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Ecuador's Correa Haunted by Honduras
This was a coup attempt – encouraged by Washington's shameful support for the overthrow of Manuel Zelaya last year
On Thursday, it turned out to be true. Some analysts are still insisting that what happened was just a police protest over possible benefit cuts that got out of hand. But to anyone who watched the prolonged, pitched gun-battle on TV last night, when the armed forces finally rescued President Correa from the hospital where he was trapped by the police, this did not look like a protest. It was an attempt to overthrow the government.
The co-ordinated actions in various cities, the takeover of Quito's airport by a section of the armed forces – all this indicated a planned coup attempt. And although it failed, at various points during the day it was not so clear what the outcome would be.
The government pointed a finger at a former president and army colonel, Lucio Gutierrez, and he was on television yesterday calling for the ousting of Correa. He accused the president of everything from supporting the Farc (the guerilla group fighting Colombia's government), to wrecking the economy.
The coup might have had a chance if Correa were not so popular. Despite his enemies in high places, the president's approval rating was 67% in Quito a couple of weeks ago. His government has doubled spending on healthcare (pdf), significantly increased other social spending, and successfully defaulted on $3.2bn of foreign debt that was found to be illegitimately contracted. Ecuador's economy managed to squeak through 2009 without a recession, and is projected to grow about 2.5% this year. Correa, an economist, has had to use heterodox and creative methods to keep the economy growing in the face of external shocks because the country does not have its own currency. (Ecuador adopted the dollar in 2000, which means that it can do little in the way of monetary policy and has no control over its exchange rate.)
Correa had warned that he might try to temporarily dissolve the congress in order to break an impasse in the legislature, something that he has the right to request under the new constitution – though it would have to be approved by the constitutional court. This probably gave the pro-coup forces something they saw as a pretext. It is reminiscent of the coup in Honduras, when Zelaya's support for a non-binding referendum on a constituent assembly was falsely reported by the media – both Honduran and international – as a bid to extend his presidency.
Media manipulation has a big role in Ecuador, too, with most of the media controlled by rightwing interests opposed to the government. This has helped build a base of people – analogous to those who get all of their information from Fox News in the United States, but proportionately larger – who believe that Correa is a dictator trying to turn his country into a clone of communist Cuba.
The US state department issued a two-sentence statement from secretary of state Hillary Clinton, who late Thursday urged "all Ecuadoreans to come together and to work within the framework of Ecuador's democratic institutions to reach a rapid and peaceful restoration of order." Unlike the White House statement in response to the Honduran coup last year, it also expressed "full support" for the elected president. This is an improvement, although it is unlikely that it reflects a change in Washington's policy toward Latin America.
The Obama administration did everything it could to support the coup government in Honduras last year, and, in fact, is still trying to convince the South American governments – including Ecuador, Brazil, Argentina and the collective organisation of UNASUR – to recognise the government there. South America refuses to recognise the Lobo government because it was elected under a dictatorship that did not allow for a free or fair contest. The rest of the hemisphere also wants some guarantees that would stop the killing of journalists and political activists there, which has continued and even got worse under the "elected" government.
As the South American governments feared, Washington's support for the coup government in Honduras over the last year has encouraged and increased the likelihood of rightwing coups against democratic left governments in the region. This attempt in Ecuador has failed, but there will be likely be more threats in the months and years ahead


25 Comments so far
Show AllI hope they use "harsh interrogation techniques" on the police/military behind this coup and come up with names and faces of the "covert" Americans behind this uprising. There are enough alternative news sources on the Internet now to get the story out, around the expected black-out of Corporate News.
Shining a light on the dirty little operations in America's backyard while they are extra busy in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan will help the Central/South-Americans finally get rid of the superpower meddling that has plagued them for centuries.
No more harsh interrogation techniques, please. :-) Plenty of other ways to trace the breadcrumbs back to the culprits.
Agree with other commenters - no "harsh interogation techniques," Torture is wrong, and besides the goal is to get accurate information.
