First I have heard of this. Is it true ? If so, it's pretty significant.

Charles

"Perhaps most significant is the announcement that the U.S. government
will not recognize the results of the November elections if they occur
under the de facto regime"




Some other measures announced by the U.S. government may be more
effective in cutting off air supply to the coup than the weak
sanctions and contradictory military cut-off. Visas were revoked for
coup members, including leader Roberto Micheletti, business supporters
and the 14 members of the Supreme Court. Perhaps most significant is
the announcement that the U.S. government will not recognize the
results of the November elections if they occur under the de facto
regime. This announcement, followed by a similar announcement by the
OAS, isolates the coup regime in its efforts to stage elections in a
militarized country.



Read more at: 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laura-carlsen/cutting-off-the-honduran_b_289520.html


 Laura CarlsenDirector, Americas Program, Center For International Policy
Posted: September 17, 2009 12:14 AM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts
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Cutting Off the Honduran Coup's Air Supply
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Read More: Honduran Coup, Inter-American Development Bank, Millennium
Challenge Corporation, Panamax, School Of The Americas Watch, World
News



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 Share Print CommentsThe political crawl space that Honduran coup
leaders packed themselves into on June 28 would appear to be running
out of air.

A burgeoning grassroots movement from below and continued pressures
from the international community above have reduced the space,
although the coup-mongers continue to control access to the state
apparatus and use the Armed Forces to support their stand-off with the
world and the Honduran people. They stubbornly insist that they will
run their illegal government, stage their unrecognized elections,
spend the coffers of their impoverished and divided nation--no matter
what anybody says or does. From their basement stronghold, the
strategy of hunkering down relies on military forces in the streets to
fend off challenges and reliable sources of outside supplies. With
grassroots challenges growing throughout the country and outside
supplies being cut off, the question the world is asking is: how long
can this last?

Pressure or Simulation from Above?

Measuring the coup's current air supply is a tricky undertaking. There
are few, if any historical precedents. South America's military
dictatorships lasted decades, but at a huge human cost in
assassinations and repression, without the international opprobrium
and sanctions, and with support from the U.S. government.

One part of the task at hand is to evaluate the real impact of current
sanctions against the Honduran coup. On Sept. 3, the State Department
announced the termination of $33 million dollars, including $11
million in Millennium Challenge Funds and approximately $22 in State
Department funds. The State Department finally broke down these
numbers for reporters in a teleconference: $9.4 million from USAID
(including $8.7 million in development assistance and Economic Support
Funds and $2.7 million in child survival and health), State Dept.
money at $8.96 million ($6.5 million in Foreign Military Financing,
$361,000 in International Military Education and Training, and $1.72
million in global peacekeeping operations) and $1.7 in 1206 security
assistance. This is added to the $16.5 million in military aid
suspended in July.

State Department officials closed the door on determining legally that
a military coup took place in Honduras and requiring application of
Section 7008 of the Foreign Operations law. They assured reporters
that all funds that could be suspended under Section 7008 have now
been suspended. This is a highly debatable contention that requires
further research.

In any case, the sanctions imposed are dwarfed by the money that
continues to go to the illegal regime. The State Department has
admitted that $70 million in aid--over twice the amount
suspended--will still flow to the coup. Following its meeting, the
Millennium Challenge Fund declared on Sept. 9 the formal suspension of
the $11 million. But Bill Conroy at Narco News reports that the
Millennium Challenge Fund plans to sustain an estimated $100 million
in funds to Honduras from now through the end of 2010. Funds that have
already been disbursed are not even under review.

Then there are the international financial institutions where the U.S.
has a controlling vote. Although the World Bank, Inter-American
Development Bank and International Monetary Fund announced in early
July a freeze on loans to Honduras, not all disbursements on approved
loans are halted. The Americas Program has found that the IDB approved
four loans in the four days before the coup--when the press was
already reporting an imminent rupture. This was the highest
concentration of approvals in recent history and total over $70
million dollars. IDB President Luis Alberto Moreno stated that the
bank would not be providing any new credits, meaning disbursements on
these loans continue.

Diplomatic sanctions have been equally ambiguous. The refusal to issue
the official designation of a military coup is an unjustifiable
omission in legal and moral terms, regardless of the sanctions
imposed. One reporter asked: "But for the lay person, it's very hard
to understand, I think, why you wouldn't view it as a military coup
when the military was clearly so intimately involved in his removal
from office and exile."

