Flashmag Digizine Edition Issue 76 December 2017 | Page 15

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Dictatorships in this sense expand the range of instruments of political influence of the West. democratic regimes generally involve complicated public procedures and serious restrictions, which do not allow peddling of influence , which seems to be the essential tool of international politics of Western countries towards those of the southern hemisphere. A country with fair and strong institutions that would guarantee the social, economic, political and cultural well-being of its peoples would be a factor in the destruction of the mafia-like links, that unite the political power in the tropics, and the Western democracies which are in their turn held by the industrial oligarchy, which often has big interests in the tropics. These unfair interests maximize its profits, that it cannot safeguard in a transparent and fair society.

Some examples in contemporary history prove the ambivalence of official discourse and the reality of facts, that varies according to the mood of the capitalist interests of the West.

The Americans, for example, supported Saddam Hussein in his war against Iran, to hang him a few decades later under a false war. Similarly, the United States supported the dictatorial regime of Trujillo in the Dominican Republic. However, this politician notorious for his genocide against tens of thousands of Haitian immigrants in his country has caused domestic and external problems so serious that the US authorities have understood the absurdity of their project. Making no offense, speaking of the Somoza dynasty that ruled Nicaragua from the 1930s to the 1970s, Delano Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Richard Nixon said to whoever wanted to hear, that they were bastards,

but at least they were their own bastards.

In Africa Teodoro Obiang Nguema, President of Equatorial Guinea, has been in power since 1979, with the active complicity of American diplomats and businessmen. Equatorial Guinea is Africa's fourth largest oil exporter, thanks in part to investments by American companies like, Chevron, Marathon Oil and Noble Energy. Press dispatches and the reports of non-governmental organizations on the serious violation of human rights and the dictatorial nature of the Malabo regime have not tempered the ardor of businessmen and the American government, which continues to collaborate in the training of the Equatorial-Guinean troops as well as that of the no less dictatorial neighbor Paul Biya of Cameroon.

A private American company, Military Professional Resources Inc., led by a close friend of Donald Rumsfeld and benefiting from "strong links with the Pentagon" holds a $ 250 million contract to provide maritime security for the Obiang regime, and train police forces. Until recently, a former Bill Clinton advisor, Lanny J. Davis, also had a $ 1 million a year contract to help President Obiang polish his image.

As can be seen both the influential members of the Republican Party and Democrats, are pegging in the petty negro bourgeoisie of the Gulf of Guinea.

Beyond the United States, France has been infamous in Africa in the concept of fright consecrated by the sacrosanct expression “France-Afrique”, a nebula which the darkness is matched only by the opacity of control of its interests in the exploitation of raw materials such as oil and the plethora of other mineral resources that abound in African subsoils. The France-Afrique has been lethal in the preservation of its interests. Using the influence of sectarian circles, such as the Rose Croix or the Freemasonry, to make and break the quarries, assassinating overtly and overthrowing regimes that were not willing to submit to its egregious agenda, while often cynically evoking the fall of recalcitrant dictators, to their lack of justice and good governance, whereas justice and good governance should first apply in the odious

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