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- <text id=89TT1214>
- <title>
- May 08, 1989: Sparring (Again) With A Dictator
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 08, 1989 Fusion Or Illusion?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 46
- PANAMA
- Sparring (Again) with a Dictator
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Washington predicts a rigged election, U.S. policy remains
- adrift
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. called him Panama's top narcotraficante, indicted
- him in Florida and vowed to depose him. But General Manuel
- Antonio Noriega still runs the country, and even though he will
- not be standing for election on May 7, he looms as the power
- behind the throne. Polls show that Noriega's handpicked
- candidate for President, Carlos Duque, trails opposition
- candidate Guillermo Endara by more than 2 to 1. Yet U.S.
- officials and opposition leaders are convinced Duque will steal
- the election. They charge that evidence of government chicanery
- already abounds: manipulation of voter rolls to keep opponents
- from the polls, coercion of public employees to vote the
- government ticket, fraudulent registration practices that will
- permit Noriega boosters to cast multiple ballots.
- </p>
- <p> The only real suspense seems to be just how far Noriega
- will go to ensure Duque's triumph -- and how U.S. officials and
- irate Panamanians will react when the tainted returns trickle
- in. The Bush Administration is betting that the cocky Noriega
- will trip on his own blind determination. As Washington sketches
- it, Noriega's supporters will resort to such blatant electoral
- fraud that Panamanians will take to the streets in furious
- protest, sparking a brutish response from the Panama Defense
- Forces. The international outcry will deepen Panama's diplomatic
- isolation, and eventually the economic and political erosion
- will reach such dire proportions that the military will abandon
- Noriega. And then? "We'll let things collapse of their own
- weight," says a senior Administration official.
- </p>
- <p> The scenario sounds all too familiar -- and implausible. In
- February 1988, when Noriega was indicted on drug charges, the
- Reagan Administration expected Noriega to flee in panic. He
- stayed. Two months later Washington dispatched 1,300 additional
- troops to U.S. bases in Panama, hoping their very presence would
- cow Noriega into submission. It didn't. Then the U.S. imposed
- limited economic sanctions, designed to choke off the country's
- cash flow. The dollar shortage fell hardest on Panama's middle
- class, who began to grumble about unreliable American allies.
- That allowed Noriega to rally support inside as well as beyond
- Panama by portraying himself as a victim of Yanqui aggression.
- In the end, Washington managed only to devastate an economy that
- was both prosperous and closely tied to the U.S. "We have in
- fact severely damaged the Panamanian economy," says former
- President Jimmy Carter, who will lead an international
- delegation of observers to monitor the election.
- </p>
- <p> The Reagan policy vacuum has carried over into the Bush
- era. Once again the State Department and the Pentagon are at
- odds, and what passes for policy shows little promise of
- dislodging the general. At a meeting convened by Bush in early
- February, State argued that Noriega is a danger to U.S.
- security; Defense countered that Noriega is a lesser evil than
- any of the underlings likely to succeed him as commander in
- chief. "Bush was very surprised to see that there was no unity,"
- says an official. "He ended the meeting by telling everyone he
- would make up his mind on his own." Shortly after that meeting,
- Bush signed a secret presidential finding authorizing the CIA
- to funnel $10 million into the opposition's political campaign.
- Their candidates insist that none of the money has reached them,
- but Noriega has capitalized on the U.S. interference to deflect
- the election's focus from himself.
- </p>
- <p> If the election proves a sham, the U.S. will have to seize
- the opportunity to bring international pressure to bear on
- Noriega. "At a time when the world is having free elections,
- including the Soviet Union and Poland, Panama is not," says
- Richard Lugar, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations
- Committee. "You need to make Noriega pay." To show its
- disapproval, the U.S. could restrict visas issued to pro-Noriega
- Panamanians, refuse to recognize the newly seated government,
- and turn away any ambassador sent to Washington by the Duque
- administration. The Administration wants to tighten sanctions,
- but further economic deterioration might fuel an anti-U.S.
- backlash. "When have economic sanctions ever toppled a regime?"
- asks Ambler Moss, a former U.S. Ambassador to Panama.
- </p>
- <p> So far, Washington's game plan remains vague. The
- Administration has pledged that no deal will be cut with
- Noriega to quash the drug indictments. And a high-level official
- says that a fraudulent election will prompt the U.S. to consider
- new "diplomatic, intelligence and military" options, the first
- time the Bush team has suggested an armed intervention.
- </p>
- <p> Other deadlines also press. Come September, the
- presidential term of Eric Arturo Delvalle expires. Though he was
- forced from office by Noriega 14 months ago, the U.S. continues
- to recognizee the exiled Delvalle as the legitimate President,
- and has used that handy fiction to withhold $86.5 million in
- fees collected by the Panama Canal Commission. Bush must decide
- what to do with those funds, which are legally owed to Panama.
- Moreover, under the terms of the canal treaty, the American
- administrator of the PCC must be replaced by a Panamanian by
- January 1990. The U.S. Senate will have to approve the
- candidate, and if he is closely linked to Noriega, a bitter
- fight is certain.
- </p>
- <p> But Panama's problem is not just Noriega. The general's
- friends say he is tired of facing down the gringos, but even if
- he capitulates, there is little evidence that the defense forces
- plan to retire to the barracks. "For real democracy to take
- place in Panama," Moss warns, "it will be a long-term workout,
- a gradual weaning away of the military from direct power." To
- encourage that, the Bush Administration must enlist Latin
- American allies. Recourse to the big stick will only sour
- relations with the region.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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