State Department Officials One and Two both eluded the question,
stating only that an "important signal" was being sent through the
actions. The move has more bark than bite though, since all the aid
terminated had already been suspended. Now with the seeming refusal to
ever declare the military coup, the State Department has taken a step
backwards in opposing the coup and cut Congress out of any process of
reviewing all U.S. aid to the coup regime or deciding on when
suspensions are lifted.

Sending mixed messages appears to be the official U.S. policy on
Honduras these days. The press reported that the U.S. Department of
Defense invited the same Honduran Armed Forces that carried out the
coup to participate in the regional PANAMAX exercises this week. A
flurry of confusion ensued, with SouthCom stating that Honduras will
not participate, the Honduran ambassador to Panama stating that
Honduras is participating, and a Panamanian spokesperson for the
exercises stating that Honduras was invited but will not send
warships.

Ambassador Juan Alfaro, loyal to President Zelaya, threw more fuel on
the fire by adding, "What seems odd to me is that military aid was
suspended right after the coup and this shows that the Pentagon acts
in one way and Obama in another." In another contradiction, School of
the Americas Watch reports that the U.S. training facility linked to
coup-mongers and torturers continues to train Honduran military
personnel.

Some other measures announced by the U.S. government may be more
effective in cutting off air supply to the coup than the weak
sanctions and contradictory military cut-off. Visas were revoked for
coup members, including leader Roberto Micheletti, business supporters
and the 14 members of the Supreme Court. Perhaps most significant is
the announcement that the U.S. government will not recognize the
results of the November elections if they occur under the de facto
regime. This announcement, followed by a similar announcement by the
OAS, isolates the coup regime in its efforts to stage elections in a
militarized country.

However, the U.S. has still not frozen the assets of those responsible
for the coup. Questions exist about continued funding through
democracy-promotion programs. These measures, or lack of measures,
provide a continued air supply to the de facto regime. Support from
international rightwing organizations also sustains the Honduran coup,
although details of material and training support from these sources
are scarce.

Hondurans Step up Grassroots Organizing

As all this goes on, the Honduran National Front Against the Coup is
consolidating the movement for a return to constitutional order and a
constitutional assembly. It decided to boycott the elections and
candidates are being met by angry demonstrations throughout the
country.

Through a combination of spontaneous local organizing and an explicit
decision from the Front, organizing efforts have spread from the
capital city of Tegucigalpa into the departments. A rotating national
committee with regional representatives was formed. On the Atlantic
coast, the city of La Ceiba has been particularly active. Groups have
formed to defend teachers arrested for suspending classes two days a
week to participate in the resistance in La Ceiba, El Paraiso and
other parts of the country. New women's organizations have also formed
to join the resistance to the coup in western Honduras, and poor
neighborhoods in Tegucigalpa have created their own organizations to
coordinate community actions.

The National Agrarian Institute has been in the hands of anti-coup
organizations since June 28 and demonstrations have paralyzed other
government institutions for periods of time since the coup. A lively
debate exists on how to step up the pressure through these actions
while maintaining the commitment to non-violence and avoiding
situations that could lead to violent repression and conflict. The
defense of human rights is an on-going pillar of the movement, as
demonstrators face increasing repression and arbitrary arrests.

The battle to oust the illegal regime is far from over. Grassroots
organizations in the United States have mobilized to support Honduran
efforts for democracy, fresh from fact-finding visits to Honduras.

School of the Americas Watch is now touring major U.S. cities (see
schedule here). I'll be speaking about the coup in several U.S. cities
in October and Rights Action will also be touring in October (more
information at [email protected]). U.S. citizens can attend these
events to learn about what the press is not reporting and find ways to
support democracy in the Hemisphere.

Follow Laura Carlsen on Twitter: www.twitter.com/tortuga7

The political crawl space that Honduran coup leaders packed themselves
into on June 28 would appear to be running out of air. A burgeoning
grassroots movement from below and continued pressures from ...
The political crawl space that Honduran coup leaders packed themselves
into on June 28 would appear to be running out of air. A burgeoning
grassroots movement from below and continued pressures from ...


Read more at: 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laura-carlsen/cutting-off-the-honduran_b_289520.html
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