Transportation
Security
‘Nicaragua Canal - potential threat to the US and
Western powers’
Adrian Salbuchi is a political analyst,
author, speaker and radio/TV commentator in Argentina.
Published time:
December 26, 2014 12:38
Reuters
/ Oswaldo Rivas
The Nicaragua Canal can become an alternative
route through Central America for China and Russia, as well as an alternative
route for potential military use right in America’s backyard, international
consultant and author Adrian Salbuchi told RT.
Nicaragua has begun the
most ambitious construction project in Latin America - a waterway connecting
the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans that is supposed to become an alternative
to the Panama Canal. It is 278 km long, will cost around $50 billion and
provide jobs for 50,000 people. The construction is being run by a Hong Kong
company and should be completed by 2020. The project is supposed to boost
Nicaragua’s GDP.
Meanwhile, ecologists fear the giant ship
canal will endanger Lake Nicaragua - Central America's largest lake and
Nicaragua’s largest main water source – which the waterway will run through.
Locals are concerned their homes and farm lands are under threat. According to
some estimates, around 30,000 people may be displaced by the waterway.
RT discussed the project and protests it
sparked in Nicaragua with international consultant and author Adrian Salbuchi.
People protest burning tires against the
inauguration of the works of an inter-oceanic canal in Rivas, Nicaragua on
December 22, 2014.(AFP Photo / STR)
RT: The residents
are promised compensation. Why are they protesting? Were they misinformed about
the project?
Adrian Salbuchi: It’s
understandable because we are talking about the mega project that will displace
many people; some estimates say as many as 30,000 farmers will be displaced.
There will be an ecological impact, no doubt about it. However, I think we have
to be very careful to distinguish between what is this spontaneous reaction of
many of these farmers which is probably genuine, and what may also be some
engineering of social convulsion from foreign powers, not only the US that had
been doing that in the so-called Arab Spring and that had been doing that
throughout Latin America for many decades. So I wouldn’t be surprised if some
of the exaggeration or some of the future problems do come from some American
agitators or Western agitators. Don’t forget this is the country which is
governed by President Daniel Ortega of the Sandinista Liberation Front, who are
enemies of the US for many decades.
RT: Just to push
you a bit on this, do you think there may be a foreign state involved?
AS: Absolutely. And we
should even take it together with what just happened with Cuba because if
America is trying to bring Cuba into the fold, it might try to play a similar
card with Nicaragua to try to range them away as in the case of Cuba from
Russia, in the case of Nicaragua from China. We have to see not just the trade
implications that are huge, and the economic implications that are also huge,
as well as social and ecological, but much more so the geopolitical
implications. This is a Chinese private company, but we all know that very likely
behind the Chinese investment there are geopolitical factors being handled and
being driven by the Chinese government quite rightly, who have an increasing
interest throughout Latin America.
Screenshot from Google Maps
RT: There are a lot
of expectations for the waterway. How important will it be and what benefits
can it bring?
AS: For Nicaragua they
will be enormous because it will definitely improve their living standards all
together. But from the point of view of China it will be an alternative route
for commerce, for trade and even for future potential military use right in
America’s backyard. When I say China, we might talk not just about China but
also about BRICS, notably Russia and China, which are the two main geopolitical
BRICS partners. I think it’s very important to understand the problem, to stop
looking at Mercator projections of the global map and start looking at the
actual globe. The best way to understand geopolitics is with a globe, and if
you look at it you will see how very important this alternative route through
Central America will become for China, for Russia and potentially it’s an
important threat to the US and the Western powers.
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