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Washington plays both sides of the Honduran Coup
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By Laura Carlsen
Americas MexicoBlog
Wednesday, Oct 7, 2009
The good news is that Washington has finally begun to take stronger actions on Honduras.
The
bad news is that the actions completely contradict each other,
resulting in ambiguity, paralysis and infighting as the Honduran crisis
explodes.
For many months, the news out of the U.S. capital
focused on contradictions between multilateral resolutions to condemn
the coup, the scarce but firm remarks from President Obama and fudging
from the State Department. At the same time, the Pentagon kept true to
its image of the strong-but-silent-type, not responding to confirm or
deny accusations that its base at Palmerola played a role in the
abduction of President Zelaya, that it invited the Armed Forces of the
coup regime to participate in PANAMAX exercises last month, or that its
military presence in Honduras was tacitly supporting the coup.
All
these contradictions still exist. But now members of the U.S. Congress
and private sector have made coherent policy even more unlikely by
openly working to oppose the U.S. official position.
Congress Faces Off
A
small minority group in the U.S. House and Senate is determined to
support the Honduran coup regime despite official government policy to
oppose it. In a showdown that reveals the depths of the division in
Congress, conservative Senator Jim DeMint announced a plan to travel to
Honduras with three fellow Republicans (U.S. Representatives Aaron
Schock R-Illinois, Peter Roskam R-Illinois and Doug Lamborn
R-Colorado). DeMint has been outspoken in saying that the military coup
in Honduras is legal and constitutional, outright rejecting the UN and
Organization of American States resolutions that the Obama
administration voted to approve.
Head of the Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. John Kerry, refused to approve Committee financing for the trip. DeMint credits
Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell for getting around Kerry's
refusal to fund his coup-tour by obtaining a plane from the Defense
Department. He does not define this as a "fact-finding trip" as much of the press has falsely re-dubbed it. Instead, he explicitly announces the political bias of his publicly funded Honduran jaunt, writing on Twitter, "Leading delegation to Honduras tomorrow to support Nov. 29 elections. Hondurans should be able to choose their own future.”
The
U.S. government, along with other governments in the hemisphere, has
announced that it will not recognize the Nov. 29 Honduran elections if
they are held under the military coup.
DeMint lashed out at
Kerry's move, calling it "bullying." Kerry shot back that DeMint was
blocking development of government Latin America policy.
But
Kerry's office wasn't referring to DeMint's anti-democratic stance on
Honduras. He was referring to the DeMint-led veto on key Obama
diplomatic appointments to Latin America. Under Senate law, if a single
senator objects to a nomination, the Senate must muster 60 votes to
overcome the objection. The Democrats currently have only 59, counting
independents. This means that DeMint can apparaently indefinitely block
Obama's appointments to major posts in Latin American diplomacy. The
region is the only one that still does not have a new under-secretary
of state to coordinate policy, since the nominee, Arturo Valenzuela,
has not been approved.
The second Congressional practitioner of
renegade diplomacy is Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. The Florida Congresswoman is
planning to visit Honduras in the coming weeks. It's pretty clear why
Ros-Lehtinen goes out on a limb to defend the Honduran coup. Of Cuban
descent, she's virulently anti-Castro and jumps on any opportunity to
attack center-left governments in Latin America, particularly ones with
ties to Venezuela.
Ros-Lehtinen describes her presumably public-funded trip
with a bias that's inexplicit about its opposition to the official
policy of the country she ostensibly represents: "I am traveling to
Honduras to conduct my own assessment of the situation on the ground
and the state of U.S. interests in light of the U.S.'s misguided
Zelaya-focused approach," she stated.
The Congresswoman plans to
meet with Micheletti, business leaders, the US Embassy and other
members of the coup. She had a meeting scheduled with Honduran
businessman Alfredo Facusse in Miami last week but Facusse, a supporter
of the coup, had his visa revoked under the U.S. State Department
measure to sanction the coup.
