WikiLeaks Honduras: State Department Busted on Support of Coup
Tuesday 30 November 2010
by: Robert Naiman, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

The streets of Honduras following a coup in July 2009. (Photo: codepinkhq)
By July 24, 2009, the US government was totally clear about the basic facts of what took place in Honduras on June 28, 2009. The US embassy in Tegucigalpa sent a cable to Washington with the subject, "Open and Shut: The Case of the Honduran Coup," asserting that "there is no doubt" that the events of June 28 "constituted an illegal and unconstitutional coup." The embassy listed arguments being made by supporters of the coup to claim its legality, and dismissed them thus: "None ... has any substantive validity under the Honduran constitution." The Honduran military clearly had no legal authority to remove President Manuel Zelaya from office or from Honduras, the embassy said, and their action - the embassy described it as an "abduction" and "kidnapping" - was clearly unconstitutional.
It is inconceivable that any top US official responsible for US policy in Honduras was not familiar with the contents of the July 24 cable, which summarized the assessment of the US embassy in Honduras on key facts that were politically disputed by supporters of the coup regime. The cable was addressed to Tom Shannon, then assistant secretary of state for western hemisphere affairs; Harold Koh, the State Department's legal adviser; and Dan Restrepo, senior director for western hemisphere affairs at the National Security Council. The cable was sent to the White House and to Secretary of State Clinton.
But despite the fact that the US government was crystal clear on what had transpired, the US did not immediately cut off all aid to Honduras except "democracy assistance," as required by US law.
Instead, a month after this cable was sent, the State Department, in its public pronouncements, pretended that the events of June 28 - in particular, "who did what to whom" and the constitutionality of these actions - were murky and needed further study by State Department lawyers, despite the fact that the State Department's top lawyer, Harold Koh, knew exactly "who did what to whom" and that these actions were unconstitutional at least one month earlier. The State Department, to justify its delay in carrying out US law, invented a legal distinction between a "coup" and a "military coup," claiming that the State Department's lawyers had to determine whether a "military coup" took place, because only that determination would meet the legal threshold for the aid cutoff.
Question: And so - sorry, just a follow-up. If this is a coup - the State Department considers this a coup, what's the next step? And I mean, there is a legal framework on the US laws dealing with countries that are under coup d'etat? I mean, what's holding you guys [back from taking] other measures according [to] the law?
Senior State Department Official: I think what you're referring to, Mr. Davila, is whether or not this is - has been determined to be a military coup. And you're correct that there are provisions in our law that have to be applied if it is determined that this is a military coup. And frankly, our lawyers are looking at that exact question. And when we get the answer to that, you are right, there will be things that - if it is determined that this was a military coup, there will be things that will kick in.
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As you know, on the ground, there's a lot of discussion about who did what to whom and what things were constitutional or not, which is why our lawyers are really looking at the event as we understand them in order to come out with the accurate determination.
But the July 24 cable shows that this was nonsense. The phrase "military coup" occurs nowhere in the document, a remarkable omission in a cable from the embassy presenting its analysis of the June 28 events' constitutionality and legality one month after the fact, if that were a crucial distinction in assessing US policy. And indeed, initial press reports on the statements of top US officials in response to the coup made no such distinction, using the descriptions "coup" and "military coup" interchangeably.
Why did the State Department drag its feet, pretending that facts which it knew to be clear-cut were murky? Why didn't the State Department speak publicly after July 24 with the same moral clarity as the July 24 cable from the embassy in Honduras? Had the State Department shared publicly the embassy's clear assessment of the June 28 events after July 24, history might have turned out differently, because supporters of the coup in the United States - including Republican members of Congress and media talking heads - continued to dispute basic facts about the coup which the US embassy in Honduras had reported were not subject to reasonable dispute, and US media reporting on the coup continued to describe these facts as subject to reasonable dispute, long after the embassy had firmly declared that they were not.
