivia

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Revision as of 01:08, 11 February 2022 by ComradeToonces (talk | contribs)
Bolivia
Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia
Tetã Hetãvoregua Mborivia
Wuliwya Suyu
Puliwya Mamallaqta
CapitalSucre
La Paz
Common languagesSpanish
Guarani
Aymara
Quechua
GovernmentUnitary presidential republic
• President
Luis Arce
• Vice President
David Choquehuanca
Area
• Total
1,098,581 km²
Population
• 2019 estimate
11,428,245
CurrencyBoliviano


Bolivia, officially the Plurinational State of Bolivia, is a country in South America. The current ruling party of Bolivia is the Movement for Socialism (or Movimiento al Socialism in Spanish commonly referred to as MAS) which besides a year long coup in 2019, has been in power since 2006. The MAS party has implemented many socialist policies that has achieved numerous social achievements. Bolivia has been the target of multiple CIA coups.

History

Pre-Colonial Bolivia

Bolivia is home to numerous indigenous nations and most notably home to part of the Incan Empire, a thriving civilisation that lasted from around 1400 until about 1533 when it fell as a result of Civil War, Disease brought from Europe, and Colonization by Spain led by the brutal Conquistador Francisco Pizarro.[1]

Spanish Colonization of Bolivia

The initial looting of South America by European forces saw the looting of silver and gold to personally enrich the conquistadors, but the invading forces soon realised this would not be a sustainable source of wealth since merely increasing the amount of gold and silver would eventually just cause inflation for the colonising forces. The real source of wealth for the Spanish began with the brutal exploitation of the indigenous nations through the encomienda system.[2] The encomienda system granted land and indigenous subjects, which were essentially slaves, as a reward to nobles and soldiers from Spain.[2] Most of the class politics in modern Bolivia can trace their roots to colonization and the encomienda system. The feudal nature of the encomienda system would change over time, but the process of extracting labor and resources from Bolivians to the imperial core (the U.S. and Europe) has remained a principal problem for Bolivians which would not be effectively overcome until the seizing of state power by the Movement for Socialism in 2006.

Bolivian Independence

During the 19th century, Independence movements swept through the Americas through diverse and complex movements. The racial and class politics of Latin America was and is very complex with competing notions of independence such as the independence for nobility, indigenous nations, and African slaves who were now large in number due to the Atlantic Slave Trade. South American independence movements began gaining ground in the early 1800s and were led by elite Creole (mixed race) South Americans who had increasingly differing desires than those of the colonial authorities. Simón Bolívar, along with his right hand man Antonio José de Sucre, led multiple wars and rebellions over the course of decades beginning around 1800 against Spanish Royalists in modern day Columbia, Ecuador, and Venezuela in pursuit of a united South American Republic.[3] In the Southern Cone, Argentina and Chile, José San Martín led an army made up of former slaves and poor peasents in a triumphant march across the Andes mouintains to defeat the Spanish royalists in Chacabuco Chile in july of 1821.[3] The struggel against the Spanish Crown finaly ended on Juy 26 of 1822 when Bolívars' and San Martíns' armies converged in Ecuador to defeat the Spanish ending a two decade long struggle.


Operation Condor

In 1971, the United States overthrew the left-wing president Juan Torres, who was later kidnapped and killed by CIA-backed death squads. His successor, Hugo Banzer, tortured and executed thousands of dissidents and brutally crushed a strike of tin workers. In 1975, the CIA gave Banzer information that was used to locate and target leftist priests and nuns.

Movement for Socialism

In 2006, Evo Morales, a member of the Movement for Socialism party and the first indigenous president of Bolivia, was elected. He was president until 2019, when the CIA organized a military coup against him after he won the 2019 election by more than 10%. The United States created over 60,000 fake Twitter accounts to spread capitalist propaganda and Jeanine Áñez took power without an election. Áñez was an imperialist liberal who called the indigenous Aymara people "satanic."[4] In 2020, a general election was held and Luis Arce, another member of Movement for Socialism, won the election in a landslide. This election was confirmed to be fair by international observers.[5]

In January of 2022, the Bolivian government intercepted US weapons that were intended for right-wing separatist groups in the wealthy Santa Cruz region.[6]

References

  1. Mark Cartwright (2015-8-14). "Inca Civilization"
  2. 2.0 2.1 Teresa A. Meade (2017). A History of Modern Latin America: 1800 to the present 2nd Edition: 'Chapter 2; Colonial Background' (p. 26).
  3. 3.0 3.1 Teresa A. Meade (2017). A History of Modern Latin America: 'Chapter 3: Competing Notions of Freedom; South American Independence Movements' (pp. 73-75). USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc..
  4. Valentina De Marval (2019-11-15). "Did Bolivia’s interim president delete anti-indigenous tweets?" AFP Fact Check. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  5. "ONU, OEA y Uniore descartan fraude en elecciones generales" (2020-10-23). Página Siete. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  6. Ben Norton (2022-01-15). "Bolivian intercepts US weapons shipment to right-wing separatist region" Moderate Rebels.