Honduras Coup Poses Challenges, Questions for Obama, Congress
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered a reasonably muscular condemnation of the military coup in Honduras, where elected President Manuel (Mel) Zelaya was kidnapped and flown out of the country by soldiers bent on blocking an advisory vote on constitutional reform in the country.
President Obama's statement was softer and in tone:
I am deeply concerned by reports coming out of Honduras regarding the detention and expulsion of President Mel Zelaya. As the Organization of American States did on Friday, I call on all political and social actors in Honduras to respect democratic norms, the rule of law and the tenets of the Inter-American Democratic Charter. Any existing tensions and disputes must be resolved peacefully through dialogue free from any outside interference.
Senior aides to the Obama administration tell reporters that U.S. diplomats were working to ensure Zelaya's safe return. And the Wall Street Journal suggests that the administration may have worked behind the scenes to try and avert the coup.
But Roberto Lovato argues that the U.S. response at this point is insufficient. The savvy expert on U.S. relations with Latin America writes:
President Obama and the U.S. can actually do something about a military crackdown that our tax dollars are helping pay for. That Vasquez and other coup leaders were trained at the WHINSEC, which also trained Augusto Pinochet and other military dictators responsible for the deaths, disappearances, tortures of hundreds of thousands in Latin America, sends profound chills throughout a region still trying to overcome decades U.S.-backed militarism.Hemispheric concerns about the coup were expressed in the rapid, historic and almost universal condemnation of the plot by almost all Latin American governments. Such concerns in the region represent an opportunity for the United States. But, while the Honduran coup represents a major opportunity for Obama to make real his recent and repeated calls for a "new" relationship to the Americas, failure to take actions that send a rapid and unequivocal denunciation of the coup will be devastating to the Honduran people -- and to the still-fragile U.S. image in the region.
Recent declarations by the Administration -- expressions of "concern" by the President and statements by Secretary of State Clinton recognizing Zelaya as the only legitimate, elected leader of Honduras -- appear to indicate preliminary disapproval of the putsch. Yet, the even more unequivocal statements of condemnation from U.N. President Miguel D'Escoto, the Organization of American States, the European Union, and the Presidents of Argentina, Costa Rica and many other governments raise greatly the bar of expectation before the Obama Administration.
Obama should be more outspoken. This is a time when clarity is essential, and potentially influential.
There is also a role for members of Congress, who need to examine the timing and character of this coup -- which was carried out by military officers trained in the U.S. at the School of the Americans/Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC), in a country with a substantial U.S. military base (home to roughly 500 troops and air force combat planes and helicopters) in Soto Cano. It is difficult to imagine that the Honduran military would have moved against Zelaya without notifying U.S. military officials -- a prospect that, considering the sordid history of Washington's entanglements in the region, ought to be reviewed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Honest players on that committee, such as Wisconsin Democrat Russ Feingold, have a right and a responsibility to ask tough questions about the removal of a democratically-elected leader whose most serious "crime" appears to have been a determination to challenge the corrupt status quo in his country.
Zelaya, a businessman with a record of activism on behalf of decentralization of power and respect for indigenous peoples, was elected in 2005 as the relatively moderate candidate of the country's historically powerful Liberal Party.
Photographed in genial conversation with former President George Bush, he was not viewed as a particularly radical player when he took office. But Zelaya's left-leaning economic and social policies earned praise from labor unions and civil society groups, and he had forged regional alliances with the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, which Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and other elected leaders in Latin America established as a counter to the neoliberal trade and security policies pushed by the U.S. under Bush.
That made relations with the U.S. somewhat more tense, especially as Zelaya wrangled with conservative forces over media, presidential succession and constitional issues.
Chavez has suggested that U.S. meddling -- and a Central Intelligence Agency tie -- enabled the coup.
School of the Americas Watch is following developments closely, and well -- lots of fresh photos and blogging on its site.
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31 Comments so far
Show AllHow can Washington have the balls to talk about "bringing democracy" to other nations when it has supported this coup. Zelaya was elected democratically, something the US would not understand.
I am sure some prominent North American political/economic leaders think one way to wealth and power in the western hemisphere is to kill democracy and humiliate Latinos. This metaphorically enslaving Latin America is what has happened in the past all the way back to Cortez and British French colonial times.
