Obama administration needs to maintain tough stance against Honduran coup
The Obama administration deserves praise for its response to the coup in Honduras. It sends a hopeful signal that Washington’s traditional support for such undemocratic power grabs has ended.
Masked soldiers stormed the Honduran presidential palace in the early morning hours of June 28 and violently seized President Manuel Zelaya. Still in his pajamas, the president was forced at gunpoint onto a plane and flown to Costa Rica.
President Obama condemned the coup, saying: “I think it would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition, rather than democratic elections.”
In past decades, Democratic and Republican administrations alike have tolerated — and in some cases supported — violent coups against democratically elected governments in Latin America. In 2002, when a similar coup was hatched in Venezuela, the Bush administration initially welcomed the short-lived illegitimate government.
Obama’s stance is a welcome change and marks a positive step toward mending the open wounds left by past U.S. policies in Honduras and other Latin American countries. But the Obama team still has some housecleaning to do.
Some of the generals behind the putsch are graduates of the infamous U.S. Army training academy for Latin American militaries, formerly called the School of the Americas, in Fort Benning, Ga. With at least 11 dictators among its alumni, former Rep. Joseph Kennedy famously claimed the training academy has produced “more dictators than any other school in the history of the world.”
The military coup thwarted Zelaya’s move to introduce a voters’ referendum on whether to rewrite the country’s constitution. The military brass is partial to the current constitution because it was drafted in the early 1980s under the military dictatorship of Gen. Policarpo Paz García, another graduate of the School of the Americas.
After the passage of the constitution in 1982, the military cemented its dominion over Honduran political affairs. The generals kept a tight rein on the population through a military death squad unit known as “Battalion 316,” which was trained by the CIA and killed hundreds of Hondurans. (Former members of this battalion also took part in the recent coup.)
In the early 1980s, CIA station chiefs and the U.S. Embassy led by then-Ambassador John Negroponte called the shots in Honduras. (Negroponte went on to hold various senior posts in the George W. Bush administration, including director of national intelligence.) The country became the staging ground for the Reagan administration’s covert wars against rebels in El Salvador and the socialist Sandinista government in Nicaragua.
Deep U.S. involvement endures to this day. Honduras maintains a large U.S. military base that is one of the Pentagon’s last remaining footholds in Latin America, while the Honduran military still receives millions in U.S. taxpayer dollars. This same military has brutally repressed massive street demonstrations clamoring for the return of the country’s democratically elected leader.
The funding bill for this assistance plainly states that U.S. military aid will be cut for “any country whose duly elected head of government is deposed by military coup or decree.”
The White House should swiftly follow through on this stipulation. Obama should also continue to work with Latin American leaders and with multilateral bodies such as the United Nations and the Organization of American States for Zelaya’s return.
To do anything less would be to sneer at democracy. And the United States has done that long enough in Latin America.
Teo Ballve is a freelance journalist based in Colombia. His website is http://teoballve.com. He can be reached at pmproj [at] progressive [dot] org.
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Teo Ballve's call to praise Obama seems a bit premature. Though I do agree with Obama (and most people who have past the 5th grade) that elections are better than coups, I am going to wait a while before I "praise" Obama. I read the State Department's press release on Honduras and there is a troubling tone to their position which is expressed in their response to Paul Richter who asked, "There’s been discussion about Zelaya returning but with limited powers. And I wonder if the U.S. would support that kind of solution since it would seem to be a breach of democratic process.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL ONE: By breach of democratic process, what do you mean?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL TWO: Yeah, what do you mean? Yeah.
(Paul Richter) QUESTION: In other words – in other words, Zelaya was elected, was duly elected, and given certain powers. If he goes back without those powers as a figurehead, wouldn’t that be a breach of process?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL ONE: Well, again, we and all the countries of the region have called for an unconditional return – in other words, a return of President Zelaya and a restoration of the democratic and constitutional order, which means that President Zelaya is president of Honduras with all the powers and privileges that adhere to the presidency. However, in the course of fashioning this restoration, the OAS is also going to have to address the broader issue of governability within a system that has been badly damaged. And that’s obviously going to require negotiation among the different political actors. I don’t think that that negotiation would affect the fundamental powers or authorities of the presidency of Honduras. But obviously, for this to be successful there has to be some kind of accord or agreement among the different players.
I am going to save up my praise for Obama until after the coup plotters and those who violated the Honduran Constitution are safely in jail. The United States has a long history of arranging coups in and around Honduras and any statement made by a U.S. government spolksmodels should be enjoyed more as Surrealist art than any sort of narrative about what the US intends to do. This particular mode of "not" liking the coup and restoring "democracy" happened with Aristide in Haiti under the other Clinton.