Tanya Garcia,
IRC Programa de las Américas
06/10/2005
Roger Noriega's steady climb through the ranks of U.S.
diplomacy has been based not on his skills as a statesman or diplomat,
but rather on a willingness to do what's necessary to defend U.S.
elite interests abroad. In many instances, those actions have included
shady dealings of questionable legality and morality.
Bush's Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs
is no stranger to the U.S. policy of aligning itself with unsavory
Latin American leaders to further its own interests. Since the early
1980s, Noriega has played instrumental roles both in Congress and
the White House. In July of 2003, he replaced the controversial
Otto Reich in his current post.
Noriega has long been an operative for U.S. policies of direct and
indirect intervention abroad. In the late 1980s, he worked in the
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), where he managed
"non-lethal" aid in Central America. Both the Pentagon
and USAID established "humanitarian aid offices" in 1985
after Congress prohibited U.S. military aid to the Nicaraguan Contras,
based in Honduras, Costa Rica, and in parts of Nicaragua itself.
Much of this aid was delivered to the Contras by right-wing evangelical
and political groups, working closely with the executive branch.
It was later shown that Noriega was directly in charge of channeling
this aid to the Contras-sometimes laundering the aid through an
operative of Colombia's Medellin drug cartel residing in Miami.
Noriega also played a key role in abetting the fall of Haiti's elected
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in March of 2004. The Center for
Cooperative Research provides evidence that Noriega, who was a vocal
critic of the Aristide government, circulated demands for the removal
of Aristide in the Organization of American States (OAS) in February
2004.
After the U.S. helped to overthrow President Aristide, Noriega quickly
applauded the ascension of Prime Minister Gerard Latortue, who came
to office despite the fact that he was living in Florida at the
time and was therefore ineligible for the presidency under Haitian
constitutional law. Amid rampant violence and chaos, Noriega celebrated
the overthrow of Haiti's government, stating to Congress: "Now
we can make a new beginning in helping Haiti to build a democracy
that respects the rule of law and protects the human rights of its
citizens."
Prior to 2004, Noriega laid much of the groundwork for Aristide's
removal from office. While working for New York Congressman Benjamin
Gilman on the House International Relations Committee, Noriega worked
diligently to frame Aristide's security guards in various political
killings.
Later, as the U.S. Ambassador to the OAS, Noriega collaborated frequently
with the International Republican Institute in their efforts to
build the Haitian opposition, even against the wishes of the U.S.
Embassy in that country, which was trying to mediate among all parties
involved. IRI's Haiti chief, Stanley Lucas, received Noriega's support,
including support in events that led to the 2004 coup. Noriega remained
mute whenever asked of the IRI's role in the country.
Following his steps in Haiti, Noriega's latest raison d'étre
is the ouster of Fidel Castro. As the major spokesperson for new
measures to tighten the embargo against the island-outlined in the
2004 Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba report-Noriega announced
plans "to bring an end to the regime of Cuban dictator Fidel
Castro and to prepare to assist a post-Castro Cuba". The Bush
administration's new round of sanctions toward the island will cost
Americans $59 million and very likely be counterproductive to any
legitimate aim to enhance human rights and democratic transition.
Noriega has spent years developing rightwing policies to punish
Cuba. He served as Jesse Helms' senior staff member on the Committee
on Foreign Relations that eventually drafted and passed the notorious
1996 Helms-Burton Act. Human rights advocates, international jurists,
and foreign governments have protested the act for its aim to economically
strangle the island and force other countries to impose the U.S.
embargo.
Noriega's lack of diplomacy in the hemisphere has offended many
Latin American leaders. Following Noriega's criticism of Argentina
for visiting Cuba and leaning leftward in economic policy, President
Kirchner responded angrily that his country was "no longer
the doormat of the United States."
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell's replacement in January
2005 with Condoleezza Rice, who has repeatedly sided with the neoconservative
and anti-multilateralist faction of the administration's foreign
policy team, will likely strengthen Noriega's role in hemispheric
policy.
The new team ensures that Washington's unilateralist policies will
continue in Latin America, and Roger Noriega has proved himself
a faithful foot soldier of those policies. Powell and Noriega publicly
clashed when Noriega applauded the short-lived coup d'état
in Venezuela, forcing Secretary of State Powell to distance himself
from Noriega's comments after President Hugo Chavez was returned
to power.
The shared political perspectives of Rice and Noriega will likely
prevent confrontations between the two if Noriega remains in his
high State Department position. But having Noriega continue as the
U.S. government's point man for Latin American and Caribbean relations
will do nothing to alleviate the deepening tensions between the
region and the United States.
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