In
Nicaragua,
A Return
Of The
Contras?
By Tim
Rogers,
Correspondent
Christian
Science
Monitor
MANAGUA
- Hidden
somewhere
in the
rugged
mountains
of
Estelí,
in
northern
Nicaragua,
a former
contra
commando
with CIA
training
says
he’s
organizing
an armed
rebellion
against
President
Daniel
Ortega.

A man walks past a painting of Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega in Managua August 7. Ortega returned to power in 2007 in his fourth attempt at reelection – a campaign he ran on promises of 'peace and reconciliation.' Oswaldo Rivas/Reuters |
José
Gabriel
Garmendia,
a former
counterrevolutionary
special
forces
commander
known by
the
codename
“Comandante
Jahob,”
is
reportedly
leading
a group
of
rearmed
contras
that
promise
to
“remove
Ortega
from
office
with
bullets”
if the
president
tries to
sidestep
the
constitution
to get
himself
reelected
next
year.
US-backed
counterrevolutionary
forces,
or
“contras,”
battled
the
left-wing
Sandinista
government
in
decade-long
civil
war in
the
1980s,
which
claimed
more
than
36,000
lives.
When Mr.
Ortega
and the
Sandinistas
were
voted
out of
office
in 1990,
tens of
thousands
of
contras
–
including
Jahob –
handed
in their
weapons
and
tried to
return
to
civilian
life.
Ortega
returned
to power
in 2007
in his
fourth
attempt
at
reelection
– a
campaign
he ran
on
promises
of
“peace
and
reconciliation.”
|
But
three-and-half
years
into his
second
term,
Nicaraguan
society
has
become
increasingly
polarized
by
Ortega’s
government,
which
critics
claim is
pushing
the
country
back
toward
dictatorship.
Ortega’s
actions
have
allegedly
forced
some
contras
to
return
to
clandestine
struggle,
according
to Jahob.
In a
rare
phone
interview
with a
local
newspaper
earlier
this
month,
the
mysterious
comandante
said he
and his
men are
looking
for
weapons
and
munitions
and are
prepared
to
remain
in the
mountains
as long
as they
feel
it’s
necessary
to
ensure
Ortega's
ouster.
Military
dismisses
threat
Nicaraguan
authorities
are
downplaying
Jahob’s
rebellion.
Gen.
Julio
César
Avilés,
Nicaragua’s
military
chief,
said the
Army has
gathered
intelligence
that
Jahob
has been
crossing
into
Honduras
to make
contacts
with
other
“delinquent
groups”
north of
Nicaragua’s
border,
where
the
contras
created
training
bases
with CIA
support
in the
1980s.
Still,
the
military
brass
insists
Jahob is
nothing
more
than a
common
criminal
hiding
behind a
false
political
cause.
“The war
has
ended;
there
are no
conditions
for
armed
groups
to
operate
here,”
General
Avilés
told
reporters
last
month.
But
former
contra
leaders
and
ex-military
intelligence
warn
that it
would be
a
mistake
to
dismiss
Jahob’s
incipient
uprising.
One
ex-contra
who says
he
worked
with
Jahob in
the
1980s
says he
remembers
the
former
commando
leader
as being
a
“specialist
in
ambush
and
kidnappings,”
and
someone
who is
“very
capable
of doing
convert
operations
anywhere,
anytime.”
Former
contra
leader
Luis
Fley,
better
known as
“Comandante
Jhonson,”
told the
Monitor
that
Jahob is
not a
common
outlaw,
but
rather a
highly
trained
solider
with
strong
political
convictions
and
lingering
resentment
toward
the
Sandinistas,
who
killed
his
father –
an
evangelical
preacher
– and
brothers
during
the war
in the
1980s.
Mr. Fley
says
Jahob –
who is
now 47 –
was
trained
in
covert
operations
by the
Argentines
and
Americans
in the
1980s,
and is
probably
working
to
“build a
social
network
with
collaborators
in the
mountains.”
Scars of
war
could
reopen
Retired
Gen.
Hugo
Torres,
a former
Sandinista
guerrilla
hero who
later
worked
as head
of the
military’s
state
intelligence
in the
mid-1990s,
warns
that
Jahob
could
find
fertile
ground
to
develop
a
following
in the
mountains.
“The
wounds
from the
military
conflict
in the
‘80s
still
hadn’t
finished
scarring
when
Ortega
returned
to power
(in
2007).
And
instead
of
working
to heal
those
wounds,
Ortega
did just
the
opposite:
he is
reopening
wounds
by
polarizing
and
dividing
the
population,”
says Mr.
Torres,
who is
now a
member
of the
left-wing
dissident
Sandinista
Renovation
Movement
(MRS).
The
former
general
warns
that
Jahob’s
movement
could
grow if
he
proves
to be a
strong
leader
and if
people
think
Ortega
is
repeating
the
oppressive
Sandinista
policies
of the
1980s.
Though
Torres
says
it’s too
soon to
predict
how
Jahob’s
adventure
will
end, at
this
point it
is
“important
to not
magnify
this,
nor
minimize
it.”
For many
of the
older
ex-contras
who
demobilized
21 years
ago,
returning
to armed
conflict
is
unthinkable.
Yet many
were
just
teenagers
when
they
handed
in their
guns.
They are
now in
their
30s or
40s and
– in the
words of
Torres –
“still
have
energy.”
War
unwanted
among
many
civilians
But many
who
experienced
the
battlefield
horrors
in the
1980s
say a
return
to armed
violence
is
unacceptable.
Former
contra
commando
“Comandante
Jehu,” a
close
friend
of Jahob,
says his
comrade
simply
wants to
work and
live in
peace.
Jehu,
who sits
in a
wheelchair
after
being
crippled
during
the war
in the
80s,
says
Jahob
has no
intention
of
returning
to armed
struggle,
but was
forced
to go on
the run
because
he was
being
“persecuted”
by the
Army for
a murder
he
insists
he
didn’t
commit.
“Jahob
is not
rearmed,
he’s
just
hiding
because
he feels
cornered,”
Jehu
said.
“There
are no
conditions
for a
guerrilla
war
here.
People
don’t
even
have
enough
money to
buy
food,
much
less
guns.”
Jehu
says
Jahob’s
threats
have
been
exaggerated
by
Managua
politicians
trying
to
manipulate
the
situation
for
their
own
benefit.
He says
Nicaragua’s
political
right
wing
fantasizes
about a
Rambo-like
character
that
declares
war on
Ortega,
while
the left
wing
fantasizes
about
war as
an
excuse
to crack
down
harder
on
society
and
cancel
next
year’s
elections.
But the
majority
of
Nicaragua’s
poor who
fought
in the
civil
war –
people
like
Jahob –
know
that war
doesn’t
fix
anything,
Jehu
insists.
“War is
horrible,”
the
disabled
veteran
says.
“Those
of us
who
fought
for 10
years
have no
desire
to
return
to war.”
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