http://www.alternet.org/print.html?StoryID=16777
Tom Hayden reports from the WTO ministerial conference in Cancun
each day.
CANCUN, Sept. 14 - Derailment here today of the Cancun WTO Ministerial caused gloom in the hotel suites at the convention center - and dancing in the streets. It was the biggest triumph for anti-WTO critics since Seattle four years ago, and marked the emergence of a permanent new power bloc of once-powerless nations defending the rights of hundreds of millions of small farmers.
In particular, it was a victory for the
"Our World Is Not for Sale" network of global activists who called
for the "derailment" of the WTO process months ago when few believed
that to be possible. The Not For Sale network - which coordinates local
movements, lobbies governments at the grass-roots level, supports marches like
those of Mexican campesinos this week, and punctuates the WTO's inner forums
with direct action announcements - is already planning for the next showdown, a
Miami summit in November where the U.S. will attempt to extend NAFTA to Latin
and Central America.
The New York Times called the WTO
derailment "unexpected," thanks to which, it lamented, the global
economy "will not receive a jump-start by the expansion of markets."
The paper also reported that the U.S. presidential campaign is now being
"infected" by questioning of unfettered free trade. The paper,
however, did not deign to provide any explanation for the disease metaphor it
applied to political debate.
All observers concurred, however, that
the derailment was an embarrassing setback for the Bush administration. Coming
amidst conflicts in the UN over Iraq, the unsuccessful effort to coerce the poorer
countries seemed to mark the end of the short-lived "American empire"
promoted by the administration's neo-conservative ideologues.
White House hopes for a cheap Iraq
victory coupled with the expansion of trade agreements have both been derailed.
Instead, thousands of American manufacturing jobs continue to disappear into
Third World sweatshops, and unprecedented budget deficits and serious cuts in
popular social programs haunt an administration entering a presidential
election year.
Worse, from the viewpoint of White House political operatives, its opposition is now emboldened and elated.
(c) 2003 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.