As the Center for Economic and Policy Research noted in an August 2009 report, in the previous 12 months the US had responded to other coups by cutting US aid within days. In these cases - in Africa - there was no lengthy deliberation on whether a "coup" was a "military coup."
What was the difference?
A key difference was that Honduras is in Central America, "our backyard," so different rules applied. Top officials in Washington supported the political aims of the coup. They did not nominally support the means of the coup, as far as we know, but they supported its political end: the removal of the ability of President Zelaya and his supporters to pursue a meaningful reform project in Honduras. On the other hand, they were politically constrained not to support the coup openly, since they knew it to be illegal and unconstitutional. Thus, they pursued a "diplomatic compromise" which would "restore constitutional order" while achieving the coup's central political aim: removal of the ability of President Zelaya and his supporters to pursue a meaningful reform project in Honduras. The effect of their efforts at "diplomatic compromise" was to allow the coup to stand, a result that these supporters of the coup's political aims were evidently content with.
Why does this matter now?
First, the constitutional and political crisis in Honduras is ongoing, and the failure of the US to take immediate, decisive action in response to the coup was a significant cause of the ongoing crisis. After nominally opposing the coup, and slowly and fitfully implementing partial sanctions against the coup regime in a way that did not convince the coup regime that the US was serious, the US moved to support elections under the coup regime which were not recognized by the rest of the hemisphere, and today the US is lobbying for the government created by that disputed election to be readmitted to the Organization of American States, in opposition to most of the rest of the hemisphere, despite ongoing, major violations of human rights in Honduras, about which the US is doing essentially nothing.
Second, the relationship of actual US policy - as opposed to rhetorical pronouncements - to democracy in the region is very much a live issue from Haiti to Bolivia.
Yesterday there was an election in Haiti. This election was funded by the US, despite the fact that major parties were excluded from participation by the government's electoral council, a fact that Republican and Democratic Members of Congress, in addition to NGOs, complained about without result. The Washington Post reports that the election ended with "nearly all the major candidates calling for the results to be tossed out amid 'massive fraud'": "12 of the 19 candidates on Sunday's ballot appeared together at a raucous afternoon news conference to accuse the government of President Rene Preval of trying to steal the election and install his chosen candidate, Jude Celestin."
Yesterday's election in Haiti had the fingerprints of the US government all over it. It was funded by the US "Security" for the election was purportedly provided by UN troops, paid for by the US And the crucial historical context of the election was the 2004 coup that deposed democratically elected President Jean Bertrand Aristide, a coup engineered by the US with years of economic destruction clearly intended to topple the elected government.
Last week, Bolivian President Evo Morales called out the US for its recent history of supporting coups in the region.
AP's treatment of President Morales' remarks was instructive:
Morales also alleged US involvement in coup attempts or political upheaval in Venezuela in 2002, Honduras in 2009 and Ecuador in 2010.
"The empire of the United States won," in Honduras, Morales said, a reference to the allegations of former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya that the US was behind his ouster.
"The people of the Americas in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, we won," Morales continued. "We are three to one with the United States. Let's see what the future brings."
US officials have repeatedly denied involvement in all of those cases and critics of the United States have produced no clear evidence. [my emphasis]
It's certainly true that critics have produced "no clear evidence" of US "involvement" in any of these cases - if your standard for "clear evidence" of US "involvement" is a US government document that dictated in advance everything that subsequently happened. But this would be like saying that critics have produced "no clear evidence" for the Armenian genocide because researchers haven't yet found a Turkish Mein Kampf. [Some who dispute that there was an "Armenian genocide" do actually claim something like this - "there is no proof of a plan" - but claims like this are generally not taken seriously by US media - except when the US government is an author of the crime, and the crime is recent.]
In the case of the coup in Venezuela in 2002, we know the following:
- Groups in Venezuela that participated in the coup had been supported financially and politically by the US.
