by: Mike Ludwig, Truthout | Report
Dozens of United States diplomatic cables released in the latest WikiLeaks dump on Wednesday
reveal new details of the US effort to push foreign governments to
approve genetically engineered (GE) crops and promote the worldwide
interests of agribusiness giants like Monsanto and DuPont.
The cables further confirm previous Truthout reports on the diplomatic pressure the US has put on Spain and France,
two countries with powerful anti-GE crop movements, to speed up their
biotech approval process and quell anti-GE sentiment within the European
Union (EU).
Several cables describe "biotechnology outreach programs" in countries
across the globe, including African, Asian and South American countries
where Western biotech agriculture had yet to gain a foothold. In some
cables (such as this 2010 cable
from Morocco) US diplomats ask the State Department for funds to send
US biotech experts and trade industry representatives to target
countries for discussions with high-profile politicians and agricultural
officials.
Truthout recently reported
on front groups supported by the US government, philanthropic
foundations and companies like Monsanto that are working to introduce
pro-biotechnology policy initiatives and GE crops in developing African
countries, and several cables released this week confirm that American
diplomats have promoted biotech agriculture to countries like Tunisia, South Africa and Mozambique.
Cables detail US efforts to influence the biotech policies of developed
countries such as Egypt and Turkey, but France continues to stand out
as a high-profile target.
In a 2007 cable,
the US embassy in Paris reported on a meeting among US diplomats and
representatives from Monsanto, DuPont and Dow-Agro-sciences. The
companies were concerned about a movement of French farmers, who were
vandalizing GE crop farms at the time, and suggested diplomatic angles
for speeding up EU approvals of GE Crops.
In 2008 cable
describing a "rancorous" debate within the French Parliament over
proposed biotech legislation, Craig Stapleton, the former US ambassador
to France under the Bush administration, included an update on MON-810, a
Monsanto corn variety banned in France.
Stapleton wrote that French officials "expect retaliation via the World
Trade Organization" for upholding the ban on MON-810 and stalling the
French GE crop approval process. "There is nothing to be gained in
France from delaying retaliation," Stapleton wrote.
Tough regulations and bans on GE crops can deal hefty blows to US
exports. About 94 percent of soybeans, 72 percent of corn and 73 percent
of the cotton grown in the US now use GE-tolerate herbicides like
Monsanto's Roundup, according to the US Agriculture Department.
A 2007 cable, for example, reports that the French ban on MON-810 could cost the US $30 million to $50 million in exports.
In a 2007 cable obtained by Truthout in January, Stapleton threatened
"moving to retaliate" against France for banning MON-810. Several other
European countries, including Germany, Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria,
have also placed bans on MON-810 in recent years. MON-810 is engineered
to excrete the Bt toxin, which kills some insect pests.
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