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http://machetera.wordpress.com/2010/10/01/behind-the-coup-in-ecuador/
Behind the Coup in Ecuador

By Eva Golinger

Translation: Machetera

The latest coup attempt against one of the countries in the 
Bolivarian Alliance For The People of Our America (ALBA) is 
attempt to impede Latin American integration and the advance of 
revolutionary democratic processes.  The rightwing is on the 
attack in Latin America.  Its success in 2009 in Honduras against 
the government of Manuel Zelaya energized it and gave it the 
strength and confidence to strike again against the people and 
revolutionary governments in Latin America.

The elections of Sunday, September 26th in Venezuela, while 
victorious for the Venezuelan United Socialist Party (PSUV), also 
ceded space to the most reactionary and dangerous destabilizing 
forces at the service of imperial interests.  The United States 
managed to situate key elements in the Venezuelan National 
Assembly, giving them a platform to move forward with their 
conspiratorial schemes to undermine Venezuelan democracy.

The day after the elections in Venezuela, the main advocate for 
peace in Colombia, Piedad Córdoba, was dismissed as a Senator in 
the Republic of Colombia, by Colombia’s Inspector General, on the 
basis of falsified evidence and accusations.  But the attack 
against Senator Córdoba is a symbol of the attack against 
progressive forces in Colombia who seek true and peaceful 
solutions to the war in which they have been living for more than 
60 years.

And now, Thursday, September 30th, was the dawn of a coup d’etat 
in Ecuador.  Insubordinate police took over a number of facilities 
in the capital of Quito, creating chaos and panic in the country. 
  Supposedly, they were protesting against a new law approved by 
the National Assembly on Wednesday, which according to them 
reduced labor benefits.

In an attempt to resolve the situation, President Rafael Correa 
went to meet with the rebellious police but was attacked with 
heavy objects and teargas, causing a wound on his leg and teargas 
asphyxiation.  He was taken to a military hospital in Quito, where 
he was later kidnapped and held against his will, prevented from 
leaving.

Meanwhile, popular movements took to the streets of Quito, 
demanding the liberation of their President, democratically 
re-elected the previous year by a huge majority.  Thousands of 
Ecuadorans raised their voices in support of President Correa, 
trying to rescue their democracy from the hands of coup-plotters 
who were looking to provoke the forced resignation of the national 
government.

In a dramatic development, President Correa was rescued in an 
operation by Special Forces from the Ecuadoran military in the 
late evening hours.  Correa denounced his kidnapping by the 
coup-plotting police and laid responsibility for the coup d’etat 
directly upon former President, Lucio Gutiérrez.  Gutiérrez was a 
presidential candidate in 2009 against President Correa, and lost 
in a landslide when more than 55% voted for Correa.

During today’s events, Lucio Gutiérrez declared in an interview, 
“The end of Correa’s tyranny is at hand,” also asking for the 
“dissolution of Parliament and a call for early presidential 
elections.”

But beyond the key role played by Gutiérrez, there are external 
factors involved in this attempted coup d’etat that are moving 
their pieces once again.

Infiltration of the Police

According to journalist Jean-Guy Allard, an official report from 
Ecuador’s Defense Minister, Javier Ponce, distributed in October 
of 2008 revealed “how US diplomats dedicated themselves to 
corrupting the police and the Armed Forces.”

The report confirmed that police units “maintain an informal 
economic dependence on the United States, for the payment of 
informants, training, equipment and operations.”

In response to the report, the U.S. Ambassador in Ecuador, Heather 
Hodges, justified the collaboration, saying “We work with the 
government of Ecuador, with the military and with the police, on 
objectives that are very important for security.” According to 
Hodges, the work with Ecuador’s security forces is related to the 
“fight against drug trafficking.”

The Ambassador

Ambassador Hodges was sent to Ecuador in 2008 by then President 
George W. Bush.  Previously she successfully headed up the embassy 
in Moldova, a socialist country formerly part of the Soviet Union. 
  She left Moldova sowing the seeds for a “color revolution” that 
took place, unsuccessfully, in April of 2009 against the majority 
communist party elected to parliament.

Hodges headed the Office of Cuban Affairs within the U.S. State 
Department in 1991, as its Deputy Director.  The department was 
dedicated to the promotion of destabilization in Cuba.  Two years 
later she was sent to Nicaragua in order to consolidate the 
administration of Violeta Chamorro, the president selected by the 
United States following the dirty war against the Sandinista 
government, which led to its exit from power in 1989.

