Yesterday, I questioned whether the Obama/Clinton quick, one-sided condemnation of the “coup” in Honduras was a low risk way for the administration to earn instant “street cred” with its leftist base. Sure enough, a headline in the New York Times this morning likely caught the attention of liberal/progressive readers: “In a Coup in Honduras, Ghosts of Past U.S. Policies.” In the first few paragraphs, President Obama is quoted as saying that “we do not want to go back to a dark period” in Latin American history. Obama was delivering a coded message to leftists: “I’m not like those former U.S. Presidents who sent the CIA or other covert military forces to try to take out peace loving Marxists like Castro, Allende, Ortega, and Chavez.” After all, these popular leaders are/were only trying to improve the lives of their people, who were impoverished as a result of capitalist exploitation, U.S. meddling, etc.
In his first five months in office, Obama has moved the country abruptly to the left and yet his policies are not even in the ballpark of where they would have to be to satisfy leftists. Thus he has to rely on style and code words, which lose their resonance over time, especially when they’re not backed up by “progressive” actions.
On that note, Robert Lovato delivers a call to action in this morning’s Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/roberto-lovato/obama-has-the-power-and-r_b_222170.html. Lovato’s analysis of the Honduran situation is straight out of the leftist playbook. First, he suggests that the court-ordered removal of Zelaya is equivalent to the brutal crackdown in Iran (I’m not aware of any reports that the Honduran military has been murdering protestors). In fact, Lovato writes that the situation in Honduras should be considered an even more serious concern to the United States government, compared to Iran, because the Honduran military is supported by American tax dollars. In the minds of leftists, something is not truly evil unless Uncle Sam has his fingers on it. Plus, according to Lovato, the Obama administration “can actually do something” about Honduras, but we can do nothing about Iran murdering its own people and developing a nuclear weapon. Last but not least, according to Lovato – wait for it – it’s our fault that Zelaya had moved hard left and was in bed with Chavez because we callously disregarded the plight of poor Hondurans dealing with rising food prices and “deepening poverty.” It’s also telling, however, that the subtext of Lovato’s post is a veiled threat to Obama: “take actions that send a rapid and unequivocal denunciation of the coup,” or else I can no longer defend your bona fides.
The problem is, if Obama goes too far left, he’ll be gone after one term in office. The remainder of the above mentioned NYT article also begins to moderate the administration’s position on Honduras. The State Department admits that Zelaya’s plan for a referendum was not in line with the Constitution, but that the military action was not justified (for all we know, if the Honduran government had let things go much further, its options might have been reduced; also, where was the State Department when Chavez was taking over Venezuela?) The U.S. gives military and economic aid to Honduras – a good trading partner and a bulwark against the Chavez axis. Thus while condemning the Honduran government is easy (words, speeches), taking action against the Honduran government poses more serious strategic and political risks for Obama/Clinton. The attempt to straddle both sides of this issue is more explicit in the following Washington Post article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/29/AR2009062904239_2.html?sid=ST2009062902805
If I were a leftist, though, I’d argue for patience. Obama probably still believes in most items on the hard leftist agenda, he just has a better appreciation of what it takes to get there than most leftists. When his administration takes both sides of an issue, his leftist tendencies are still evident:
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Who cares what Chavez says? One of Barrack Obama’s biggest fears is being called a “sell out,” which in this context means a neo-colonialist ugly American posing as a progressive.
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Why should the United States be sensitive about possible accusations from the Iranian regime (it’s a British-American-Zionist plot) or the Marxist-dominated Organization of American States (it’s a Yankee plot)? For the same reasons that Obama thinks it is necessary to go on apology tours.
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The one thing that might have annoyed Obama/Clinton most about the Honduran “coup” was that the Hondurans had the gall to rescue their own country from the Chavez axis without getting permission from these two philosopher kings, which might never have been forthcoming.
Obviously, it is not unusual for diplomats and especially politicians to come down on both sides of an issue, and Obama has a gift for being most things to most people. Nevertheless, it remains to be seen how much more mileage he will get out of style, code words, and other window dressing.
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