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- <text id=89TT2976>
- <title>
- Nov. 13, 1989: Nicaragua:Playing Politics With Peace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 13, 1989 Arsenio Hall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 49
- NICARAGUA
- Playing Politics with Peace
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Headed toward elections, Ortega blows his cool
- </p>
- <p> As the time for the official campaign for Nicaragua's
- national elections approached, the ruling Sandinistas faced a
- unique prospect for a Marxist regime: the chance of winning a
- new term in office through open and honest balloting. President
- Daniel Ortega Saavedra had been nominated for re-election in a
- splashy party convention, and he launched a surprisingly
- effective grass-roots campaign, while opposition candidate
- Violeta Barrios de Chamorro got off to a pathetic start. Best
- of all, the 10,000-man army of insurgent contras, deprived of
- U.S. military support, was skulking in Honduras under a regional
- peace accord ordering them to disband in early December.
- </p>
- <p> But Ortega had been known to blow advantages in the past.
- Remember his spectacularly mistimed trip to Moscow only days
- after Congress voted to cut off aid to the contras in 1985? Last
- week he did it again. Ortega announced the cancellation of a
- 19-month-old cease-fire with the rebels and thereby raised the
- possibility that the elections, scheduled for February, might
- be scuttled. With that one action he managed to put Nicaragua
- back on the U.S. agenda, outrage his Central American neighbors
- and renew the prospect of war in his worn-out nation.
- </p>
- <p> Ortega lobbed his bombshell during ceremonies celebrating
- the centenary of democracy in Costa Rica two weeks ago. He
- accused the contras of murderous ambushes, and as a result, he
- was thinking of canceling the cease-fire. Ortega's announcement
- visibly angered President George Bush. The "little man in a
- military uniform," said Bush, had behaved like "an unwanted
- animal at a garden party."
- </p>
- <p> Ortega's final decision to call off the cease-fire was
- apparently dictated by the murder following his return to
- Managua of four civilians at an agricultural cooperative in San
- Miguelito, southeast of the capital, an attack the government
- pinned on the contras. At a sunrise press conference the next
- morning, an emphatic, often stinging Ortega insisted that his
- government "cannot continue being patient" in the face of contra
- "terrorism" and would "hit the contras hard." The Nicaraguan
- President blamed Washington's refusal to disband the contras for
- the resumption of fighting and hinted darkly that U.S. backing
- of the rebels could affect whether or not Nicaraguans go to the
- polls. Warned Ortega: "It's up to the U.S. whether there will
- be elections or not."
- </p>
- <p> The Sandinista leader insisted that his own government was
- still committed to the February ballot. His intention in
- canceling the cease-fire, he said, was merely to hold the U.S.
- and Honduras to the terms of the accord signed last August to
- dismantle the rebel operation by Dec. 5. The U.S., to guarantee
- that the vote takes place, has supported the contras in their
- refusal to disband until after the Nicaraguan elections, though
- it has prohibited offensive operations. In this regard, Ortega's
- ploy may have worked. Sandinista and rebel leaders appear likely
- to hold new talks soon.
- </p>
- <p> Actually, Ortega's main motivation may have been domestic
- politics. Nothing assures votes like a patriotic stance, and
- the Sandinistas have long fared well by whipping up war fears.
- Nicaraguans resent dying in this long-drawn-out conflict, and
- more of them blame the contras than the Sandinistas for the
- latest surge in countryside attacks.
- </p>
- <p> In military terms, the impact of lifting the cease-fire
- remains unclear. Throughout the cease-fire, government troops
- continued to break up the contras' support network in the
- provinces, and rebels staged sporadic attacks against the army.
- Now those occasional engagements could escalate. At least 2,000
- contra guerrillas are inside Nicaragua, and there is little
- doubt that more have been infiltrating the country during recent
- weeks. On Friday the Sandinista army said it had begun offensive
- operations against the rebels in nine of the country's 16
- provinces.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, the contras cannot count on a rebound of U.S.
- aid, even though some of the sharpest U.S. reaction to Ortega's
- move came from liberal legislators who have long opposed U.S.
- aid to the guerrillas. Said one of them, Wisconsin Congressman
- David Obey: "Daniel Ortega is a fool and always has been."
- Despite Bush's initial outburst, the Administration's response
- otherwise remained low-key. That was due in part to a
- realization, as a senior Administration official put it, that
- "there's not the remotest chance Congress will okay the
- restoration of lethal aid." Congress abolished such assistance
- in February '88, later approving $49 million for food and
- medicine.
- </p>
- <p> Why, then, did Ortega venture so much opprobrium abroad to
- score points at home in a race that, by most accounts, he was
- already winning? The answer may lie in a poll published two
- weeks ago by the Nicaraguan Institute of Public Opinion. With
- nearly 90% of Nicaragua's 1.97 million voters registered, large
- numbers of them as the result of a Sandinista campaign, Ortega
- led the opposition by 26% to 21%. Yet the Institute's sample
- showed that 46% remained undecided -- more than enough to make
- any candidate for office extremely uneasy.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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