- The CIA had advance knowledge of the plans for a coup, and did nothing to warn the Venezuelan government, nor did the US do anything meaningful to try to stop the coup.
- although the US knew in advance about the plans for a coup, when these events played out, the US tried to claim that there was no coup.
- the US pushed for international recognition of the coup government.
- the International Monetary Fund, which would not take such action without advance approval from the United States, announced its willingness to support the coup government a few hours after the coup took place.
These facts about US government "involvement" in the coup in Venezuela are documented in Oliver Stone's recent movie, South of the Border. This is why it's so important for as many Americans as possible to see this movie: because there are basic facts about the relationship of actual US government policies - as opposed to rhetoric - to democracy in Latin America that major US media simply cannot be counted upon to report straight. In order to successfully agitate for meaningful reform of US government policy in Latin America, Americans have to know what the actual policy of the US government has been.
And this is why Just Foreign Policy is urging Americans to organize house parties on December 10 - Human Rights Day - to watch South of the Border. You can sign up to host a screening here.
Here is a clip from South of the Border, in which Scott Wilson, formerly foreign editor of the Washington Post, describes the "involvement" of the US in the coup in Venezuela:
And here is a clip from South of the Border in which President Morales talks with Oliver Stone about the role of the media:
Oliver Stone: "Now [Morales] joining the Hugo ranks, becoming more the 'bad left' in the American media."
President Morales: "The media will always try to criminalize the fight against neoliberalism, colonialism, and imperialism. It's almost normal. The worst enemy I have is the media."
South of the Border Clip #2 from Cinema Libre Studio on Vimeo.
Robert Naiman is Policy Director at Just Foreign Policy.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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This is awesome.
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 10:13 — Anonymous (not verified)This is awesome. Game-Set-Match.
Of course nothing will come of this revelation (in terms of a change in policy or holding anyone accountable). But it's a tremendous moral success for Wikileaks and the critical need for transparency.
Which means that the wizards behind the curtain must be shitting twinkies. Which means this will most likely be answered with a regressive security smackdown of some sort.
But for once, the power elite have something to fear. The game is afoot, and nothing is assured right now. The rules are changing. Great article about that here www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/nov/29/the-revolution-will-be-digitised
I'm curious to see how much
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 10:46 — Anonymous (not verified)I'm curious to see how much coverage this revelation gets in the MSM.
I'm betting it'll get as much coverage as the recent agreement between Russia and China to abandon the use of the US dollar in their bilateral trade and to use their own currencies in its place.
All this business is done on
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 12:51 — Anonymous (not verified)All this business is done on taxpayer's money while the corporations who instead of paying taxes spend on lobbying and decide who will conduct their murky bidding on taxpayers' money...
Uncle Sam can teach lessons to banana republics!
Yes, this is a big deal. It
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 14:24 — Karlin (not verified)Yes, this is a big deal. It is now in the public sphere, even if it is not going to be reported on in the mainstream media.
Perhaps the whole sordid history of US involvement in the South American "socialist resistance" will become known by a much wider audience than just us alternative media types.
The US inspired and supported covert assassinations, kidnappings, and torture of socialist leaders, and of course the election frauds, are not longer a "secret", thanks to WikiLeaks.
I am concerned about the
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 17:49 — Bubbiesue (not verified)I am concerned about the U.S. "playing dumb" in too many of these cases. Laws and treaties were made and ratified for a reason.
Who will be left to stand up for us when the inevitable coup/military coup/election decided by the Supremes, not the People in the House of Representatives happens? It's happened before in history, (National Socialist Germany comes to mind on a smaller scale) and I believe we are watching the start of it now.
No, I'm not trying to preach just doom and gloom. On the contrary, I believe everybody with skin in the game--that is, all Americans--need to begin now to support good, thinking, progressive candidates in Spring elections and all elections. Everyone should be sure to vote, so you can say you did your part, at the very least.
