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OTTO REICH: "I Did Not Orchestrate Coup in Honduras"

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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 09:58 AM
Original message
OTTO REICH: "I Did Not Orchestrate Coup in Honduras"
Okay Otto, if you say so.
Magbana


MIAMI HERALD
Posted on Thu, Jul. 09, 2009
I did not orchestrate coup in Honduras

BY OTTO J. REICH
oreich@ottoreich.com

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/other-views/story/1133623.htm

It is not often that an ambassador of a foreign country publicly accuses a private U.S. citizen of being the ''architect'' of a coup d'état against a third country. Yet that is what happened recently when the Venezuelan ambassador to the Organization of American States, Roy Chadderton, charged me with orchestrating the removal of Honduras President Manuel Zelaya.

What would lead a diplomat to utter such fabrications?

First, we should remember that Chadderton is the envoy of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chávez, a lieutenant colonel who once tried to shoot his way into the Presidential Palace in Caracas, then reached power by disguising his intentions and now holds it by intimidation and deception.

Second, Chadderton stands for more than just Chávez. Speaking before an emergency session of the OAS Permanent Council, Chadderton represented a collection of the least democratic and, therefore, least successful nations in the Americas. It's a group invented in Havana, financed by Venezuelan oil money and self-described as the Bolivarian Alternative of the Americas (ALBA, in Spanish), which Zelaya had recently joined and whose members include such anti-American despots as the Castro brothers, Chávez, Daniel Ortega, Evo Morales and other autocrats.

Chadderton and his ilk repeat falsehoods because they can. His government has said for years that I was responsible for the ''coup'' against Hugo Chávez in 2002 even though a three-month investigation by the State Department's Inspector General clearly proved there was no U.S. involvement. Chávez has presented no evidence to the contrary.

Chadderton attacked me because I have been pointing to Zelaya as the enabler of the corruption in Honduras. In April, Zelaya announced he was suing me for ''defamation.'' Zelaya commandeered all radio and TV stations and, surrounded by his cabinet and legal advisors, proclaimed he was dispatching a team of cabinet ministers and the president's legal advisors to the United States to ``sue Otto Reich.''

No lawsuit filed

With great fanfare, Zelaya's emissaries landed in Miami and announced that they were looking for a law firm willing to sue me.

After a large expenditure of Honduras' scarce cash, the team announced the successful conclusion of the search.

I have yet to receive notification of a suit, nor do I expect one. Not because Zelaya is no longer in power but, because, like so many of Mel Zelaya's actions, the much-ballyhooed lawsuit was a fake, a ruse to portray him as the innocent victim. Perhaps when Zelaya learned that to sue a U.S. citizen he had to renounce his diplomatic immunity and testify under oath in a U.S. court -- one that he could not buy or intimidate -- he lost interest.

In court, Zelaya would have been asked why he named his nephew, Marcelo Chimirri, as manager of the state-owned phone company, Hondutel. About $100 million ''disappeared'' from the company after Chimirri's arrival. Though Zelaya protected him, an independent prosecutor appointed by the Honduran congress charged Chimirri with embezzlement. Since Zelaya's removal last week, Chimirri has been arrested.

Zelaya may be facing much more serious charges than grand theft and abuse of power. His most recent felony was to undermine the constitution and to disobey the laws he was sworn to uphold.

With advice and support from Chávez, he tried -- but failed -- to subvert the electoral process so that he could remain in office indefinitely.

Had I really been the ''architect'' of Zelaya's removal, I would had advised that he be charged with the almost 20 crimes with which the Honduran Judiciary has now charged him, and be arrested by civilian authorities. I would have urged that the constitutional process be followed: the elevation to the presidency of the next-in-line, President of the Congress Roberto Micheletti, and the continuation of the electoral process, culminating in a November election.

Finally, the Congress would have voted overwhelmingly, as it did by a 125-3 vote, to ratify the removal of Zelaya.

A legal government

Without my involvement, these steps were taken. Therefore, under Honduran law, the new government is legal and constitutional.

The United States should not betray our values by joining the efforts of some of the most repressive and undemocratic leaders of this hemisphere to seek the reinstatement of lawbreaker Mel Zelaya.

Otto Reich, a government-relations consultant in Washington, served in senior positions at the White House and State Department for 12 years.
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 11:41 AM
Response to Original message
1. Wild bear: "I did not shit in the woods." Atlantic shark: "I did not shit in the sea."
Pope: "I am not Catholic."