When Bush sent her to Ecuador, it was with the intention of sowing 
destabilization against Correa, in case the Ecuadoran president 
refused to subordinate himself to Washington’s agenda.  Hodges 
managed to increase the budget for USAID and the NED [National 
Endowment for Democracy] directed toward social organizations and 
political groups that promote U.S. interests, including within the 
indigenous sector.

In the face of President Correa’s re-election in 2009, based on a 
new constitution approved in 2008 by a resounding majority of men 
and women in Ecuador, the Ambassador began to foment destabilization.

USAID

Certain progressive social groups have expressed their discontent 
with the policies of the Correa government.  There is no doubt 
that legitimate complaints and grievances against his government 
exist.  Not all groups and organizations in opposition to Correa’s 
policies are imperial agents.  But a sector among them does exist 
which receives financing and guidelines in order to provoke 
destabilizing situations in the country that go beyond the natural 
expressions of criticism and opposition to a government.

In 2010, the State Department increased USAID’s budget in Ecuador 
to more than $38 million dollars.  In the most recent years, a 
total of $5,640,000 in funds were invested in the work of 
“decentralization” in the country.  One of the main executors of 
USAID’s programs in Ecuador is the same enterprise that operates 
with the rightwing in Bolivia: Chemonics, Inc.  At the same time, 
NED issued a grant of $125,806 to the Center for Private 
Enterprise (CIPE) to promote free trade treaties, globalization, 
and regional autonomy through Ecuadoran radio, television and 
newspapers, along with the Ecuadoran Institute of Economic Policy.

Organizations in Ecuador such as Participación Ciudadana and 
Pro-justicia [Citizen Participation and Pro-Justice], as well as 
members and sectors of CODEMPE, Pachakutik, CONAIE, the 
Corporación Empresarial Indígena del Ecuador [Indigenous 
Enterprise Corporation of Ecuador] and Fundación Qellkaj [Qellkaj 
Foundation] have had USAID and NED funds at their disposal.

During the events of September 30 in Ecuador, one of the groups 
receiving USAID and NED financing, Pachakutik, sent out a press 
release backing the coup-plotting police and demanding the 
resignation of President Correa, holding him responsible for what 
was taking place.  The group even went so far as to accuse him of 
a “dictatorial attitude.”  Pachakutik entered into a political 
alliance with Lucio Gutiérrez in 2002 and its links with the 
former president are well known:

“PACHAKUTIK ASKS PRESIDENT CORREA TO RESIGN AND CALLS FOR THE 
FORMING OF A SINGLE NATIONAL FRONT

Press Release 141

In the face of the serious political turmoil and internal crisis 
generated by the dictatorial attitude of President Rafael Correa, 
who has violated the rights of public servants as well as society, 
the head of the Pachakutik Movement, Cléver Jiménez, called on the 
indigenous movement, social movements and democratic political 
organizations to form a single national front to demand the exit 
of President Correa, under the guidelines established by Article 
130, Number 2 of the Constitution, which says: “The National 
Assembly will dismiss the President of the Republic in the 
following cases: 2) For serious political crisis and domestic 
turmoil.”

Jiménez backed the struggle of the country’s public servants, 
including the police troops who have mobilized against the 
regime’s authoritarian policies which are an attempt to eliminate 
acquired labor rights.  The situation of the police and members of 
the Armed Forces should be understood as a just action by public 
servants, whose rights have been made vulnerable.

This afternoon, Pachakutik is calling on all organizations within 
the indigenous movement, workers, democratic men and women to 
build unity and prepare new actions to reject Correa’s 
authoritarianism, in defense of the rights and guarantees of all 
Ecuadorans.

Press Secretary

PACHAKUTIK BLOQUE”

The script used in Venezuela and Honduras repeats itself.  They 
try to hold the President and the government responsible for the 
“coup,” later forcing their exit from power.  The coup against 
Ecuador is the next phase in the permanent aggression against ALBA 
and revolutionary movements in the region.

The Ecuadoran people remain mobilized in their rejection of the 
coup attempt, while progressive forces in the region have come 
together to express their solidarity and support of President 
Correa and his government.

Eva Golinger is a Venezuelan and USAmerican lawyer living in 
Caracas. She is the author of The Chavez Code: Cracking US 
Intervention in Venezuela (2005), Bush Versus Chavez: Washington’s 
War on Venezuela (2007) and La telaraña imperial: Enciclopedia de 
injerencia y subversiones [The Imperial Spider Web: Encyclopedia 
of Interference and Subversion], with Romain Migus, 2008. 
Machetera is a member of Tlaxcala, the network of translators for 
linguistic diversity. This translation may be reprinted as long as 
the content remains unaltered, and the source, author, and 
translator are cited.

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