Our involvements with South
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 18:09 — kurt (not verified)Our involvements with South America are horror and terrorist in nature. Our genocides taking place in the Middle east at the moment are based on lies and manufactured hatred. Only the reinvestigation of Building Seven and 9-11 have any chance of restoring sanity and truth to the big lie we all now find ourselves living in , even here on Truth Out.
Happy New Year
As I wrote on my blog
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 18:17 — Ulf Erlingsson (not verified)As I wrote on my blog Sunday, the cable by Llorens is deliberately misleading. What it proves is that he misled Washington to believe that there had been a coup d'état, by lying about the fact that Mel Zelaya had violated a direct court order, which warranted his arrest (see the legal report from the Human Rights Foundation for an excellent and clear account). My blog article can be found at http://blog.erlingsson.com/?p=4092
The Honduras Supreme Court
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 18:51 — Anonymous (not verified)The Honduras Supreme Court ordered the military to kick out President Zelayathe, according to their constitution. Their president was attempting to become a dictator for life, which is also against their constitution. Even President Manuel Zelayathe's own political party supported this sudden deportation. The writer of this article is obviously anti-democratic and anti-constitutional. Only an idiot would support this would-be dictator.
I still don't understand why
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 19:13 — jwa1968 (not verified)I still don't understand why people think what happened in Honduras was a coup of any type. The Honduran Congress impeached Mel Zelaya and the country's Supreme Court issued an arrest warrant for the military to seize the impeached President who had clearly violated the country's constitution by proposing a referendum. Only the Supreme Electoral Tribunal of Honduras can do anything of the sort. The Honduran Constitution is clear in stating the the executive immediately forfeits the office upon violation of the document and its provisions.
To Ulf Erlingsson: I don't
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 19:23 — Anonymous (not verified)To Ulf Erlingsson: I don't believe that Llorens lied about the fact that Zelaya had violated a direct court order which warranted his arrest. The fact is that the Supreme court issued an order for the ARREST of Zelaya and not that he should be removed to Costa Rica. The Court had the right to issue the arrest order, however, according to the Constitution, the police, and NOT the military, have the right to make arrests. The Supreme Court was wrong in issuing the order to the military. And the chief military officer has admitted that the military took the decision on their own to forcibly deport Zelaya out of Honduras. He also admitted that what the military did was illegal. However, he said, "We will be exonerated." There WAS a coup d'état.
America.s involvement in
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 19:25 — kurt (not verified)America.s involvement in south America has always been the suppression of Democracy and cilil liberties. Big business inerests have always led our South American foreign policy.In this world you can either trust what your rulers tell you or you can seek the truth. Investigate 9-11
The spooks working on the
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 19:48 — Anonymous (not verified)The spooks working on the Honduras psyop coup-spin are very good -- I've yet to see an article about it that isn't quickly visited by them to spin the coup away. They can try to make white mean black, but this article cannot be refuted with their specious legalities.
Honduras is a vicious pariah that deserves the opprobrium it's getting. I hope the families get the comeuppance they deserve, and that the security forces that do their bidding get a taste of their own medicine someday.
It is clear the apologists
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:05 — Cybernaught (not verified)It is clear the apologists for right wing violence and murder have found Truthout ...
On the question, it seems likely the US consulted with the coup leaders prior to the illegal action. That too, would be part of the usual MO.
Nothing new here, the USA
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:08 — bob (not verified)Nothing new here, the USA has been doing this stuff since the revolution, certainly since the Monroe Doctrine. Read (free on line)--"war is a racket", written by a USMC General who was an enforcer in the Americas. The latest book from Naomi Kline--"Shock Doctrine" shows how world wide the US Friedmanite doctrine has become; starting in the Americas & going around the world. Yes Virginia, even in China & Russia.
I totally agree with the
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:24 — Anonymous (not verified)I totally agree with the aforementioned comments and want to simply add here that it is humanity's responsibility to inform those who are unaware of the powers of the 'elite' to destroy both wealth and human life.