...


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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 12:35 PM
Response to Original message
2. Otto Reich and the International Republican Institute : Honduran Destablization, Inc.
July 9, 2009

Otto Reich and the International Republican Institute
Honduran Destablization, Inc.
By NIKOLAS KOZLOFF

When it comes to U.S. machinations and interventionism in Latin America, I'm not naïve: over the past five years, I've written two books about the inner workings of American foreign policy south of the border, as well as dozens and dozens of articles posted on the Internet and on my blog. As a result, when the Obama Administration claimed that it knew that a political firestorm was brewing in Honduras but was surprised when a military coup actually took place this strains my credibility.

Nevertheless, in the absence of cold, hard facts, I reserve judgment on whether Obama has turned into an imperialist intent on waving the Big Stick in Central America. Furthermore, the fact that Hugo Chávez of Venezuela says North American imperialism was behind the coup in Tegucigalpa does not make it so. In typical fashion, Chávez has failed to produce any shred of evidence to support his provocative allegations.

International Republican Institute

There are, however, a number of intriguing leads that point to U.S. involvement --- not in a coup per se but in indirect destabilization. Eva Golinger, author of the Chávez Code, has just published an interesting piece on her blog about the ties between the International Republican Institute (IRI) and conservative groups in Honduran society. Golinger has followed up on my extensive writings documenting the activities of the IRI, a group chaired by Senator John McCain (R-AZ). Though McCain seldom talks about it, he has gotten much of his foreign policy experience working with the operation that is funded by the U.S. government and private money. The group, which receives tens of millions of taxpayer dollars each year, claims to promote democracy worldwide.

Golinger reveals that IRI has thrown hundreds of thousands of dollars to think tanks in Honduras that seek to influence political parties. What's more, she discloses that the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has provided tens of millions of dollars towards "democracy promotion" in Honduras. I was particularly interested to learn that one recipient of the aid included the Honduran National Business Council, known by its Spanish acronym COHEP, a long time adversary of the Zelaya regime.

Otto Reich

Another interesting lead comes via Bill Weinberg, a thorough and dogged journalist, founder of the Web site World War 4 Report and the host of WBAI Radio's thoughtful program Moorish Orthodox Radio Crusade in New York. On Sunday, Weinberg posted an intriguing article on his Web site entitled "Otto Reich behind Honduras coup?" In the piece, Weinberg discloses that the Honduran Black Fraternal Organization, known by its Spanish acronym OFRANEH, has claimed that former U.S. diplomat Otto Reich and the Washington, D.C. based Arcadia Foundation were involved in the coup.

In my first book, I documented Otto Reich's Latin American exploits in some detail. A Cuban native, Reich left the island in 1960. In 1973, while studying at Georgetown, he met someone named Frank Calzon. According to Honduras' La Prensa, Calzon was an "expert in CIA disinformation" who recruited Reich. Later, when Reich served as U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela under Ronald Reagan, he established contact with Gustavo Cisneros, a media magnate, billionaire and prominent future figure in the Chávez opposition.

After his stint as ambassador, Reich went on to be a corporate lobbyist for Bacardi and Lockheed Martin, a company that sought to provide F-16 fighter planes to Chile. In 2002, he became assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs under Bush through a recess appointment. Although Reich has denied there was any U.S. role in the brief coup d'etat against Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez in April 2002, the veteran diplomat reportedly met regularly at the White House with alleged coup plotter Pedro Carmona. At the height of the coup in Venezuela, Reich called his old friend Cisneros twice. According to the media magnate, Reich called "as a friend" because Chávez partisans were protesting at Caracas media outlets.

Reich has also served on the board of visitors of WHINSEC, formerly known as the School of the Americas, a U.S. army institution that instructed the Latin American military in torture techniques. As a member of the board, Reich's job was to review and advise "on areas such as curriculum, academic instruction, and fiscal affairs of the institute." After leaving the Bush Administration in 2004, Reich went on to found Otto Reich Associates in Washington, D.C. On the group's Web site, you can see a photo of Reich and John McCain shaking hands. A caption from McCain reads, "Ambassador Reich has served America with distinction by representing our fundamental values of freedom and democracy around the world, and I am grateful for his support."

