Skip navigation

Analysis: Obama's stand on the Honduran coup

President careful not to respond in way that would suggest interventionism

Image: Wounded Honduran woman
A wounded woman is taken away after violence broke out between soldiers and police near he presidential residence in Tegucigalpa, on Monday.
Eduardo Verdugo / AP
Video: White House  
  
Clinton: Afghan exit date not a ‘drop-dead deadline’
Dec. 6: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates discuss the timetable for withdrawal from Afghanistan with NBC’s David Gregory on “Meet the Press.”

  Tweets from inside the Beltway

  1. Loading the latest posts…

Click here for more tweets from NBC's D.C. bureau.

Interactive
Explore a 3-D White House
Check out historical info, photos, and panoramic images.
White House visitor logs
Image: The White House
Public records
Help figure out who has been visiting the White House during the first eight months of the Obama administration.
By BEN FELLER
Associated Press Writer
updated 4:51 p.m. ET June 30, 2009

WASHINGTON - Dealing with the first Latin American crisis of his presidency, Barack Obama sought a swift, clear response that would not be interpreted as U.S. interventionism in a region that loathes it.

So he condemned a coup in Honduras by turning to that most reliable standby: democracy.

"We stand on the side of democracy, sovereignty and self-determination," Obama said when asked Monday about the forced exile of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, a takeover that has drawn international criticism and unnerved a part of the world that has worked to shed itself of strong-arm tactics.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The point could not be lost. Obama mentioned some version of the word democracy eight times. He even wound up referring to George Washington.

The response put Obama with much of the world as Honduras and its newly appointed leader, Roberto Micheletti, quickly found themselves isolated. Obama left sticky underlying issues in Honduras for its people to decide, but pledged that the U.S. would work with international bodies on a peaceful solution.

All that was clear. What comes next is cloudy.

New leaders stand by coup
Micheletti and the Congress that put him in place stood by their move after soldiers stormed the national palace and forced Zelaya into exile. Police and soldiers clashed with pro-Zelaya protesters in the capital on Monday, and about 5,000 anti-Zelaya demonstrators gathered at a main plaza in Tegucigalpa on Tuesday to celebrate his ouster.

The U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday unanimously condemned the military coup and demanded Zelaya's immediate return to power. Zelaya, who was in the assembly chamber for the vote, thanked the diplomats, calling the vote "historic."

Obama, wielding clout within the Americas as a popular voice of a powerful country, has outlined his approach. He will work within existing groups, particularly the Organization of American States that links the countries of the Western Hemisphere, and not try to dictate a solo U.S. response.

This is what he promised during a summit in Latin America just two months ago: The United States is an equal partner, not a senior partner, in the region.

But politically, a hostile removal of a democratically elected president demands a response from a U.S. president. So Obama, who was criticized by Republican critics for being too slow to react to Iran's postelection upheaval, quickly expressed concern on the day that Zelaya was booted from his country.

Then, in plain terms, Obama elaborated Monday after a meeting with a U.S. ally in the region, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.

"We believe that the coup was not legal and that President Zelaya remains the president of Honduras," Obama said.

"It would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition rather than democratic elections," Obama said. "The region has made enormous progress over the last 20 years in establishing democratic traditions in Central America and Latin America. We don't want to go back to a dark past."


Sponsored links

Resource guide