home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT0899>
- <title>
- Apr. 03, 1989: Central America:Back To Square One
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 03, 1989 The College Trap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- CENTRAL AMERICA
- Back to Square One
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The U.S. is disappointed in the outcome of El Salvador's
- election, but Bush and Congress get their act together on
- Nicaragua
- </p>
- <p>By William R. Doerner
- </p>
- <p> The wars in Central America have never had much in common
- except for the angst they give the U.S. And so it was not
- really surprising that the same week that saw a daunting shift
- to the right in El Salvador also brought forth the first
- bipartisan U.S. policy toward Nicaragua this decade. The Bush
- Administration seems unsure how to manage the collapse of the
- long U.S. effort to build a strong centrist government in El
- Salvador. But it has accomplished a sharp break with the
- Reaganite past in cementing an accord with the Democratic
- Congress to wind down the futile contra war in Nicaragua. The
- reversal leaves U.S. policy with an uncertain future.
- </p>
- <p> In El Salvador, Alfredo Cristiani, candidate of the
- Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) party, left all rivals
- for the country's presidency far behind by polling an outright
- majority, 54% of the estimated 1 million ballots cast.
- Cristiani's victory, however, was muted by a voter turnout of
- only about 50%. The high rate of abstentions translated in part
- to support for the boycotting Farabundo Marti National
- Liberation Front (F.M.L.N.), the Marxist guerrilla force that
- has battled for power for the past nine years.
- </p>
- <p> The real loser was the centrist Christian Democratic Party
- of incumbent President Jose Napoleon Duarte, who is terminally
- ill with cancer. Having lost control of the legislature to ARENA
- a year ago, the Christian Democrats will hand over the chief
- executive's office on June 1.
- </p>
- <p> The other big loser was the U.S., which has given its
- public support and $1.5 million a day in aid to Duarte since
- 1984, when his election inspired hope that the war might end.
- Washington desperately wanted to build the Christian Democrats
- into El Salvador's bulwark against the political extremes, both
- the Communist insurgents and ARENA, the paramilitary
- organization turned political party that has been closely linked
- to death squads responsible for thousands of political murders.
- But the well-intended Duarte failed either to negotiate a peace
- or restore his country's shattered economy; his government was
- widely despised as both inept and corrupt.
- </p>
- <p> El Salvador's election, while fairer than some previous
- exercises, was nonetheless seriously flawed. Election-related
- violence took the lives of at least 30 civilians, including
- three journalists, two of them killed by army troops. Guerrilla
- forces effectively paralyzed public transportation and staged
- several attacks in outlying towns. The vote was thus held down
- not only by sympathy with the F.M.L.N. but also by fear of it.
- </p>
- <p> Fredy Cristiani, 41, sports an image of moderation but
- comes from a traditionally rightist background. He is the
- product of privilege and a 1968 graduate of Washington's
- Georgetown University who heads family-owned coffee and
- pharmaceutical businesses. Cristiani became active in ARENA a
- year before the 1984 presidential election. Its candidate then,
- party founder Roberto d'Aubuisson, was strongly opposed by the
- U.S. because of his alleged ties to the notorious death squads.
- Party leaders, eager to transform ARENA's tough image, chose
- Cristiani to personify the new nonviolent party.
- </p>
- <p> But skeptical Americans wonder whether D'Aubuisson is gone
- for good. He remains a Deputy in the legislature and leader
- emeritus of the party. D'Aubuisson himself is unabashedly
- confident. "Why shouldn't I have influence?" he asks.
- </p>
- <p> Since his election, Cristiani has assiduously subscribed to
- a program of moderation, including immediate negotiations with
- the revolutionary guerrillas, a goal that the U.S. also now
- supports. "Why wait?" he asks. His yearlong campaign, however,
- was short on specifics. He ran instead under the appealingly
- vague slogan "The Change We All Want." Says Cristiani to the
- U.S.: "All we ask is, Judge us from our track record, not by
- perceptions."
- </p>
- <p> Publicly, the U.S. reacted cautiously to ARENA's victory.
- The State Department reminded Cristiani that "our relationship
- with the new government will depend on its adherence to
- democracy and respect for human rights." Privately, officials
- fear El Salvador will once again find itself polarized between
- ultra-right and far left, with no centrist, reformist government
- to protect the disenfranchised masses against the violence of
- both.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the U.S. is finding it easier these days to
- deal with Nicaragua. Late last week the White House announced
- a "gentleman's agreement" with Congress to allot $4.5 million
- a month in humanitarian aid to the Nicaraguan contras for the
- next eleven months while diplomats work at pushing the
- Sandinista regime toward democracy. The bargain ends, for the
- moment at least, a fractious eight-year battle between the
- Democrat-controlled Congress and the Executive Branch over how
- to handle Central America. The product of intense lobbying by
- Secretary of State James Baker, the agreement to fund the
- contras but not any more fighting may mark a sea change in U.S.
- policy. "I think we all have to admit," said Baker, "that the
- (Reagan) policy basically failed because we were not united."
- </p>
- <p> The parties could split again: at Democratic insistence,
- the agreement contains a provision for cancellation in November
- if the contras provoke violence. But for now the Democrats and
- Republicans have both signed on to a plan that guarantees the
- 12,000-man contra army will remain intact through next February,
- when the ruling Sandinistas have promised to hold democratic
- elections. That much had been an emergency goal for Bush, since
- the current U.S. contra-aid program is scheduled to expire this
- week. Congressional Democrats, who have grown resistant to such
- assistance since the Iran-contra scandal, accepted this program
- because it effectively sets a date for the contras' disbandment
- and does little to interfere with the Esquipulas peace plan,
- adopted in August 1987 by all governments in the region.
- </p>
- <p> The new aid for the contras is clearly a kind of
- mustering-out pay designed to keep the contras, currently
- bivouacked in Honduras, fed and clothed for another year, until
- a more permanent solution is worked out. To that end, the plan
- calls for the "voluntary reintegration" of the contras into
- Nicaraguan political life or their "voluntary regional
- relocation," language that makes it evident they are finished
- as a fighting force, barring an act of major treachery by the
- Sandinistas.
- </p>
- <p> Baker's next step will be to hold out a list of economic
- and diplomatic incentives to reward democratic reforms in
- Nicaragua. Such a list has not yet been compiled, but the
- rewards will probably include the presence of an American
- Ambassador in Managua for the first time in nearly a year, a
- gradual lifting by Washington of its almost four-year-old trade
- embargo, and loans through the Inter-American Development Bank.
- </p>
- <p> Baker's advisers have also tentatively concluded that any
- successful policy in Central America must include an end to
- Soviet support of the Sandinistas and the F.M.L.N. Thus Baker
- expressed revived interest in a 15-month-old proposal by Moscow
- for both superpowers to stop funding their clients in the
- region, originally rejected by Washington because it implied
- equal rights to intervene in hemispheric affairs. Washington
- still considers the idea of joint cutoffs merely the "starting
- point for negotiations," but at least it is willing now to
- respond constructively to the Soviet initiative. The important
- thing is that on this and other matters the U.S. is once again
- using diplomacy -- after recognizing the failure of its
- halfhearted military pressure -- to seek solutions to problems
- in a region vital to its security.
- </p>
- <p>--Ricardo Chavira/Washington and John Moody/San Salvador
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-