Military
Coup in Honduras: Is It against Obama Too?
Dr. Wim Dierckxsens (Holanda).- Dr. Antonio Jarquin T (Nicaragua).- Dr Paulo Nakatani (Brasil) Dr.
Paulo Campanario (Brasil).- Dr. Reinaldo Carcanholo (Brasil).- Dr.
Remy Herrera (Francia)
July 12 – 2009
www.observatoriodelacrisis.org
Two events, three
contexts, the answer, two premises, two questions, two consequences and five
conclusions and actions.
Event 1
Honduras (Central America): A country of 7.5
million people; one of the smallest and poorest countries in Latin America
(poverty rate is 60 %). Known as "Banana Republic" because it was
absolutely controlled by the American "United Fruit Company". Located in its territory is a US
military base, the “Soto Cano” (Palmerola) base (1), used previously by the United States to launch open and secret
military operations against other countries. Honduras has a
history of military coups supported up by the USA.
Manuel Zelaya, the
democratically elected president: His house is assaulted by soldiers in the dawn
of June 28th, 2009. The president is violently kidnapped wearing pyjamas. He is
taken in an airplane out of his country and left in the runway of the
international airport of Costa Rica. A de
facto government settles. It stops all energy, communication, radio and
television services. It imposes restrictions to free mobilization and rights.
The unarmed population is mobilized to oppose the coup. The army represses,
shoots, kills or hurts many unarmed citizens which are peacefully protesting.
There are several violations of the human rights. The defeated president states: “My "crimes" are: a.- To promote a consultation or poll
to the population asking if they would like to vote in the next November
presidential elections about the review “yes” or “no” of the Constitution of
the Republic and b.- To promote
slight social reforms. Later, the aggressors charge the president with other
crimes that they never presented according to the state of right in this
country. The accomplices of the army are a group of political and rich
businessmen. The country was paralyzed by the popular movement. The aggressors
were isolated by the international community.
Event 2
Latin America: Historically
governed by military dictatorships and coups d’état lead by different American
governments. The region moves toward installation of democratic governments in
recent decades; most of them progressive with different left, centre and right tendencies.
Decades of bloodbath, tortures, death squads, guerrillas and wars are left
behind, and there are slow democratic advances and installation of civil
governments; the soldiers being returned to the barracks and subordinated to
civilian control.
Three contexts:
1. – One theory
is that the coup is limited to Honduras without any support, planning, or
intervention by foreign forces. However, “No Latin American government believes
this”.
2. - The coup
is against the democratic advances of all Latin American countries by striking
at one of the weakest links in the chain of nations that are building democracy
in the continent, with the aim of establishing military control or changing the
nature of the civilian administrations and reversing democratic advances. Hence the unanimous condemnation of the coup
by all the governments of the region.
3. - If this ‘experiment’
succeeds it could spread to other countries and regions. At a time of serious
crisis and world economic collapse centred on the United States, anything is possible. That is the reason
why there has been immediate and universal rejection of the coup both
regionally and internationally (2).
The response:
Within 24 hours
of the coup, the presidents and foreign ministers of 34 Latin American states
met, condemned it and demanded the reinstatement of the ousted president in organisations
including such as the Central-American Integration System (SICA in Spanish),
RIO Group, Union of South-American Nations (UNASUR in Spanish), CARICOM
(Caribbean Community) OAS (USA and Canada included). This was subsequently supported
by the 192 member states of the United Nations (2). There was an unparalleled
historical event coming from governments of diverse tendencies and from all
regions of the world. Judging by the universality and speed of the reaction, it
seems that first Latin Americans and then all countries in the world, even
developed countries, considered the coup in Honduras an experimental laboratory
of secret forces that could be extended to their own countries. Nazism and
fascism are still in the collective memory.
If allowed to succeed, the Honduras coup could be the beginning of a
neo-fascist wave against world democracy.
Two
premises
1. - In Latin
America, it is unthinkable that the coup in Honduras could have occurred without
support from the United States military, intelligence or political
apparatus. Even more unthinkable is the idea that
without U.S. support the illegal regime could have so far resisted unanimous
international and national pressure, to the point of killing people, violating
human rights or violently attacking a peaceful and defenceless rally. The unanimous
and historical convergence of condemnation by all left, centre and right
governments of the OAS and even more, of the 192 countries of the UN confirm
so.