It is time for the 'collective' to unite in order to save all of humanity.
Thank you Wikileaks for all you do to awaken the masses!! May you have a very special place in the 'Kingdom' !
Prepare for shortages ..... everyone! Survival is the key right now!
Cat
To Anonymous: Llorens lied
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:24 — Ulf Erlingsson (not verified)To Anonymous: Llorens lied about it by saying that it had been alleged but not proven that Zelaya had violated the laws. Since he had violated a direct court order ordering him to demonstrate with a written report that he had followed their order to cease with an activity that, if continued, would likely be in violation of the constitution (it was later confirmed that it would have), he had clearly broken the law. It was well beyond an allegation, and thus it was a lie by Llorens to omit that fact and obfuscate about what transpired before Zelaya was deposed. Finally, Congress is the supreme voice of the people between elections, and the Supreme Court is the highest interpreter of the law. To call what happened a coup is thus tantamount to considering a president on par with a king or an emperor.
To Cybernaught: I have read
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:30 — Ulf Erlingsson (not verified)To Cybernaught: I have read Truthout since 2003, and I am no apologist for any violence on any side of the political spectrum (and no, I am not a "rightist" - in fact I was in Dennis Kucinich's national campaign committee when he ran for president in 2004). It is precisely since I am against all coup d'etats that I cannot call the stopping of a coup a coup. You see, Zelaya was committing a coup d'etat. He had already sown the seeds, and if he had not been deposed, the coup would have been a fait accomplis. It would be useful if you who commented made sure to get to know Honduras a little bit better first, and not think that all of Latin America is the same, and that every case fits in the same mold.
http://www.counterpunch.com/k
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:44 — Anonymous (not verified)http://www.counterpunch.com/kozloff06292009.html
http://www.counterpunch.com/ross06292009.html
Ulf Spook To Read
The cable clearly said is
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 20:57 — LatAm (not verified)The cable clearly said is was a conspiracy among the MILITARY, the supreme court, and congress. The army executed the coup, as it has done before. The "military coup" issue is fantasy.
The Honduran constitution says nothing about referendums. The coupsters claimed that Z was planning to stay in office, but it was physically and scientifically impossible for him to do so. A vote (cuarta urna) on a referendum to amend the constitution generally would have taken place the same day a new prez was chosen, and it would then have taken 2-3 years, if ever, to get the referendum set up, and, if that were approved, have a vote on the results of a constitutional convention. HRF is a right-wing decoy founded in cooperation with the CIA. Google Thor Halvorssen Mendoza.
Chavez is a lunatic, but a
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 21:00 — Ulf Erlingsson (not verified)Chavez is a lunatic, but a dangerous lunatic. Last night I saw him on TV news saying that "sí, ordenó la occupación de estas casas particulares. El congreso no puede ordenar occupaciones, no tienen poder ocupatoria, pero yo sí, yo tengo poder ocupatoria." If the world had read Mein Kampf they would have known who Hitler was long before 1939. If you would listen to Hugo Chavez you would know who he is.
Zelaya was not commiting a
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 21:13 — LatAm (not verified)Zelaya was not commiting a coup. He proposed a constitutional convention to address rights of labor and minorities, foreign bases, and so on. The oligarchy would not stand for it, nor for his joining ALBA, nor for his saying that in order to join ALBA he "did not need permission from any imperialism." His term expired shortly after the elections; he was not a candidate in the elections, and candidacies had closed before the coup. And, he was facing a hard-line oligarchy that in any event would not have permitted any referendum to be held, nor any constitutional convention. When the oligarchs wanted a constitutional amendment, they did it through the congress they controlled, never through the people: the current constitution was negotiated between the army and the congress. The dictator-for-life argument is pure lies. I read the entire constitution, by the way, long ago. The "legal" arguments for the coup are nonsense. And I know Honduran history: like that Micheletti himself had tried to amend the term of the president in the 1980s, when the president was to his liking.
