By Conn Hallinan – 08.23.2009
While the Obama Administration was careful to distance
itself from the recent coup in Honduras—condeming the expulsion of
President Manuel Zelaya to Costa Rica, revoking Honduran officals’ visas, and
shutting off aid—that doesn’t mean influential Americans aren’t involved,
and that both sides of the aisle don’t have some explaining to do.
The story most U.S. readers are getting about the coup is
that Zelaya—an ally of Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez—was
deposed because he tried to change the constitution to keep himself in power.
That story is a massive distortion of the facts. All Zelaya
was trying to do is to put a non-binding referendum on the ballot calling for a
constitutional convention, a move that trade unions, indigenous groups and
social activist organizations had long been lobbying for. The current
constitution was written by the Honduran military in 1982 and the one term
limit allows the brass hats to dominate the politics of the country. Since the
convention would have been held in November, the same month as the upcoming
presidential elections, there was no way that Zelaya could have remained in
office in any case. The most he could have done was to run four years from now.
And while Zelaya is indeed friendly with Chavez, he is at
best a liberal reformer whose major accomplishment was raising the minimum
wage. “What Zelaya has done has been little reforms,” Rafael Alegria, a leader
of Via Campesina told the Mexican daily La Jornada. “He isn’t a socialist or a
revolutionary, but these reforms, which didn’t harm the oligarchy at all, have
been enough for them to attack him furiously.”
One of those “little reforms” was aimed at ensuring public
control of the Honduran telecommunications industry and that may well have been
the trip wire that triggered the coup.
The first hint that something was afoot was a suit brought
by Venezuelan lawyer Robert Carmona-Borjas claiming that Zelaya was part of a
bribary scheme involving the state-run telecommunication company, Hondutel.
Carmona-Borjas has a rap sheet that dates back to the April
2002 coup against Chavez It was he who drew up the notorious “Carmona decrees,” a series of
draconian laws aimed at suspending the Venezuelan constitution and suppressing
any resistance to the coup. As Chavez supporters poured into the streets and
the plot unraveled, he fled to Washington DC.
There he took a post at George Washington University and
brought Iran-Contra plotters Otto Reich and Elliott Abrams to teach his class
on “Political Management in Latin America.” He also became vice-president of
the right-wing Arcadia Foundation, which lobbies for free market policies.
Weeks before the June 28 Honduran coup, Carmona-Borjas
barnstormed the country accusing Zelaya of collaborating with
narco-traffickers.
Reich, a Cuban-American with ties to right-wing factions all
over Latin America, and a former assistant secretary of state for hemispheric
affairs under George W. Bush, has been accused by the Honduran Black Fraternal
Organization of “undeniable involvement” in the coup.
This is hardly surprising. Reich’s priors makes
Carmona-Borjas look like a boy scout.
He was nailed by a 1987 Congressional investigation for
using public funds to engage in propaganda during the Reagan Administration’s
war on Nicaragua. He is also a fierce advocate for Orlando Bosch and Luis
Posada Carriles, both implicated in the bombing of a Cuban airliner in 1973
that killed all 73 on board.
Reich is a ferocious critic of Zelaya and, in a recent piece
in the Weekly Standard, urged the Obama Administration not to support
“strongman” Zelaya because it “would put the United States clearly in the same
camp as Cuba’s Castro brothers, Venezuela’s Chavez, and other regional
delinquents.”
Zelaya’s return was unanimous supported by the UN General
Assembly, the European Union, and the Organization of American States.
One of the charges that Reich levels at Zelaya is that the
Honduran president is supposedly involved with bribes paid out by the state-run
telecommunication company, Hondutel. Zelaya is threatening to file a defamation
suit over the accusation.
Reich’s charges against Hondutel are hardly happenstance.
The Cuban-American, a former lobbyist for AT&T, is close
to Arizona Senator John McCain and served as McCain’s Latin American advisor
during the Senator’s run for the presidency. John McCain is Mr.
telecommunications.
