Honduras Just Wants an Election
The U.S. demand that Mr. Zelaya be returned to power before
a vote is destructive.
By Mary O'Grady
WSJ.com
At a luncheon reception for Brazilian President Lula da Silva earlier this
year, a Brazilian official explained to me that the reason Brazil does not raise
its voice for human rights in the dictatorship of Cuba is that it does not wish
to intervene in the island's domestic affairs. Apparently the policy of
nonintervention does not apply to democratic Honduras.
Last Monday former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, who was arrested,
deported and legally deposed from office on June 28, made a stealth return to
Tegucigalpa and sought shelter at the Brazilian Embassy. Mr. Zelaya told a
Honduran radio station that his plan to return was hatched in consultation with
Mr. da Silva and Foreign Minister Celso Amorim. Brazil says it had nothing to do
with smuggling Mr. Zelaya into the country, which is tantamount to calling the
former Honduran president a liar. On that point, many Hondurans would agree.
Getty Images
Former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya inside the Brazilian Embassy in
Tegucigalpa.
Mr. Zelaya has corruption charges pending against him in Honduras but
"noninterventionist" Brazil refuses to hand him over to authorities. Instead it
is allowing him to use the embassy as a command center from which he has been
calling his violent supporters into the streets.
Mr. da Silva's sympathies with the extreme left and his friendship with Fidel
Castro are legendary. At home he doesn't engage in the leftist militancy of the
1970s because Brazilians won't have it. He is constrained by institutions,
economic reality and public pressure. His admiration for communism even waned a
bit when Venezuela and Bolivia tried to nationalize Brazilian investments. Yet
he has to feed crumbs to his notoriously left-wing foreign ministry and that's
where Honduras comes in handy.
This practice of moderation at home and extremism abroad is not unique to
Brazil. Many Latin American presidents do the same thing. What is frightening is
that the U.S. seems to be adopting a similar policy.
Last week Tegucigalpa was under attack by zelayistas. They burned
tires in the streets, vandalized property, looted businesses and blocked roads.
But the U.S. repeated its support for Mr. Zelaya. Without producing any legal
review, Washington decreed once again that a president who tried to trash the
constitution must be reinstated or it will not recognize the November
presidential election.
Why does the U.S. threaten to undermine a free election that would very
likely restore peace and security? Venezuela's Hugo Chávez may have answered
that in his speech to the United Nations General Assembly last Thursday. Taking
the podium, Mr. Chávez told his audience that he didn't smell "sulfur" the way
he did last year. This was a reference to his last U.N. tirade, when he called
George W. Bush a devil who had left behind a sulfuric odor. This year, Mr.
Chávez said, there was a smell of "hope."
Mr. Obama clearly has won acceptance from the Latin American tyrant and the
U.S.'s Honduras policy has been helpful. But will this great honor last longer
than a hiccup and yield any return? Probably not. Beyond sparing Mr. Obama the
verbal barbs he delivered to Mr. Bush, Mr. Chávez shows no inclination toward
being a good neighbor. He's engaged in a massive military buildup and he's even
talking about his own nuclear ambitions.
The Obama administration's position on the Honduran election is embarrassing.
Can anyone imagine that if Fidel Castro declared tomorrow that he would hold
free elections and invite the whole world to come as observers, the U.S. would
reject the idea because Cuba is a military dictatorship? It would be absurd.
Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli told me last week in New York that he
believes that "the only way and the best way to get out of the Honduran problem
is to allow the Honduran people to have a free, participative election where
they select whoever they think is the best candidate to run their government."
Mr. Martinelli notes that the candidates in this race were chosen while Mr.
Zelaya was still president. Honduran President Micheletti ran in a primary but
lost to Elvin Santos, who is now the candidate for Mr. Zelaya's party and who
also wants the elections to go forward. Panama once had the problem of democracy
interrupted, Mr. Martinelli says, and it was elections that restored it.
Mr. Martinelli says—as many in the Honduran government do—that it was wrong
to deport Mr. Zelaya. He also says that he was hoping that negotiations in San
José, Costa Rica, would produce an agreement to resolve the dispute. But he adds
that what Mr. Zelaya is demanding "is not within the laws and regulations of
Honduras." So now the election is the answer.
A transparent election is the path to political stability endorsed by the
Free World. It is unseemly and churlish for the U.S. to threaten that process.
Does Mr. Obama treasure kind words from Hugo Chávez that much? If so, we're all
in trouble.
Write to O'Grady@wsj.com
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