All of Latin America has it's issues with and getting over colonial residuals of corruption and nepotism. It does not need more interference from North American and European corporate greed with it’s cultural arrogance. Latin America has suffered too long from North America White Anglo Saxon Protestant arrogance. This arrogance is from the Presbyterian Church among other North American institutions ran fruit companies ---- to the murder of Latin American leaders such as what happened in Chile. Now suspected in Bolivia. May this not be true in Honduras.
CD is also in the "disappearing" game--hot and heavy.
This site smells like Buenos Aires in 1977.
Wow! It is amazing how many experts suddenly show up on Honduran or Latin American affairs. Where were you guys, the OAS or Hillary when Zelaya squandered millions of dollars of the budget on propaganda to promote an illegal referendum? When Germany, Japan, and Switzerland cut off aid to Honduras citing corrruption of the Zelaya administration? When after the earthquake that left thousands homeless Zelaya adressed the nation to promote his referendum and did not say one single thing about the disaster? When a jet landed in the middle of the night in Honduras and Zelaya's henchmen were filmed unloading bags of unknown content and then abandoning the jet? When Zelaya joined the ALBA initiative led by madman Hugo Chavez? When Zelaya plunged the country into its worst economic recession? When 150,000 people have lost their jobs just in 2009?
Isn't nice to live in a country where you worry about Michelle's toned arms, and Obama's nice suits, rather than worry about a guy who wears cowboy hats to his office, accuses members of Congress of being on drugs, and rides his Harley Davidson motorcycle around town blocking streets and traffic as he parades around town?
Politicians or armachair analysts who do not own industries, pay taxes, employ people or have even visited Honduras should not voice such strong opinions.
Hopefully for us who live and bleed for this country the world will realize that what has happened here is to be praised. When civil and military authorities join together and break paradigms and enforce the law even against a president hell bent on breaking it. Maybe there's a lesson here for Americans. Maybe Bush would not have made such a mess of things if you guys had had the guts to do what we did here.
"Where were you guys, the OAS or Hillary when Zelaya squandered millions of dollars of the budget on propaganda to promote an illegal referendum?"
So let me get this straight: President Obama has no constitutional right to hold a referendum on, say, a free trade deal that congress is going to sign. See, in most "democracies" we vote for people who ignore us, we then beg them to listen to us and we have no direct power. If he did however hold a referendum asking us, gasp, what WE thought, is that grounds for the military to step in and remove him from office? So, are you going to start attacking polling companies in Honduras for asking similar questions? I think your idea of democracy is just tops, sign me up!
"When Zelaya plunged the country into its worst economic recession? When 150,000 people have lost their jobs just in 2009?"
Wow, YOUR economy is tanking too?! Weird, I thought it was just America! Is any other country's economy tanking anywhere (especially in the “developing” and “under-developed” countries), cause this might spread...keep us updated, yeah? Is this Zelaya guy all powerful? You know, the guy who asked his country to give him some direct input and was removed from office, is THAT guy in total control?
Honduras is the 3rd poorest country in the freaking Western hemisphere. Where the hell were people like you (speaking such amazing English, with access to a computer and time to post on this webpage) when "free market" policies were decimating most of your country? Was the right wing in Honduras taking money from people like Reagan to terrorize their country, driving them further into poverty while benefiting a tiny elite or were they doing the opposite? I do follow events in Latin America pretty closely, but am not an expert on your country. I have noticed though that the only policies that have EVER worked for regular working people are the policies that "madmen" like Chavez are pursuing: prioritizing basic social services, creating constitutions that people vote on that give them economic, social and participatory rights that we in the West could only dream of, trying to foster solidaririty, protecting domestic industry until (at least) it is able to compete with the far more advanced foreign competition, controlling financial flows (which was taken for granted by even the West when forming the Bretton Woods institutions), etc. What is your opinion on THAT? Are you part of the right wing opposition (in that case you are in no moral position to lecture any one else, get bent) or are you for changing what needs to be changed in your country?
You’re right though, why should WE as Americans care? We only give your country immense amounts of military and economic aid. US organizations like the NED, USAID, the International Republican Institute operate in your country, back and fund the right wing. I'm sure you are outraged by THAT interference, I'm sure you carp and moan about that too, right? How many people depend on money from their relatives in the US? Why would we object to OUR tax dollars going towards a coup in another country? The right wing has surely done Honduras well, with its wonderful economic policies before Zelaya, right? What needs to be changed, and why should we Americans object OUR tax dollars supporting propping up those failed polices?
