Hillary Rescues Honduras
July 10, 2009
by Larry Johnson
|This piece is cross-posted from No Quarter with the permission of the author. The New Agenda thanks Larry Johnson for his astute analysis of the work of SOS Hillary Clinton when so few in the media seem interested in covering this story. Opinions expressed herein as those of the Larry Johnson and not necessarily those of The New Agenda.
After Barack Obama’s team of White House amateurs overreacted to the expulsion of Honduran President Zelaya two weeks ago by lining up with Fidel Castro and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, Hillary Clinton’s State Department has brought some adult leadership to the process. What Barack Obama should have done at the outset was coordinate with his Secretary of State. But apparently Barack likes to listen to the likes of Dennis McDonough, who is a political hack on par with Karl Rove. McDonough is clueless on policy but always eager to play a political angle.
Rather than check with the intelligence community, who could have briefed President Obama on the fact that intelligent agents of Cuba and Venezuela were plotting with Honduran President Zelaya to circumvent the Honduran Constitution, Obama quickly denounced the Hondurans and failed to do anything behind the scenes to prevent the blow up or reassure the Hondurans that the United States would not abandon them to Chavez. Although the Honduran military had the full support of the Honduran Supreme Court and the Honduran Congress when it moved against Zelaya, the action exposed Honduras to charges that it was reverting to the bad old days of military governance.
Enter Hillary the Savior.
Secretary of State Clinton, while condemning the action of the Honduran military, mounted a behind the scenes diplomatic effort to counter the meddling of Cuba and Venezuela. Her efforts paid dividends yesterday with the news that Nobel laureate and former Costa Rican President, Oscar Arias, would mediate the conflict. The Wall Street Journal reports:
Mrs. Clinton said both sides had agreed to work with Mr. Arias, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for brokering an end to civil wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua. She called him “the natural person to assume this role.”
Talks will begin Thursday in Costa Rica, Mr. Zelaya told Honduran radio. It was the Obama administration’s idea to bring Mr. Arias in as a mediator, said a senior U.S. official briefed on the diplomacy.
Mr. Arias could help the U.S. try to find a solution in which Mr. Zelaya returns to his post temporarily. Political parties here also have discussed moving up presidential elections already scheduled for November.
But a solution could prove tricky, with Honduras’s political establishment opposed to Mr. Zelaya resuming his post for any period.
Honduras’s acting president, Roberto Micheletti, applauded the designation of Mr. Arias and said, “We are ready for dialogue,” but added, “Only if it’s about President Zelaya’s surrendering himself to the tribunals of justice, and not about his return.” He told reporters, “No way.”
Washington has sought to make clear it prizes democratic principles by quickly condemning the coup and throwing its weight behind Mr. Zelaya, though he is a leftist ally of Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and a frequent critic of the U.S.
The Wall Street Journal is a tad hysterical here. The reality is that a deal is likely in place that will let Zelaya finish his term after a public commitment to forego his effort to circumvent the Honduran Constitution and seek a new four year term for himself.
The Honduran press sees it differently. The lead article in today’s La Prensa states:
EEUU parece abandonar a Manuel Zelaya (The United States Appears to Abandon Manuel Zelaya).
La Prensa also reported on the testimony of proposed Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs, Arturo Valenzuela who told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday that this was not just a matter of resolving Zelaya’s expulsion from Honduras but that there also is a need to look at Zelaya’s effort to circumvent the Honduran Constitution and the efforts of Venezuela to interfere in Honduran internal affairs.
This is the message that the United States should have delivered on day one but Barack Obama circumvented the State Department. It has been Hillary’s leadership over the last two weeks that has moonwalked the Hondurans back from the precipice of crisis and set them on the road to a peaceful, legal resolution of the matter that will protect Honduras from the subversion of Cuba and Venezuela. Well done Madam Secretary.
From the State Dept. Web site:

Chavez was/is looking for a chance to bait the US, to huff and bluster and act confrontational and rattle his sabre and build machismo and provoke the US into a war of words. 2 salient facts remain unaltered:
1.) the strategic insignificance of Honduras in the Western Hemisphere
2.) The intentional assignment of essentially light weight duty to a Cabinet member capable of much more and capable of addressing issues on the front burners of world affairs -negotiations could break down and the flow of bananas north interrupted…but lets hope Hillary will be allowed to serve the nation as originally intended
I want all US presidents to succeed. I can’t back Obama on Honduras, he spoke before studied the situation. I didn’t vote for him, but he is my president. On foreign policy I think he is not looking to good. Apologizing for the U.S. to foreigners. We’ve helped more countries than any other nation. I was upset with Bush, not on Iraq cause we had to get rid of Saddam, but with spending too much money over all and not vetoing bills that had earmarks. You can imagine what I think about the money that Obama is printing. Looks like we are headed for a depression.
What an awful article. What is it doing here?
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