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[Same formula as Yugoslavia: Unite, which is to say
bribe/threaten, the opposition parties, and let the
electorate know that they're going to suffer if they
vote the wrong way. Then of course there's the
subterranean campaign: Secretly (and illegally)
funding compliant parties and candidates; buying off
media publishers and editors for favorable coverage
and endorsements, as well as planting psyops material
and assisting in dirty tricks operations, etc., etc.
All the hallmarks of Western democracy-for-export over
the past half century.]

White House revives Irangate memories 
US diplomat urges action to block Ortega in Nicaragua

Special report: George Bush's America

Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Wednesday June 6, 2001
The Guardian

The US role in Central America has been brought into
sharp focus by two recent events with echoes of the
1980s civil wars in the region. 

Last week the state department sent a senior official
to Nicaragua to encourage opposition to the Sandinista
leader Daniel Ortega, who the polls suggest will win
this year's presidential election. 

But President Bush's nominee for ambassador to the UN,
John Negroponte, who is accused of turning a blind eye
to atrocities and helping the contras in the covert
war against the Sandinistas when he was ambassador to
Hondurason the 1980s, looks less certain of getting
the job now that the Republicans have lost control of
the Senate. 

Last week Lino Gutierrez, number two in the state
department's western hemisphere bureau and a former
ambassador to Nicaragua, made it clear in a barely
coded address to the American chamber of commerce in
Managua that the US would not look kindly on the
Sandinistas' re-emergence. 

Observers say the message was that those opposed to
the Sandinistas should bury their differences or
suffer the economic consequences. 

Mr Gutierrez also met leading members of the
Conservative party, whose presidential candidate is
running third to Mr Ortega and the governing Liberal
Constitutional party's candidate, Enrique Bolanos. 

In Nicaragua a candidate can win the presidency with
35% of the vote and a 5% clear lead over the next
nearest. The latest poll gives Mr Ortega 37% and Mr
Bolanos 30%. 

A Washington official said: "We seek a free, fair and
democratic election. We continue to have concerns
about Daniel Ortega ... But we will support the will
of the people." 

The Sandinistas and others in Nicaragua have accused
Washington of intervening in the election. 

Mr Ortega was a leader of the Nicaraguan revolution
which removed the dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979.
He was elected president in 1984, but lost in 1990 to
a coalition candidate, Violeta Chamorro. 

While he was president the US backed the contras -
counter-revolutionaries - in the civil war. This led
to the Irangate scandal: the use of profits from
secret weapons sales to Iran to finance the contras
after Congress voted to deny them aid. 

Meanwhile the opposition to Mr Negroponte is
intensifying. He is accused of ignoring the Honduran
government's human rights abuses when he was
ambassador there in 1981-85 in exchange for it
ensuring a base for the contras. 

His appointment must be confirmed by the Senate
foreign relations committee, whose chairman is now the
Democrat Joe Biden. Yesterday Mr Biden's
communications director, Norm Kurz, said they were
awaiting delivery of state department and CIA
documents tohelp them assess the allegations 

He said they had no intention of slowing down the
confirmation, but "some very serious questions - we're
talking about death squads" had to be addressed. 

"No one here is trying to subvert anything, it's all
in these documents and what they reveal," he said. 

A Democrat member of the committee, John Kerry, said:
"New information suggesting that the US embassy in
Honduras knew more about human rights violations in
Honduras than was communicated to the Congress and to
the public needs to be probed carefully and thoroughly
examined." 

Mr Negroponte has been in the US foreign service for
37 years and has been ambassador to Mexico and the
Philippines. 

He was a member of Henry Kissinger's team in the Paris
peace talks at the end of the Vietnam war. 

But it is his time in Honduras that has prompted most
questions. 

Jack Binns, his predecessor in Honduras, warned
Washington that the number of extra-judicial killings
was rising, but he says now that he was told to stop
reporting the abuses since they would damage the
contra operation. 

Mr Negroponte has said he was unaware of the
activities of an army unit, Battalion 3-16, which
operated as a death squad and has been accused of
killing 184 leftwingers. 

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