I see that CD is becoming infested with neocons.
If you stop and notice, you will see that most of the folks posting here lately have agendas that are clearly fascist--whether neocon, zionist or troglodite.
Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
One thing that disturbs me is how quickly the canard and coup talking point about the motivation for the coup got currency in AP and Reuters accounts and among blog trolls. It was said that Zelaya was pushing for a referendum to allow him to serve an extra term, just as Chavez had done. Sometimes the canard was softened to admit that the supposed referendum was a non-binding poll. The truth is that the poll was to determine if the people would support a constitutional assembly, which would demonstrate the lack of legitimacy of the Congress and build a political environment to push for a Constitutional Assembly. Thus, the coup was without the tissue of a justification. Thus also, tepid assertions that "[a]ny existing tensions and disputes must be resolved peacefully through dialogue free from any outside interference" tend to re-inforce the false narrative.
Ecuador went through a similar period of popular struggle against the oligarchical courts and the old partidocracia-dominated Congress to get to their Constitutional Assembly. For coverage of some of these events in Ecuador see http://phillipbannowsky.com/.
Totally correct, the blowhard propagandists on Fox are comparing Zelaya to Chavez the dictator. Damn those democratically elected dictators and their opinion polls! The current one term limit was written into the constitution during the Reagan administrations war on all things Central American.
It would be good to remember that the 2002 in Venezuela was coordinated by the opposition t.v. stations. Yesterday in Managua Chavez said something to the effect of "God look out for Obama--Fox News has him in its sights".
He's in the sights of the Pentagon, the CIA, the neocons and....?
The ousted president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, has said he will return home later this week, after being forced into exile on Sunday.
Addressing a meeting of leaders from the Organization of American States (OAS) in Nicaragua, Mr Zelaya invited other leaders to accompany him - atop a big Russian tank no doubt
1) I didn't hear Obama tell Honduras that "the world is watching" as he did with Iran.
2) The US has troops stationed at Soto Cano Air Base in Honduras. Why isn't their outrage in this country that a coup has taken place in a country that we have troops stationed in? What purpose do our troops serve there? Are we that helpless? Or do we support the coup in private, but publically offer lip service condemning the coup?
There is a difference between Obama and his administration not backing the coup (if true, definitely a good sign) and saying the US has no involvement. Obama doesn’t know what the CIA and organizations like the NED are doing, for his own good. If he knew he’d be complicit in their activities. There is no doubt of US involvement, especially considering that ANOTHER country would give people social and participatory rights in the proposed constitution. Let's not pretend this isn't a direct challenge to corporate interests in the West, principally in the US. I’m imaging that the situation is for more complex than most people are saying. What we do know however is that the leaders of the coup were trained by the US, the right wing in Honduras has close ties and depends on the capitalists in the West and are similar to groups the US has supported in places like Bolivia and Venezuela and the US is involved with the opposition in Honduras, which they also have admitted. So draw your own conclusions. Maybe the US has not given the ok, maybe they are playing games, saying they're against the coup publically but backing it indirectly (which would give Obama cover and help him save face should Zelaya return), maybe the Honduran regime will be so isolated that this will fail horribly, who knows at this point.
This coup was of, for and by U.S. trained death squads.
See: Bush, Cheney, Banana Republic.
Nichols: ..." It is difficult to imagine that the Honduran military would have moved against Zelaya without notifying U.S. military officials -- a prospect that, considering the sordid history of Washington's entanglements in the region, ought to be reviewed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee."....
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You want to talk interesting lead., ... just hours before the world is told Zelaya was taken in a military coup, this article is published in Reuters:
...
Honduras's Zelaya says US helped thwart coup-paper
Sun Jun 28, 2009 7:12am EDT
MADRID, June 28 (Reuters) - Honduran President Manuel Zelaya told Spain's El Pais that a planned attempt to wrest power him was thwarted after the United States declined to back the move.
"Everything was in place for the coup and if the U.S. embassy had approved it, it would have happened. But they did not ... I'm only still here in office thanks to the United States," he said in the newspaper interview published on Sunday.
