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Obama's Honduran debacle

Examiner Editorial
November 4, 2009

Manuel Zelaya (left) has been successfully neutralized, no thanks to the White House's schizophrenic foreign policy.

After months of ill-advised interference by the United States, two Honduran presidents are back on speaking terms. Interim leader Roberto Micheletti and the ousted Manuel Zelaya have reportedly reached an agreement that could return Zelaya to power as a lame duck for roughly one month, before a newly elected president takes office. President Obama may spin this as a U.S. victory, but in fact it's the culmination of the administration's mystifying diplomacy.

The deal still must be ratified by the Honduran Congress and Supreme Court (which legally removed him in the first place). The State Department is confident the Honduran legislators and judges will reinstate him. In any event, a department spokesman said, the U.S. will recognize the results of the regularly scheduled presidential election later this month. Neither Zelaya or Micheletti are candidates in the coming election.

There are some positives here. Even if Zelaya returns to power for a meaningless month, Micheletti has won the battle. Although the two men are from the same political party, Micheletti nonetheless deprived Zelaya of power for five critical months and thus blocked his illegal attempt to seek another term, something that is definitively banned by the Honduran constitution. Micheletti also guaranteed that constitutional elections will be held to replace Zelaya, no matter who is interim president. After November's balloting, a legitimate new president will take power, mindful of the one-term limit imposed by the Honduran constitution.Still, this happy ending in no way justifies Obama' bone-headed interference in Honduran internal affairs, which destabilized that nation's political institutions and caused totally unnecessary violence and deaths.

His Honduran decisions make clear that Obama does not understand the true threat to democracy in today's Latin America: It's no longer guerrillas or generals of the 1980s, but rather elected presidents who weaken legal curbs on their own power and then refuse to step down. Exhibit A: Venezuela's Hugo Chavez. Obama clearly was not promoting democracy in Honduras by instantly siding with Zelaya, who hoped to follow in Chavez's footsteps and was actively aided in that effort by the Venezualan strong man. Even with a positive conclusion, however, this fiasco reinforces the impression Obama often left during last year's campaign that he is inadequately prepared to make critical decisions on foreign policy.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Hostile Knowledge

Nov 4, 2009

Zelaya's "return" has failed in the Honduran Committee.

Now, the Corkroaches in the WH are crawling around everywhere and hissing.

Hiss! Hiss! Hiss!

 

JamesJ

Nov 4, 2009

Obama's _______ debacle.
You fill in the blank

 

JamesJ

Nov 4, 2009

Obama's _______ debacle.
You fill in the blank

 

Diogenes

Nov 4, 2009

What debacle? This is just the culmination of all of the DICTATORS of the Western Hemisphere uniting into a Marxist Cartel, the leader, Hugo Chavez of the great country of Venezuela and his followers in El Salvador, Cuba, and the USSA, Comrade ObaMao.

 

Apostle53

Nov 4, 2009

Prime example of Obama's America's suicide diplomatic policies and his own political leanings.

 

CalGal

Nov 4, 2009

Perhaps Obama is naive and unprepared about Latin America's real threats. But aren't you also struck that Obama's early-career statement the U.S. Constitution was insufficiently redistributionist together with discounting the Honduras Constitution means he disregards written laws?

 

DANSHANTEAL

Nov 5, 2009

IN TRYING TO PLEASE LATIN AND SOUTH AMERICANS, WE PLEASED NO ONE. SAME IN THE MIDDLE EAST. HILLARY LOOKS LIKE A YO-YO ON SETTLEMENTS. WHERE ARE ARE THE TRIED AND TRUE PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY?

 


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