There is this problem with "Democracy" as the US defines it. When the poor get active and actually vote in representative numbers, and those votes are actually counted, sometimes leaders are elected whom the US does not like. They do things the US would prefer them not do. Thus, they become undemocratic.
A commentator on NPR's Diane Rehm show this morning, in the context of this possible coup attempt, mentioned that the US used to say Latin America was all democracies except for Cuba, but now that wasn't so, citing Venezuela. Huh??!
I hope there is an Eva Gollinger in Peru. Her work on Venezuela has been outstanding!
Oops, brain-fart. I obviously meant Ecuador, not Peru. Sorry, long day.
In the US "democracy" has become a euphamism for "corporate capitalist" controlled government.
Here is a link to the statemnet by CONAIE, http://upsidedownworld.org/main/ecuador-archives-49/2717-conaie-on-the-attempted-coup-in-ecuador
The situation is far more complex than what is being discussed, with NarcoNews being best so far, http://narcosphere.narconews.com/thefield/4138/coup-attempt-ecuador-result-sec-clintons-cowardice-honduras
I've gotta post something here, because it's just too damn entertaining to watch readbetweenthelines go into uncontrolled apoplectic rage at the mere appearance of my name in the context of a Latin American topic. Regardless of what I actually say.
it's part of their internet survellance strategy: baiting.
Documentary called Crude tells a relevant story. Check it out.
Documentary called Crude tells a relevant story. Check it out.
Lenny davis, the clintons' long-time lawyer-adviser,
was working full-time to support the honduran coup and even had the balls to show up at Democracy Now to defend the coup and intimidate the left,
while hillary tried her darndest best to twist the truth into pretzel about whether the US govt supported the coupe.
obama sneered "the left is complaining that the US is not intervening against the coup, after complaining other times that the US intervene too much". what disingenuous creeps clintons, lenny davis, and obama are
Honduras - the CIA, Chiquita and Dole.
I haven't eaten a banana since the overthrow.
These bananas taste like paste anyway. After eating Jamaican bananas, as well as pineapple, you find out what a real banana tastes like and your boycott is quite legitimate and like you I've boycotted them for decades. GREAT MINDS THINK ALIKE!
Bush only had 1 attempted coup, Venezuela, in his 8 years. President ObamayaBush has engineered 2 attempted coup's just 2 years. I guess he drinking the kool aide that things are going in Iraq and AfPak so he can expand American hegemony now. He's out bushing Bush. Don't forget he lived under a military dictatorship in Indonesia while his mother worked for USAID and the Ford Foundation both CIA fronts.
You're forgetting the 2004 coup in Haiti.
http://www.copvcia.com/free/ww3/032304_haiti_pt1.html
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2010/011810a.html
And don't forget things like the stolen elections in Mexico and Afghanistan, which makes it unnecessary to go to the next step, overthrowing the unacceptable government:
http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/18-mexicos-stolen-election/
As for Obama, if a President tries to change too much of the existing Security State process, they just kill him - that's what happened to Kennedy. Any American who thinks the US Government is "of the people, by the people, for the people" is still in grade school, or should be. Of course, if they thought Obama would challenge the existing System too much, they never would have let him be elected.
Please, the current US president is useless. He has no spine. We would be much better off with Colin Powell in the White House.
Vote Powell for peace comes to mind as a slogan. He hasn't favored this war mongering and didn't under Slick Willy. Getting a
GOP president in who's another Ike is what we need. With his high level military background, he's one of the club and will get away with doing what John F Kennedy couldn't. He can cut the Pentagon budget just like Ike did,. He can end "Don't ask, don't tell" by executive order. He can put through a national income policy which Gerald Ford backed. With a Republican in the White House, all this becomes respectable
AD
I would not doubt CIA involvement/facilitation of a coup attempt, but conspiracy theory comments like these with nothing - repeat that, nothing - but unsubstantiated claims to support them are really unproductive. If you have good information about CIA involvement or information, post it.