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Ominous threats from US against Nicaraguan Sandinistas
By Gerardo Nebbia
25 October 2001
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In the wake of September 11, the Bush administration is threatening
the Nicaraguan people over the possible election victory of Daniel
Ortega, the presidential candidate for the Sandinista National
Liberation Front (FSLN), in the Central American nations
November 4 elections. Polls indicate that Ortega has a thin lead
over the candidate of the ruling Liberal Constitutionalist Party
(PLC), Enrique Bolanos.
Washington is directly threatening the Nicaraguan population
with what amounts to political and economic blackmail if they
dare exercise their democratic rights and vote for the Sandinistas.
In so doing, the administration is indicating its intention to
return to the policy long pursued by US imperialism in the region,
of both covert and direct military intervention to impose and
keep its puppet regimes in power.
The FSLN came to power in 1979 after a long struggle to overthrow
the regime of dictator Anastasio Somoza. Over the next 11 years,
the Sandinistas combined land reform, literacy campaigns and other
limited social improvements with a close relationship with Cuba
and the Soviet Union.
The Reagan administration spent most of that time financing
a clandestine war with a right-wing Contra army recruited and
financed by the CIA. During this dirty war, the American government
also mined Nicaraguas harbors, and sabotaged its economic
credibility. In 1990, under pressure from US imperialism, then
President Ortega agreed to elections, which the Sandinistas lost
to right-wing candidate Violeta Barrios de Chamorro.
On May 27 of this year, US ambassador to Nicaragua Oliver Garza
warned that a Sandinista victory would invite economic and political
sanctions from the US government. Garza delivered a message from
President George W. Bush that an FSLN victory would result in
violations of democratic principles. He demanded that Ortega return
property confiscated during the years of FSLN rule as a condition
for US acceptance of a Sandinista government
On October 4, Secretary of State Colin Powell escalated US
objections in a meeting with Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Francisco
Sacasa. Powell indicated that five Nicaraguan passports had been
found in the apartment of someone connected to the World Trade
Center bombings, inferring that the FSLN might be connected to
terror attacks.
Also on October 4, the US State Department issued a statement
expressing grave reservations about the FSLN and charging
the organization with links to terrorism. The next day, a State
Department spokesperson delivered a speech at the University of
Pittsburgh accusing three FSLN leaders, Thomas Borge, Lenin Cerna
and Alvaro Baltonado, of having welcomed terrorists from the Middle
East, Europe and Latin America. On October 16, at a meeting of
the Inter-American Press Association in Washington, Marc Grossman,
US undersecretary of state for Political Affairs, urged Nicaraguans
to vote wisely in the upcoming elections.
The Bush administration accuses the FSLN of having ties with
rogue states, defined as those that sponsor terrorismincluding
Libya, Iraq, the Colombian FARC (Colombian Revolutionary Armed
Forces) and the ETA (Basque Revolutionary Army). While it pledges
to respect the result of the November elections, if Ortega were
to win, the US would place Nicaragua on the rogue
nations list. Cuba is the only American nation presently on that
list. As a consequence, Nicaragua would then face economic sanctions
and isolation from the US and international organizations such
as the World Bank and the IMF.
According to an article in the October 10 Washington Post,
US policy toward Nicaragua and Central America is taking an ominous
turn. The article reports that Bush is lobbying heavily for the
speedy confirmation of Otto Reichwho was a supporter of
the Contra armyas assistant secretary of state for Western
Hemispheric Affairs. Evidence suggests that Reich attempted to
obtain a US visa for anti-Castro terrorist Orlando Bosch, who
was charged with planning the 1976 terrorist bombing of a Cuban
airliner that killed 73 people, mostly Cuban athletes. After spending
11 years in a Venezuelan prison, Bosch entered the US illegally
and received a full-pardon from former President George Bush in
1988.
In fact, there are few programmatic differences between FSLN
candidate Ortega and the PLCs Bolanos. Issues in the campaign
revolve around the corruption of the present regime, the alleged
connection between the FSLN and Arab regimes and accusations of
sexual misconduct by Daniel Ortega.
Nicaraguas economy is in shambles after the loss of $170
million in reserves due to the collapse of two major banks last
year. The government depends on the timely arrival of World Bank
aid ($35 million arrived in September). In the Western Hemisphere,
only Haiti has a lower per capita income than Nicaragua.
Adding to this financial chaos is famine in the countrys
coffee-growing region, caused by the collapse of the world price
of coffee. Under these conditions, the World Bank and IMF will
dictate the policies of the future government. Even modest populist
measures are out of the question for the Sandinistas, and there
is no doubt that an Ortega administration would pursue the policies
imposed on Nicaragua by international finance capital.
The FSLN has made it clear that it will continue the neo-liberal
policies of the PLC, which include the privatization of public
services and an economy that facilitates foreign investments.
Ortegas modest reform proposals hinge on negotiating a new
agreement with the nations creditors, which he hopes will
be more favorable to Nicaragua.
There is a real fear, however, that a Sandinista victory would
raise mass expectations of social justice and economic equality
that would be hard to contain. The possibility of a Sandinista
victory already is causing many to pull their investments out
of the country.
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