The Senator has deep ties with telecom giants AT&T, MCI
and Qualcomm and, according to Nikolas Kozloff , author of “Hugo Chavez: Oil,
Politics and the Challenge of the U.S.,” “has acted to protect and look out for
the political interests of the telecoms on Capitol Hill.”
AT&T is McCain’s second largest donor, and the company
also generously funds McCain’s International Republican Institute (IRI), which
has warred with Latin American regimes that have resisted telecommunications
privatization. According to Kozloff, “President Zelaya was a known to be a
fierce critic of telecommunications privatization.”
When Venezuelan coup leaders went to Washington a month
before their failed effort to oust Chavez, IRI footed the bill. Reich, as then
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s special envoy to the Western Hemisphere,
met with some of those leaders.
Republicans in Congress have accused the Obama
Administration of being “soft” on Zelaya, and protested the White House’s
support of the Honduran president by voting against administration nominees for
the ambassador to Brazil and an assistant secretary of state.
But meddling in Honduras is a bi-partisan undertaking.
“If you want to understand who is the real power behind the
[Honduran] coup, you need to find out who is paying Lanny Davis,” says Robert
White, former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador and current president of the
Center for International Policy.
Davis, best known as the lawyer who represented Bill Clinton
during his impeachment trial, has been lobbying members of Congress and
testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee in support of the coup.
According to Roberto Lovato, an associate editor at New
American Media, Davis represents the Honduran chapter of CEAL, the Business
Council of Latin America, which strongly backed the coup. Davis told Lovato,
“I’m proud to represent businessmen who are committed to the rule of law.”
But White says the coup had more to do with profits than
law.
“Coups happen because very wealthy people want them and help
to make them happen, people who are used to seeing the country as a money
machine and suddenly see social legislation on behalf of the poor as a threat
to their interests,” says White. “The average wage of a worker in free trade
zones is 77 cents per hour.”
According to the World Bank, 66 percent of Hondurans lives
below the poverty line.
The U.S. is also involved in the coup through a network of
agencies that funnel money and training to anti-government groups. The National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) and the US Agency for International Development
(USAID) contribute to right-wing organizations that supported the coup,
including the Peace and Democracy Movement and the Civil Democratic Union. Many
of the officers that bundled Zelaya off to San Jose were trained at the Western
Hemispheric Institute for Security Cooperation, the former “School for the
Americas’ that has seen torturers and coup leaders from all over Latin America
pass through its doors. Reich served on the Institute’s board.
The Obama Administration condemned the coup, but when Zelaya
journeyed to the Honduran-Nicaragua border, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton denounced him for being “provocative.” It was a strange statement,
since the State Department said nothing about a report by the Committee of
Disappeared Detainees in Honduras charging 1,100 human rights violations by the
coup regime, including detentions, assaults and murder.
Human rights violations by the coup government have been
condemned by the Inter American Commission for Human Rights, the International
Observer Mission, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, the Committee to
Protest Journalists, and Reporters Without Borders.
Davis claims that the coup was a “legal” maneuver to
preserve democracy.
But that is a hard argument to make, given who some of the
people behind it were. One of those is Fernando Joya, a former member of
Battalion 316, a paramilitary death squad. Joya fled the country after being
charged with kidnapping and torturing several students in the 1980s, but he has
now resurfaced as a “special security advisor” to the coup makers.
According to Greg Grandin, a history professor at New York
University, the coup makers also included the extremely right-wing Catholic
organization, Opus Dei, whose roots go back to the fascist regime of Spanish
caudillo Francisco Franco.
In the old days, when the U.S. routinely overthrew
governments that displeased it, the Marines would have gone in, as they did in
Guatemala and Nicaragua, or the CIA would have engineered a coup by the local
elites. No one has accused U.S. intelligence of being involved in the Honduran
coup, and American troops in the country are keeping a low profile. But the
fingerprints of U.S. institutions like the NED, USAID and School for the
Americas—plus bipartisan lobbyists, powerful corporations, and dedicated
Cold War warriors—are all over the June takeover. 