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Article published November 06, 2009
Coup defused

THE presidential crisis in Honduras has come to an end in a way that appears to restore sound democratic practice to that Central American nation.

In June, the Honduran military grabbed the president, Manuel Zelaya, bundled him onto a plane and sent him off to Costa Rica. In his place, it installed the speaker of the parliament, Roberto Micheletti.

The coup, a bad old ghost from the Latin American past, was justified to head off an attempt by Mr. Zelaya to modify the constitution by fair or foul means to get himself a second term as president, although the constitutional limit was set at one term.

The rest of Latin America, and the United States to a degree, hit the roof, refusing to accept the Micheletti regime. Mr. Zelaya eventually sneaked back into Honduras and took up residence in the Brazilian Embassy while Latin American, U.S., and other negotiators tried to work out an agreement that would legitimize the new government.

The U.S. role in the maneuvering was complicated by the fact that the Micheletti group hired lobbyists who were active in Washington. Another angle for the United States was the fact that the Pentagon had a point of view that was influenced by, first, a previous close relationship with the Honduran military and, second, by U.S. use of a base in Honduras. The United States considered the base important in spite of the recent agreement with neighboring Colombia for the use of seven bases there by American forces.

Last week Mr. Micheletti agreed to let Mr. Zelaya reassume office until presidential elections, scheduled for Nov. 29. Both agreed that neither would be a candidate. The agreement remains to be put into effect, pending the Honduran legislature's approval.

The elections will still have to take place, free of military interference, but it appears that the matter has come to a satisfactory close. Honduras will have a democratically elected president and its neighbors won't have to live with the bad precedent of a successful military coup, hearkening back to bad old days in that part of the world.


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