2. - The whole
international community and in particular U.S. President Obama and Mrs.
Clinton, the secretary of State, have rejected the coup and soldier’s
insubordination in Honduras. They have agreed that President Zelaya remains the
legitimate president of Honduras. Besides, they have joined the world protest
that demands Honduran president’s reinstatement and for the
Generals and accomplices to be charged for their crimes.
Two embarrassing questions:
1. - Did President Obama and
Secretary Hillary Clinton have prior knowledge of the coup and of the possible
participation of civilians or of the military, political and intelligence
structures from the USA? ... Did the president approve the operation as Kennedy
approved the Bay of Pigs invasion in
Cuba? (3).... Did the
American diplomats and soldiers in Honduras known about the impending
coup? ... Did they
take part in it or were informed?
2. If the US Americans at
any level knew about the coup beforehand, why did they not take steps to
prevent it, to be consistent with the statements of President Obama and Secretary
Clinton during the Vth Summit of the Americas Presidents in Trinidad and Tobago
in April?
If the answer is "Yes,
Obama and Clinton had prior knowledge", then the international
community was deceived and the Vth Summit of the Americas was a ruse to pacify
Latin American opinion, while the United States was preparing a clandestine
political and military operation in Honduras. This is not just a coup in Honduras: it is a
coup against all Latin American countries; a military-political operation
intended to reverse the progress made through peaceful and democratic means underway
in the whole continent. It threatens all civilian governments, whether of the
left, the centre or the right. Nevertheless, many governments in Latin America
are prepared to give President Obama the benefit of doubt and prefer to think
that this operation was prepared behind his back.
However, if the answer is
"No", President Obama had no prior knowledge”, this would mean that there
was illegal intervention within the USA of sinister forces in the
political, military or intelligence apparatus, usurping or commanding the
powers and privileges of the U.S. President with respect to the conduct of U.S.
foreign policy, by attacking other
democratic state such as Honduras, a friend of USA, without the approval
of the president (given the public denunciation of the coup of President Obama
and Secretary Clinton). Worse still, this would imply the presence in the
official state apparatus of the U.S. of subalterns --civil, military diplomatic
or in intelligence-- insubordination to the President of the United States.
In either case, a serious
violation of international and of U.S. law would have occurred. An
investigation from the same "U.S. establishment" should be called for
to determine guilt and corresponding punishment, and to restore to the
President Obama the power he acquired from the people of the United States in
democratic elections. The same is necessary with President Zelaya in
Honduras.
Consequences
1. - It is, therefore, of the
utmost importance to clear up this case. If there was U.S. involvement but
President Obama was unaware of it, then there was a military insubordination and
a coup in Honduras and a kind insubordination or/and coup d’état in the
USA against President Obama; or even worse, a coup from an alternative force
or government in the shadows of that country, a force with access to its
military apparatus and maybe to its conventional weapons and weapons of mass
destruction. Such an alternative force would have the
means to overthrow or blackmail any government in the world, or to impose
a new era of world neo-fascism control from the shadows: a situation that is a
very serious danger for the international security.
2. – As a
consequence, we would have: soldiers’ insubordination in Honduras,
insubordination in USA and to the presidential authority of two democratic
governments whose presidents were elected by the people: a coup in Honduras and
something similar that is in process in USA.
Five conclusions
1. President Zelaya should be restored
immediately and unconditionally and those responsible for the coup should be
punished. There should be no dialogue or mediation with the “de facto
government” except for the purpose of carrying the OAS’s decision expressed
by the clear mandate to its Secretary General Insulza. What is unacceptable is
further delay, weakening, deviation or reversal of the OAS and UN decision. The
international community must also demand that United States carry out an
immediate, exhaustive and public investigation and determination of the
involvement of U.S. civilians or officials in the coup, or whether they
encouraged or participated or even had prior knowledge of it.
2. - The
events in Honduras and the delay in implementing the demand of the entire Latin
American and Caribbean region to re-establish the constitutional order in that
country, point to the need to consider
the removal of all U.S. military bases in the region, which are dangerous for
its incipient democracies. This can be discussed in the framework of the
RIO GROUP or of the OAS.