Reich's outfit provides services in "International Government Relations/Anti-Corruption," and "Business Intelligence/Policy Forecasting." Specifically, the group seeks to "design and implement political and business diplomacy strategies for U.S. and multinational companies to compete on an even playing field in countries with complex ethical and legal challenges," as well as "advise major and mid-size U.S. corporations on government relations to support trade and investment goals in South and Central American countries and the Caribbean," in addition to identifying and securing foreign investment and "privatization opportunities" in Latin America.

Otto Reich and The Searing Case of Hondutel

In campaign '08, Reich served as a foreign policy adviser to Republican John McCain. In an interview with Honduras' La Prensa, Reich blasted Honduran President Zelaya for cultivating ties with Hugo Chávez. Reich had particular scorn for the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, known by its Spanish acronym ALBA, an anti-free trade pact including Venezuela, Honduras, Cuba, and Bolivia. "Honduras," Reich remarked, "should be very careful because the petroleum and Chávez problem is very similar to those who sell drugs. At first they give out drugs so that victims become addicts and then they have to buy that drug at the price which the seller demands."

Reich went on to say that he was very "disappointed" in Zelaya because the Honduran President was "enormously corrupted from a financial and moral standpoint." In another interview with the Honduran media, Reich went further, remarking brazenly that "if president Zelaya wants to be an ally of our enemies, let him think about what might be the consequences of his actions and words."

When discussing Zelaya's corrupt transgressions, Reich is wont to cite the case of Honduras' state-owned telecommunications company Hondutel. In an explosive piece, the Miami newspaper El Nuevo Herald reported that a company called Latin Node bribed three Hondutel officials to get choice contracts and reduced rates. Zelaya, Reich remarked to El Nuevo Herald, "has permitted or encouraged these types of practices and we will see soon that he is also behind this."

Reich would not provide details but reminded readers that Zelaya's nephew, Marcelo Chimirri, was a high official at Hondutel and had been accused of a series of illicit practices relating to Hondutel contracts. "After an outcry in Honduras," writes Bill Weinberg of World War Four Report, "Reich said he was prepared to make a sworn statement on the affair before Honduran law enforcement -- but said he would not travel to Honduras to do so, because his personal security would be at risk there." Reich's pronouncements to the Miami paper infuriated Zelaya who went on national radio and TV to announce that he would sue Reich for defamation. "We will proceed with legal action for calumny against this man, Otto Reich, who has been waging a two year campaign against Honduras," the president announced.

Turning up the heat on Chimirri, the U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa denied the Hondutel official an entry visa into the United States, citing "serious cases of corruption." Zelaya may have taken the U.S. ban on his nephew to heart. Zelaya complained to Washington as recently as last December about the visa issue, urging U.S. officials to "revise the procedure by which visas are cancelled or denied to citizens of different parts of the world as a means of pressure against those people who hold different beliefs or ideologies which pose no threat to the U.S."

Bush-appointed U.S. Ambassador Charles Ford was also turning the screws on Zelaya. Speaking with the Honduran newspaper La Tribuna, Ford said that the U.S. government was investigating American telecom carriers for allegedly paying bribes to Honduran officials to engage in so-called "gray traffic" or illicit bypassing of legal telecommunications channels. The best way to combat gray traffic, Ford said, was through greater competition that in turn would drive down long distance calling rates.

Perhaps the U.S. government was using the corruption charges as ammunition against Hondutel, a state company that Reich probably would have preferred to see privatized. The Honduran elite had long wanted to break up the company. In the late 1990s, none other than Roberto Micheletti, the current coup president of Honduras, was Hondutel's CEO. At the time, Micheletti favored privatizing the firm. Micheletti later went on to become President of Honduras' National Congress. In that capacity, he was at odds with the Zelaya regime that opposed so-called "telecom reform" that could open the door to outright privatization.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/kozloff07092009.html
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IndianaGreen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 02:40 PM
Response to Original message
3. Cuban nazi!
This man is a war criminal and should be behind bars.
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 03:45 PM
Response to Original message
4. This guy is like the 30 year old jar of Dippity-Doo that your mom won't throw away
lol
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 03:48 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. LOL. That funky gunk on the lid threads.
EEeewwwww.

:hi:

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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 05:12 PM
Response to Original message
6. The unindicted co-conspirator doth protest too much, methinks
I'm glad Otto is out there denying this, cuz otherwise I would never have realized he was involved
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-09-09 05:16 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. Exactly. He's false as water and twice as transparent.
What a dick.
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