This would be but a last gasp of
the fading ultra-conservative Florida Cuban group were it not for the
fact that Ros-Lehtinen has power in Congress. Due to her seniority—she
has been a member since 1989—she is currently a ranking member of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Fervent clashes in the Capitol
are common on both domestic and foreign policy, but it is rare that
Senators and Congressmen approach foreign governments (or coups)
directly to negotiate positions contrary to their governments. A TPM blog notes that this is the new GOP strategy, not only in Honduras but in at least three other situations as well.
Alarmed
at the counter-diplomacy efforts undertaken by the rightwing fringe,
other members of Congress rallied today to express support for the
administration's call for a return to constitutional order in the
Central American nation. An Oct. 2 letter to the Honduran Congress by
Congressional representatives Bill Delahunt, Jim McGovern, Janice
Schakowsy, Sam Farr, Gregory Weeks and Xavier Becerra begins:
"We
understand that you have received visitors from our Congress who
represent the minority party, the Republican Party, who have expressed
views that differ markedly from those of President Obama's
administration and the Democratic majority party in the US Congress..."
It goes on to spell out the democratic position:
"We
believe that the coup against President Zelaya was unconstitutional;
the absence of a legitimate president, the violations of human rights
and the curtailment of civil liberties are unacceptable; and these
conditions make the holding of free and fair elections next November in
Honduras impossible."
The letter follows similar letters from the office of Rep. Raul Grijalva.
It
doesn't matter much whether Ros-Lehtinen and DeMint go to Honduras for
the photo op with Micheletti or not. It has happened before (rightwing Congressman Connie Mack was there with a delegation on July 25 ) and had very little impact, except to delight the coup-controlled media for a day or so.
But
it really does matter who pays. The U.S. taxpayer—whether through the
Defense or State Departments or through Congressional funds—should not
have to pay for congressional junkets that aim to undermine official
government policies. The U.S. government has signed both the OAS and UN
resolutions deeming the coup a coup and calling for non-recognition of
the Micheletti regime.
PR Firms Reap Mega-Contracts to Undermine U.S. Government Policy
Last Monday, we reported
that the Honduran coup had contracted with the Washington PR firm
Chlopak, Leonard, Schechter & Associates worth over $290,000. The contract
was filed with the Justice Department on Sept. 18 and is available
on-line. As noted in the Sept. 28 blog, this is the first time that the
de facto regime has contracted directly, in this case signed by Rafael
Pineda Ponce, head of Institutional Strengthening for the coup regime.
It includes monitoring the press and coordinating responses to negative
publicity.
The contract reads, "The registrant will engage in
the following activities on behalf of the foreign principal: providing
advice and planning on strategic public relations activities, designing
and managing said activities through the use of media outreach,
policymaker and third party contact and events and public dissemination
of information to government officials, the staff of government
officials, news media and non-government groups. The purpose of these
activities is to advance the level of communication, awareness and
media policymaker attention about the political situation in Honduras."
Honduran
organizations have asked the State Department to investigate the
legality of the contract. For one thing, the coup regime is spending
Honduran public funds to sustain itself as an anti-constitutional
government.
The Justice Department should also be concerned
about violations of foreign lobbying regulations. It's one thing to
lobby U.S. policymakers for a foreign government but quite another to
lobby for a foreign military coup. By all logic, this should be
prohibited under the lobbying rules.
This is another example of
how the State Department's refusal to do its job by designating the
Honduran coup a coup gives Micheletti wiggle room he never should have
been given.
The ambivalence and contradictions coming out of
Washington these days only serve to prolong and deepen the conflict in
Honduras. It will never be possible to convince certain rightwing
actors to accept a return to democracy in the country, not to talk
slick PR firms into acting along any criteria but money coming in. The
only solution is to diligently apply the law—something Hondurans no
longer have the option of doing—to resolve this crisis. The coup must
be isolated and sanctioned until its leaders realize that hijacking
democracy is not acceptable practice.
Americas MexicoBlog
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