US Leaves Honduras to Its Fate
by Mark Weisbrot
www.commondreams.org/, July 9,
2009
The military coup that overthrew President
Manuel Zelaya of Honduras took a new turn when he attempted to
return home on Sunday. The military closed the airport and blocked
runways to prevent his plane from landing. They also shot several
protesters, killing at least one and injuring others. The violence
and the enormous crowd -- estimated in the tens of thousands and
reported as the largest since the coup on 28 June -- put additional
pressure on the Obama administration to seek a resolution to the
crisis. On Tuesday, secretary of state Hillary Clinton met Zelaya
for the first time.
In many ways this is similar to the 2002
coup in Venezuela, which was supported by the US. After it became
clear that no government other than the US would recognise the
coup government there, and hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans
poured into the streets to demand the return of their elected
president, the military switched sides and brought Hugo Chávez
back to the presidential palace.
In Honduras, we have the entire world
refusing to recognise the coup government, and equally large demonstrations
(in a country of only seven million people, with the military
preventing movement for many of them) demanding Zelaya's return.
The problem in Honduras is that the military -- unlike Venezuela's
-- is experienced in organised repression, including selective
assassinations carried out during the 1980s, when the country
was known as a military base for US operations in El Salvador
and Nicaragua. The Honduran military is also much closer to the
US military and state department, more closely allied with the
country's oligarchy and more ideologically committed to the cause
of keeping the elected president out of power. Colonel Herberth
Bayardo Inestroza, a Honduran army lawyer who admitted that the
military broke the law when it kidnapped Zelaya, told the Miami
Herald: "It would be difficult for us, with our training,
to have a relationship with a leftist government. That's impossible."
Inestroza, like the coup leader and army chief General Romeo Vasquez,
was trained at Washington's infamous School of the Americas (now
renamed Whinsec).
This puts a heavy burden on the people
of Honduras, who have been risking their lives, confronting the
army's bullets, beatings and arbitrary arrests and detentions.
The US media has reported on this repressiononly minimally, with
the major print media sometimes failing even to mention the censorship
there. But the Honduran pro-democracy movement has in the last
few days managed to change the course of events. It is likely
that Clinton's decision to finally meet with Zelaya was the result
of the large and growing protests, and Washington's fear that
such resistance could reach the point at which it would topple
the coup government.
The Obama administration's behaviour over
the last eight days suggests that if not for this threat from
below, the administration would have been content to let the coup
government remain for the rest of Zelaya's term. This was made
clear again on Monday, at a press briefing held by the state department
spokesman Ian Kelly. Under prodding from a reporter, Kelly became
the first on-the-record state department official to say that
the US government supported the return of Zelaya. This was eight
days after the coup, and after the United Nations general assembly,
the Organisation of American States, the Rio Group and many individual
governments had all called for the "immediate and unconditional"
return of Zelaya -- something that Washington still does not talk
about.
Meanwhile, on the far right, there has
been a pushback against worldwide support for Zelaya and an attempt
to paint him as the aggressor in Honduras, or at least equally
as bad as the people who carried out the coup. Unfortunately much
of the major media's reporting has aided this effort by reporting
such statements as "Critics feared he intended to extend
his rule past January, when he would have been required to step
down."
In fact, there was no way for Zelaya to
"extend his rule" even if the referendum had been held
and passed, and even if he had then gone on to win a binding referendum
on the November ballot. The 28 June referendum was nothing more
than a non-binding poll of the electorate, asking whether the
voters wanted to place a binding referendum on the November ballot
to approve a redrafting of the country's constitution. If it had
passed, and if the November referendum had been held (which was
not very likely) and also passed, the same ballot would have elected
a new president and Zelaya would have stepped down in January.
So, the belief that Zelaya was fighting to extend his term in
office has no factual basis. The most that could be said is that
if a new constitution were eventually approved, Zelaya might have
been able to run for a second term at some future date.
Another major rightwing theme in the media
and public perception of the Honduran situation is that this is
a battle against Chávez (and some collection of "anti-US"
leftist allies: Nicaragua, Cuba, take your pick). This is a common
subterfuge that has surfaced in most of the Latin American elections
of the last few years. In Mexico, Peru, Nicaragua and El Salvador,
for example, the conservative candidates all acted as if they
were running against Chávez -- the first two with success,
and the second pair losing. It is true that under Zelaya Honduras
joined Alba, a grouping of countries that was started by Venezuela
as an alternative to "free trade" agreements with the
US. But Zelaya is nowhere near as close to Chávez as any
number of other Latin American presidents, including those of
Brazil and Argentina. So it is not clear why this is relevant,
unless the argument is that only bigger countries or those located
further south have the right to have a co-operative relationship
with Venezuela.
Clinton has just announced that she has
arranged for the Costa Rican president Oscar Arias to serve as
a mediator between the coup government and Zelaya. According to
Clinton, both parties have accepted this arrangement. This is
a good move for the state department, as it will make it easier
for it to maintain a more "neutral" position -- as opposed
to the rest of the hemisphere, which has taken the side of the
deposed president and the Honduran pro-democracy movement. "I
don't want to prejudge what the parties themselves will agree
to," said Clinton in response to a question as to whether
Zelaya should be restored to his position.
It is difficult to see how this mediation
will succeed, so long as the coup government knows that it can
sit out the rest of Zelaya's term. The only thing that can remove
it from office, in conjunction with massive protests, is real
economic sanctions of the kind that Honduras's neighbours (Nicaragua,
El Salvador and Guatemala) imposed for 48 hours after the coup.
These countries account for about a third of Honduras's trade,
but they would need economic aid from other countries to carry
the burden of a trade cut-off for a longer time. It would be a
great thing if other countries would step forward to support such
sanctions and to cut off their own trade and capital flows with
Honduras as well.
So it is up to the rest of the world to
help Honduras; it is clear that Hondurans won't be getting any
help from the US. The rest of the world will have to scream bloody
murder about the violence and repression there, too, because Washington
will not make much of an issue about it.
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center
for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. He is co-author,
with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis, and has
written numerous research papers on economic policy. He is also
president of Just Foreign Policy.
Central
America page
Home Page