"Last (Friday) morning, at around 1 or 2 a.m., Congress was passing a decree to incapacitate me and the armed forces were mobilised. But phone calls were made -- I can't say by who or from where -- but these calls stopped the coup," he said."....
http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSLS355357
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Just one more nugget of info....
and now Chavez threatens military intervention....
Nichols tells us that, "It is difficult to imagine that the Honduran military would have moved against Zelaya without notifying U.S. military officials..." How about "impossible to imagine"? With the FMLN now the ruling party in neighboring El Salvador, and all the other leftward changes taking place in the rest of Central and South America, we must assume that the US-trained, backed and equipped military in Tegulcigalpa received a "green light" from El Norte. Commentator Eva Golinger was probably not far off when she dubbed the weekend's events "Obama's first coup".
"Any existing tensions and disputes must be resolved peacefully through dialogue free from any outside interference."
-Yes, just like the US is resolving its tensions and disputes in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan peacefully and free from any outside interference. I wonder if the hypocrisy of his words ever dawns on him. Nah, I doubt it.
The audacity of mendacity at work. This guy has perfected the Rovian technique of condemning some action or behavior precisely while he is orchestrating it. Of course, the CIA (HELLO MR. PANETTA! ANY THOUGHTS? YOU'RE AWFUL QUIET RIGHT NOW.) has "no knowledge" to the "best of our knowledge" of any coup attempt. Killer clowns are busy. The CIA needs to have there budget "increased" in Obama Orwellian terms to $1,000,000 a YEAR. Sorry killers and trouble makers everywhere, you and Medicare have to be placed on a "budget neutral" status.
Is Panetti lying to Obama and Clinton, or is Obama lying to the American public? If you think the CIA is not involved in Honduras you are hopelessly naive. I can believe the State Departmwent was caught off guard. The State Department has little control over US Foreign Policy any more.
Presidents don't have as much power as people think.
But Ahmedinejiad does?
Off Topic,
Look up "Troll"
Oh yeah, more than half a millenium ago, i was teaching jr high, and came across a book entitled, The Invisible Government. Now we are blessed not only w/the CIA, but also w/NED, IRI, and USAID all meddling in the affairs of other countries to advance the interests of mutinational corporations. And, yes all of this is done on taxpayer dimes while supposedly lacking the funds to do decent healthcare and seriously fight global warming. Bull****!
Nothing happens in Honduras without approval by Chiquita Brands International. Cincinnati would be a good place to start looking.
The planes and military helicopters flying over the cities today, looking down for any signs of dissent, ready to crush it, are commaned by General Suarzo, another Ft. Benning Ga alumni.
I for one feel like this one is going to be different. Already the administration acted quickly and it seems to me like diplomacy is actually being considered an option. Plus, the rest of Latin America is much more stable than it was before Dubya focused our limited resources elsewhere. This might be a last gasp of a dying form of governing Latin America. Obama is doing the right thing in Iran, what's to say he will not do the same in Honduras.
"failure to take actions that send a rapid and unequivocal denunciation of the coup will be devastating to the Honduran people -- and to the still-fragile U.S. image in the region."
There goes The Nation again, publishing bogus ideas such as the US image needs cultivating. The problem with this is no less than catastrophic.
Enhancing the US image gives maneuvering space to the right to pursue imperial oppression and to the pseudo-left to pursue imperial adventure, both at the expense of the Latin-American people.
In contrast, a comprehensive people-oriented US policy as advocated by the far-left, based on UNIVERSAL SOLIDARITY, and a HEALTHY POPULAR SUSPICION of Washing-town, benefits Americans of the entire hemisphere.
Heads up, Obama. Time to get the mush out of your mouth and pull up your socks.
Your new head of the Southern Command is off and running in direct contradiction of your stated policies re: Latin America.
He and Otto Reich implemented the Honduras coup.
The next military coup may well take place in Washington....
And Dick Cheney will be back in power--this time talking out of the mouth of Joe Biden.
You may be right about a coming "7 days in May" moment. However, the actors are probably in the Pentagon and their problem is all the money wall street banks are getting while the military pay isn't cutting the mustard. Wall street may think the military is just hired help, but it's a big mistake to game the generals.
Yesterday Chavez said something to the effect of May God look out for Obama, because Fox News has him in their sights.
Chavez knows all about media coups--like the one he experienced in 2002.
Time for USites--especially Obama--to stop denying that it could happen in Washington.