Ulf spook very funny --
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 21:17 — Anonymous (not verified)Ulf spook very funny -- climate denier who worked for Kucinich.
ROFL
Having lived with a very
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 21:56 — Anonymous (not verified)Having lived with a very high NGO official...in a house with an armed guard paid for by the Honduran congress...due to his outing of military death squads during the Contra/Sandinista struggle...I can safely say that the Honduran military wouldn't sneeze without Pentagon permission.
While I was there the Armed Forces was putting the finishing touches of its 8-storey bank. They made a fortune in the Contra war and continued to make more in its mafia-style tentacles into the economy...again, thanks to capital provided by Uncle Sam.
The coup was not hatched by disgruntled Honduran generals; it was planned by the Pentagon with lots of lessons learned from the Chavez fiasco. Their complaint was not the lack of democracy...it was the growing independence of Zelaya...and their hold on their largest air force base in Central America...and maybe Latin America.
What I am really interested
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 22:00 — Anonymous (not verified)What I am really interested in knowing is how rogue US intelligence agents were able to circumvent Obama's policy of non interference in the region. Is Obama in charge of the empire or just in charge of calming America's fear of being depicted as it is?
Irrelevant arguments have no
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 22:47 — Ulf Erlingsson (not verified)Irrelevant arguments have no place in a debate. Only relevant arguments have, that is, logical arguments based on facts. And that is where the legal analysis of the Human Rights Foundation excels. The bottom line is that the judicial authorities in Honduras had due cause and legal authority to arrest the president and separate him from his office. The expatriating was obviously illegal, but to my knowledge nobody has ever claimed otherwise. From those who claim that it was a coup d'etat I would like to see their legal analysis. Personally I changed opinion when looking at the facts, and I still haven't seen a single legal analysis that has taken all relevant facts into account and still concluded that it was a coup. Hugo Llorens left out crucial information in order to conclude that it was a coup, which he why his report was misleading, not to say disingenuous.
What a surprise! I wonder if
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 23:19 — Anonymous (not verified)What a surprise!
I wonder if people still think the Wikileaks revelations just came out to embarrass people rather than pointing out actual wrong-doing.
as far as the intelligence
Tue, 11/30/2010 - 23:26 — LatAm (not verified)as far as the intelligence agents --meaning the state dept and the pentagon-- are concerned, the rogue is obama. the others represent the continuation of policy long established.
Excellent article. With
Wed, 12/01/2010 - 00:20 — Anonymous (not verified)Excellent article.
With respect to the documentary film, "South of the Border", I would recommend also viewing John Pilger's film, "War on Democracy", for which there are 94-minute copies at Google, veoh, and some other Web sites. If recalling correctly, then he is stronger or much stronger in that film about the coup in Venezuela in 2002 than Scott Wilson leaves the impression of being in the 30-second clip for his brief interview by the Washington Post.
The legal opinion authored
Wed, 12/01/2010 - 01:04 — Anonymous (not verified)The legal opinion authored by the Library of Congress concluded that the removal of Zelaya from office was legal. It was totally in accordance with the constitution. It was not a coup and it was certainly not a military coup. The military acted on instuctions from the Supreme Court and was in accordance with votes in the Congress. Zelaya's own party did not support him. There is no evidence that the election which followed was not fair or that the result was affected by Zelaya's removal from office. Zelaya's removal from the country was illegal, whether it not it was prudent. No one claims otherwise. But that does not make his removal from office illegal.
Ulf spook Human Rights
Wed, 12/01/2010 - 06:14 — Anonymous (not verified)Ulf spook Human Rights Foundation? You mean the anti-Chavez right wing front group run by conservative activists that shared offices with Hill & Knowlton?
And you worked for Kucinich campaign?
ROFL
Amazing how truthout is
Mon, 12/20/2010 - 09:53 — Anonymous (not verified)Amazing how truthout is always the opposite of what is really true.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703395204576023843828913256.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
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