US Intervention and Capitalism Have Created a Monster in Honduras
OCTOBER 13, 2021
BY W. T. WHITNEY
Photograph Source: Fibonacci Blue CC BY 2.0
Chilean author and human rights advocate Ariel Dorfman recently memorialized Orlando Letelier, President Allendes foreign minister. Agents of dictator Augusto Pinochet murdered Letelier in Washington in 1976. Dorfman noted that Chile and the United States were on excellent, indeed obscenely excellent, terms (like they are today, shamefully, between the United States and the corrupt regime in Honduras).
The Honduran government headed by president Juan Orlando Hernández does have excellent relations with the United States. The alliance is toxic, however, what with the continued hold of capitalism on an already unjust, dysfunctional society. Hondurans will choose a new president on November 28.
Honduras, a dependent nation, is subject to U.S. expectations. These center on free rein for businesses and multi-national corporations, large foreign investment, low-cost export goods, low wages, foreigners access to land holdings and sub-soil resources, and a weakened popular resistance.
Meanwhile, the U.S. government casts a blind eye on Hernándezs many failings. These include: fraud and violence marking his second-term electoral victory in 2017, an illegal second term but for an improvised constitutional amendment, testimony in a U.S. court naming him as a key player in Honduras drug-trafficking industry and, lastly, his designation by U.S. prosecutors as a co-conspirator in the trial convicting his brother Tony on drug-trafficking charges.
Some 200 U. S. companies operate in Honduras. The United States accounted for 53% of Hondurass $7.8 billion export total in 2019. U.S goods, led by petroleum products, made up 42.2 % of Honduran imports.
More:
https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/10/13/us-intervention-and-capitalism-have-created-a-monster-in-honduras/