Honduran Coup Resolved--For Now

The Nation

By Greg Grandin

October 30, 2009

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091116/grandin

The Honduran crisis may soon be over. Maybe. The leader of the coup
government, Roberto Micheletti, agreed to a nine-point plan to end the
country's political impasse, brokered by Thomas Shannon, the former US
Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs and Barack
Obama's yet-to-be-confirmed ambassador to Brazil. The deal would
return Manuel Zelaya, the democratically elected president deposed in
a military coup four months ago, to office; in exchange, the
international community will end Honduras' diplomatic isolation and
recognize upcoming presidential elections, scheduled for November 29.

Hardliners in the coup government, however, see a loophole in the
accords, which gives the Honduran National Congress the power to
approve or reject Zelaya's return. And no sooner was the ink dry on
the accord when a top Micheletti advisor, Marcia Facusse de Villeda,
told Bloomberg News that "Zelaya won't be restored." In a barefaced
admission that the coup government was trying to buy time, Facusse
said that "just by signing this agreement we already have the
recognition of the international community for the elections."

But such a calculated reading of the agreement will not play well with
most countries, including the United Nations, the Organization of
American States, and the European Union, which have repeatedly called
for restoration of Zelaya. Brazil--whose Tegucigalpa embassy has given
Zelaya shelter since his dramatic surprise return to Honduras over a
month ago--applauded Shannon's deal, yet made it clear Zelaya had to
be reinstated. And in Honduras, the National Party, whose candidate is
expected to win next month's vote, wants this crisis to be over. Its
members in Congress may join with Liberal Party deputies loyal to
Zelaya to approve the deal, though with Congress in recess there is no
schedule set for when such a vote might take place.

The accord leaves unresolved the issue of whether the widespread human
rights violations that have taken place since the coup will be
investigated and prosecuted, only vaguely rejecting an amnesty for
"political crimes" and calling for the establishment of a truth
commission. Over a dozen Zelaya supporters have been executed over the
last three months. Security forces have illegally detained nearly
10,000 people; police and soldiers have beaten protesters and
gang-raped women. And the very idea of a negotiated solution to the
crisis grants legitimacy to those provoked it.

Still, if Zelaya were to be restored to the presidency, even just
symbolically, to preside over the November elections and supervise a
transfer of power to its winner, it would represent a significant
victory for progressive forces in the hemisphere. Here's why:

1. The attempt by Micheletti and his backers - both in and out of
Honduras - to justify the overthrow of Zelaya by claiming it was a
constitutional transfer of power will have definitively failed. If
this justification was allowed to go unchallenged, it would have set a
dangerous precedent for the rest of Latin America.

2. Efforts to rally support for the coup under the banner of
anti-leftism, or anti-Chavismo - much the way anti-communism served to
unite conservatives during the Cold War -- will likewise have failed.

3. It will confirm the political influence - and unity - of Latin
America's progressive governments, particularly Brazil and Venezuela,
which have taken the lead in demanding that the coup not stand - a
position that aligned them with much of the rest of the world.

4. It will be an important push back for Republicans like South
Carolina Senator Jim DeMint and Otto Reich, who tried to use the
crisis to push for a more hardline US policy against the left in Latin
America. It is DeMint who has put the hold on Shannon's confirmation,
as well as on the confirmation of Arturo Valenzuela, Obama's pick for
Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs.

5. It will hopefully help the Obama administration realize that in
many Latin American countries, there is no alternative to working with
the left. In Honduras, the violence of the coup government, as well as
the fact that the extended crisis smoked out its less than savory
supporters, like Reich, awoke not too pleasant memories of the Cold
War. Reich recently penned an essay urging Obama to replicate Ronald
Reagan's successful Latin American policy, which the Iran-Contra alum
believed paved the way for the fall of the Berlin Wall. Many, however,
remember too well Reagan's patronage of death squads and torturers.
And reports that Honduran planters were importing Colombian
paramilitaries to protect their interests were not helping defenders
of the coup make their case. As protests continued, it became clear to
all who paid attention that it was the good guys - trade unionists,
peasants, Native Americans, environmentalists, feminists, gay and
lesbian activists, and progressive priests - who were demanding the
return of Zelaya.

6. Zelaya's return would be a huge boost for those good guys, who are
largely responsible for the inability of the coup government to
consolidate its rule. Against all expectations, they have defied tear
gas, batons, bullets, and curfews, and engaged in creative and heroic
acts of resistance, growing stronger and more unified than they were
before the coup four months ago. They will engage with the new
government from a position of strength, while the elites who have long
ruled Honduras will be fractured and chastised.

The accords brokered by Shannon force Zelaya to renounce any attempt
to convene a constitutional convention, yet the National Front against
the Coup - the umbrella group that has coordinated opposition to
Micheletti - has made it clear that that demand is "non-negotiable"
and that it would continue to push for it, no matter who is president.

It was of course fear of a constituent assembly that provoked the coup
in the first place, and it is an irony probably not lost on those who
executed it that a large majority of Hondurans, according to a recent
poll, now think that such an assembly would be the best way to solve
the country's political crisis.

The last thing Micheletti and his supporters want to see is Mel
Zelaya, with his white cowboy hat and wide smile, addressing a large
crowd filling the streets of Tegucigalpa celebrating his
reinstallation, building momentum for fights to come. And this is why
Shannon's deal is anything but done.

Greg Grandin, a professor of history at New York University, is the
author, most recently, of Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry
Ford's Forgotten Jungle City (Metropolitan)




-- 
Robert Naiman
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to