3. -. A new era of mutual respect
should be promoted between the civilian/democratic governments of Latin America
and the United States. Military
dictatorships, open or secret coups d’état, authoritarianisms, and manipulation
of the rule of law and of democracy should be proscribed. Governments should be firm but prudent in
their behaviour and their rhetoric in order to avoid unnecessary confrontation
and conflicts. Re-elections or ‘continuism’ should be
avoided where they are not supported by the majority of the population
expressed in a clean and transparent manner; for they provide a pretext
for destabilization and foreign intervention aimed at reversing the
democratic advances made in the region.
4. - Apart from what the
Honduran citizens internally decide, those responsible for the coup and their
accomplices should be internationally prosecuted and punished by the world
community. They have jeopardised the
other democracies in the continent and in the world, creating a dangerous precedent
that goes far beyond Honduras. The crimes committed are unacceptable and they
should be held to account in whatever country to which they travel. They have
damaged the vital security of other nations, above all in Latin America and the
Caribbean; and their exemplary punishment is imperative to prevent coups d’état
all over the world.
5. The unequal
confrontation between Honduran civil society and the military is further
demonstration that the people are defenceless in the face of coups d’état, military
uprisings or authoritarian governments. A preventive, self-defence strategy
should aim at strengthening civil society organizations and international
solidarity so as to be able to act effectively in a crisis. This will
discourage the willingness to infringe democracy, the institutional order and
the state of rights and strengthen democratic governments against coups,
authoritarianism and militarism. The defence also goes throughout the integration of
Latin American and the Caribbean. What is behind the effort to impose
a new era of dictatorships is the foreign control of the rich Latin American
resources. We have entered a new era in the battle for Latin America, one which
requires struggle on various fronts and in the most diverse scenarios.
Note:
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organizations and governments. It may be freely reproduced with attribution to
its original source www.observatoriodelacrisis.org.
_______________________________________________
(1). - In the
“José Soto Cano" base is located the combined task force called "BRAVO",
composed of army’s troops, security and air force, and 1st battalion regiment
No 228 of the American aviation. It has 600 American troops, 18 HU-60, Black
Hawk, and CH-47 Chinook combat air units. The President of Honduras announced
in May 31st, 2008, that it would be used for commercial flights and
construction of a civil facility financed with funds of the Bolivarian
Alternatives for the Americas (ALBA). The oil reserve of the Patuka River was
discussed with the ALBA. This is the same area offered to the USA by a previous
government (Maduro) to build another US military base in the Mosquitia area. In
January 2009 President Zelaya sent a personal letter to President Obama
complaining about interventionism and demanding that the new Administration respect
the principle of non intervention. The head of the Air Force of Honduras,
General PRICE SUAZO, studied and majored in the School of The Americas (USA), in
1995. The General Romeo Vásquez, Chief of the Army and head of the coup is also
graduated in the same school, in the ‘80s. In the same years, OTTO REICH (Cuban
member of the Cuban- American National Foundation), Former vice-secretary of state
for Latin America in the G.W. Bush Administration, OLIVER NORTH (Iran-Contras
scandal), and JOHN DIMITRI NEGROPONTE (Ambassador of the USA and now in the US
State Department), all used the military base of PALMEROLA as a launching
platform for destabilization of Nicaragua and the war of the ‘80s against this
country. They are guilty of the killing of 70 thousand Nicaraguans and they are
considered by Hondurans, the operators of the American military coup in this
country. OTTO REICH agreed with the coup in the American congress showing its responsibility
and implication. Republican Senator JOHN McCain coordinated the reception of
the representatives of the Honduran Coup D’état in the US congress. (Read the US lawyer Eva Golinger’s denunciation
of the coup in ARGENPRESS.info- July 13th)
(2) After the coup in Honduras and following the same
format, a judge presented accusations against president Evo Morales in Bolivia and
then in the OAS.
(3) The invasion into the Bay of Pigs in Cuba forced
this country to get extra continental protection to defend its sovereignty. The
consequence was the “Missile crisis in Cuba” when the world was close to a
thermonuclear war.