Whose
Democracy is the U.S. Supporting in Nicaragua?
by
Brynne Keith-Jennings
Common Dreams, April 25, 2006
In Nicaragua, the
US government continues to flex its muscles to achieve an electoral
defeat of Daniel Ortega in the November presidential elections.
Ortega, president during the Sandinista revolution in the 1980s, is
running for president for the fourth time since his first defeat in
1990. As in other parts of the world, the U.S. continues to tout its
support of democracy as the justification for intervening in the
internal affairs of a sovereign state, an act that is in itself
inherently undemocratic.
In a recent
interview in the Nicaraguan news magazine Confidencial, U.S
Ambassador Paul Trivelli stated, “What we are trying to do is to
support the democratic process, and tell people that in this
country, in the electoral process there are antidemocratic forces
and there are democratic forces.” Through his actions, however,
Ambassador Trivelli has shown a strange understanding of the meaning
of “support the democratic process”.
Take the
present month of April as an example. On April 5, 2006, Trivelli
sent a letter to several political parties offering to fund
primaries that would result in one presidential candidate in order
to increase their chances of defeating Ortega. When this offer was
rejected by the parties, all of whom had already declared their
separate candidates, Trivelli chose another tactic. In a highly
publicized meeting, Trivelli met with the leaders of the Liberal
Constitutional Party (PLC), many who have been stripped of their
U.S. visas, and close associates of the party leader, former
U.S.-supported ex-President Arnoldo Aleman, who has been convicted
of embezzling over $100 million from state coffers. Trivelli urged
the party to participate in an effort to defeat Ortega, which would
include ditching their candidate José Rizo, chosen in internal party
elections earlier this year. When the party refused to remove their
candidate, Trivelli went back to his rhetoric denouncing the PLC,
stating, “A party that is controlled by Mr. Aleman is still not in
the category of democratic parties…” He then met with Presidential
candidate Eduardo Montealegre, former PLC member who split from the
party. In a statement that barely fell short of endorsing
Montealegre, Trivelli stated that he is the democratic choice for
the presidency.
Trivelli’s
recent actions prove that democracy is a fluid concept, one that
applies when convenient for the US State Department. He negotiates
with the PLC if it could mean the possibility of achieving an
alliance to beat Daniel Ortega. When not successful, he reiterates
that the PLC is undemocratic, another pressure tactic.
All of these
actions then lead to the obvious question, “Why so much fear of
Ortega?” In his rhetoric, Trivelli suggests that Ortega’s term as
president from 1984 to 1990 indicates that he does not know how to
govern democratically, as quoted in the in the Nicaraguan daily La
Prensa, “Ortega already governed, and he did so badly.” Recent
statements by both Condoleeza Rice and John Negroponte suggest that
the fear is based on regional developments; that is, that Hugo
Chavez from Venezuela is supporting Ortega, a longtime friend of
Fidel Castro, in order to strengthen the relationships among leaders
in the region.
Trivelli
himself has stated that he would support anyone “elected
democratically, who governs democratically, with a sensible economic
policy and who is ready to cooperate with the United States on
security issues.” Although Ortega’s rhetoric frequently challenges
the role of the US in Nicaragua, in recent years, he has proven to
be more a political opportunist than an ideologue or potential
threat to the United States. He has not said that his government
would renege on current IMF loans or otherwise alter the
US-supported neoliberal reforms that the US define as “sensible
economic policies”. Regardless, it should be the Nicaraguan people,
not U.S. policymakers, who decide whether or not he deserves a
second term in office.
Beyond
Trivelli’s wavering definition of democracy, however, is the issue
of Nicaraguan sovereignty and United States’ interference in
Nicaragua’s internal politics. Why is a U.S. official attempting to
form an electoral alliance in another country? Trivelli demonstrates
his arrogancy and hypocrisy by acting in every way to impede the
development of democracy in order to promote “the unity of
democratic forces”.
Since 1990,
when U.S.-favored candidate Violeta Chamorro defeated Ortega in the
elections, the US has been utilizing a much more subtle strategy
towards Nicaragua and its neighbors than the military force of the
1980s. Having already shown these countries who is “boss”, the US
only needs to send messengers like Trivelli to remind countries like
Nicaragua of what happens if they should depart too far from
U.S.-favored policy. The peace that remains in Nicaragua after 1990
is a painful, bitter peace: a peace in which officials such as
Trivelli feel free to intervene in internal politics as if they were
another actor in the Nicaraguan system. Perhaps a larger movement
would be necessary to change this relationship of domination and
dependence. But as a diplomat, the very least Trivelli could do is
to demonstrate an iota of respect for the Vienna Convention on
Diplomatic Relations, which states that “it is the duty of all
persons enjoying such privileges and immunities not to interfere in
the internal affairs of that State,” and a respect for the people of
Nicaragua, who have the right to political processes.
Brynne
Keith-Jennings is an educator with
Witness for
Peace in Nicaragua, a politically independent grassroots
organization that educates U.S. citizens on the impacts of U.S.
policies and corporate practices in Latin America. Email to:
nicaragua@witnessforpeace.org.
Sources:
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0425-32.htm,
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/3238,
http://www.counterpunch.org/keith04222006.html |