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- <text id=90TT0553>
- <title>
- Mar. 05, 1990: El Salvador:The Hapless Peacemaker
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 05, 1990 Gossip
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- EL SALVADOR
- The Hapless Peacemaker--Jose Napoleon Duarte: 1925-1990
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by John Moody/San Salvador
- </p>
- <p> He was a man possessed of a messianic conviction that he and
- he alone could bring peace and democracy to his bloodstained
- nation. And for a long time after Jose Napoleon Duarte became
- President of El Salvador in 1984 Washington shared his belief
- that he could make a difference. Six years later, however, El
- Salvador remains as desperate as ever. The bitter civil war
- lurches on, with the country's 5 million people still hostage
- to the brutal campaigns of the far-right death squads and the
- left-wing guerrillas. Duarte's economic and social reforms are
- mostly in ruins, and his pledges to punish human-rights abuses
- and corruption remain unfulfilled. Last week, at the age of 64,
- Duarte died in his home in San Salvador, his body ravaged by
- cancer, his spirit diminished by the disappointment of
- unrealized dreams.
- </p>
- <p> The promise that was Duarte flickered most brightly in 1984,
- the year he rode to the presidency on a wave of popular
- enthusiasm. Pledging an end to the civil war and the beginning
- of an era of stability, Duarte became El Salvador's first
- freely elected civilian President in half a century. It was a
- particularly satisfying victory, since Duarte had been robbed
- of the presidency in 1972, when Salvadoran soldiers halted the
- vote count and beat the candidate severely. Duarte fled into
- exile in Venezuela, not venturing home until seven years later,
- when a coup paved the way for his participation in a
- military-civilian junta. When the presidential nod finally
- came, he proclaimed, "This moment is just the beginning of a
- much longer road."
- </p>
- <p> Little did he suspect just how long--or rugged--that
- road would be. For most of his early life, there had been ample
- good luck. His father, a tailor, struck it rich in 1944 by
- winning the national lottery. That, and a partial scholarship,
- enabled Duarte to attend the University of Notre Dame, where
- he earned a degree in civil engineering. When he returned home,
- Duarte married the daughter of his father's best friend and
- joined his father-in-law's lucrative construction firm as a
- partner. In 1960 Duarte helped found the Christian Democratic
- Party, and four years later he began the first of three
- consecutive terms as mayor of San Salvador.
- </p>
- <p> The initial months of his presidency were a heady time, as
- Duarte set his agenda in motion. He created a commission to
- investigate death-squad killings, shuffled the command of the
- security forces and toured the richer capitals of the West in
- search of foreign aid. He found his most receptive audience in
- Washington, where a charmed Congress soon approved more than
- $200 million in military and economic assistance. Over the next
- five years, U.S. spending would surpass $3 billion;
- Washington's faith in Duarte endured long after his support at
- home had eroded.
- </p>
- <p> The steady downward slope of Duarte's tenure could be
- charted from one October to the next. His first October, in
- 1984, was a time of triumph as he strode into the small town
- of La Palma for the first of three meetings with leftist rebel
- leaders. A year later, as hostilities continued, tragedy hit
- home when Duarte's eldest daughter, Ines Guadalupe Duarte
- Duran, was kidnaped and held by rebels for 30 days. That
- October, Duarte personally supervised the complex negotiations
- that secured Ines' freedom, briefly abandoning his tough line
- with the guerrillas and freeing 25 political prisoners in
- exchange. The double standard aroused the contempt of some,
- especially within the powerful military, who charged that he
- had compromised his ability to govern.
- </p>
- <p> In the months that followed, Duarte tried unsuccessfully to
- get the peace talks back on track. He also implemented an
- austerity program that enjoyed greater support in Washington
- than in San Salvador. A hefty devaluation of the Salvadoran
- colon and a tax on coffee, the country's main export, pushed
- inflation to the 40% mark and raised unemployment close to 50%.
- Wary businessmen sought investments abroad, while some of the
- unions that had once supported Duarte joined a new opposition
- labor confederation. In October 1986 an earthquake flattened
- much of San Salvador, killing 1,500 people and inflicting $1
- billion in damages. When hundreds of millions of dollars poured
- in, including $250 million from the U.S., the Duarte
- government was accused of squandering the funds.
- </p>
- <p> During the next year, charges of corruption haunted Duarte's
- government. The death squads returned; mutilated bodies once
- again littered the roadsides. And the leftist guerrillas
- regained their momentum, waging successful assaults on military
- and economic targets throughout the country. As the country
- spun back toward chaos, Salvadorans came to regard Duarte as
- little better than a pawn of the Reagan Administration. That
- October, when Duarte journeyed to Washington for a White House
- visit with Ronald Reagan, he touched his hosts by kissing the
- American flag. At home, that same image came to symbolize the
- power that Duarte had forfeited.
- </p>
- <p> The waning months of Duarte's administration were beset by
- political turmoil. In March 1988 Duarte's bitter political
- rivals, the ultraconservative Nationalist Republican Alliance
- (ARENA), won control of the national legislature. Duarte's
- attempts to heal a deepening rift within his Christian
- Democratic Party failed, and one year later ARENA's
- presidential candidate, Alfredo Cristiani, triumphed, with 54%
- of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Friends eulogize Duarte as the man who, as one close adviser
- put it, "started a process, a tendency toward democracy."
- Detractors, such as Jesuit scholar Ignacio Martin Baro, assert
- that "history will remember Duarte as the President who
- mortgaged the sovereignty of his country to the Americans."
- Duarte may best be remembered, however, as the leader who could
- not live up to his own best intentions.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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