How is this a coup?
The first time I saw the word “coup” in a headline regarding Honduras and the recent arrest/exile of its president, I took it at face value. The initial, sketchy reports of the event made it seem that the legitimately elected president, Mel Zelaya had been forced from office by the military because he pushed for a change in the Honduran constitution to allow him a second term. If that’s not a coup, what is?
But then I read this, by a writer for the Wall Street Journal:
That Mr. Zelaya acted as if he were above the law, there is no doubt. While Honduran law allows for a constitutional rewrite [of the constitution], the power to open that door does not lie with the president. A constituent assembly can only be called through a national referendum approved by its Congress.
But Mr. Zelaya declared the vote on his own and had [Hugo] Chávez ship him the necessary ballots from Venezuela. The Supreme Court ruled his referendum unconstitutional, and it instructed the military not to carry out the logistics of the vote as it normally would do.
The top military commander, Gen. Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, told the president that he would have to comply. Mr. Zelaya promptly fired him. The Supreme Court ordered him reinstated. Mr. Zelaya refused.
Calculating that some critical mass of Hondurans would take his side, the president decided he would run the referendum himself. So on Thursday he led a mob that broke into the military installation where the ballots from Venezuela were being stored and then had his supporters distribute them in defiance of the Supreme Court’s order.
The attorney general had already made clear that the referendum was illegal, and he further announced that he would prosecute anyone involved in carrying it out. Yesterday, Mr. Zelaya was arrested by the military and is now in exile in Costa Rica.
Perhaps you’re inclined to dismiss any account from someone employed by the famously right-wing Journal editorial page. If so, here’s a similar observation from Gwynne Dyer, a London journalist who can’t be accused of being reflexively conservative. (One of his books, for instance, begins this way: “It is not enough that the United States lose in Iraq. It must be seen to lose by the American public … “)
Alas, the president of Honduras does not have the right to organize a referendum all by himself, and the country’s Supreme Court ordered him to stop. Congress also condemned the maneuver, but Zelaya plowed ahead regardless. When the army, obedient to the Supreme Court’s orders, refused to help Zelaya run the referendum, he fired the army’s commanding general and got his own party activists to distribute the ballot boxes.
At that point, Congress voted to remove Zelaya because of his “repeated violations of the constitution and the law and disregard of orders and judgments of the institutions,” and the Supreme Court ordered the army to intervene and arrest the president.
All this certainly gives a different flavor to the “coup.” Any reasonable person might conclude that the Honduran president himself, by seeking to sidestep his country’s constitution, Congress and Supreme Court, had attempted a coup. Still, two days ago the New York Times persisted in calling the army’s action a coup, with the only mention of the precipitating events summarized this way:
Mr. Zelaya’s ouster was driven at least in part by fears that a referendum he was planning to amend the Constitution was really a backhanded attempt to extend his stay in power.
If being driven from office for subverting the constitution and ignoring the law is a “coup,” then by the standards of the New York Times, Richard Nixon is a martyr.
July 8th, 2009 at 11:10 am
From the first report of this incident, Fox News got it right. This is a clear case of a government executive attempting to extend his power indefinitely at the expense of his county’s constitution. Any attempt to spin it otherwise is pure propaganda. Our Supreme leader, Mr. Obama, waited for a couple of days before responding and when he did respond he called for the immediate reinstatement of the would be dictator. This should scare the beJesus out of everyone (especially the starry eyed liberals that voted for him.) The curtain has been pulled back a little further as to the true nature of Mr. Obama and his cohorts with this revelation. The Chrysler and GM secured investors (bondholders) getting the bums rush from this heavy-handed Administration was the first real glimpse for me as to their true colors.
July 8th, 2009 at 7:12 pm
OK, so I’m not insane. But this is (again?) so damning of the media in general. Fox News, where Sean Hannity is considered deep? And this is (sadly) the barrier between civilization and the same ignorant Liberal horde flamed to obsession of Michael Jackson? The sheer reality that the country is controlled, not by the military-industrial complex, but instead by the entertainment-media complex is frightening, discouraging. May God forgive us for what we have let this country become (at one time, it held such promise). Perhaps it was Alfred E. Newman who once said, “you get the government you deserve.” If not, perhaps it should have been.
July 10th, 2009 at 8:36 am
In The Arena…I’ve always considered Hannity, O’Riley etc. prime time side shows. I don’t believe that any of those guys are taken seriously as deep thinkers. Lord help us Geraldo Rivera is still around and kicking on Fox. But I do enjoy watching their nightly 6PM newcast. It’s realtime news coverage done by seasoned reporters that is lightyears away from the mass media template that has become so predictable and boring as hell. Britt Hume, Charles Krauthammer, Fred Barnes, and Chris Wallace are interesting and they’re a breath of fresh air.
July 14th, 2009 at 5:31 pm
This entry is interesting in its similarity to my July 2 post about my surprise at hearing the Honduran incident might not be a coup after all:
http://xeditor.blogspot.com/2009/07/when-is-coup-not-really-coup.html
You even made a mention of Richard Nixon, whom I had tried to use as an analogy. Like you, I’m surprised more news media didn’t pick up on this angle.