|
Nicaragua
Rewind:
US
cuts
aid
to
its
poor
old
foe
MANAGUA,
Nicaragua
—
President
Daniel
Ortega’s
wobbly
balancing
act
between
Venezuela
and
the
United
States
has
become
precarious
after
a US
decision
this
week
to
cut
bilateral
aid
to
Nicaragua.
The
US
Embassy
in
Managua
announced
on
Thursday
the
suspension
of
State
Department
and
USAID
money
to
the
Nicaraguan
government.
The
$3
million
aid
cut
comes
in
response
to
the
Sandinistas’
dubious
handling
of
Venezuelan
petro
dollars
and
significant
complaints
of
official
mischief
in
the
2011
election
process.
In
January,
US
Secretary
of
State
Hillary
Clinton
called
it
“a
setback
to
democracy”
after
Ortega
sidestepped
Nicaragua’s
Constitution,
allowing
himself
to
be
re-elected.
Slashing
government
aid
sets
the
stage
for
a
much
bigger
decision
next
month,
when
Washington
will
determine
whether
to
continue
supporting
Nicaragua
in
multilateral
lenders.
That’s
considered
crucial
to
the
future
of
US-Nicaragua
relations
and
the
economic
viability
of
the
hemisphere’s
second-poorest
country.
Bilateral
aid
had
come
to
Nicaragua
thanks
to a
policy
known
as a
fiscal
transparency
waiver,
meaning
US
funds
are
contingent
on
the
Central
American
government's
disclosure
of
revenue
and
spending.
Washington
votes
once
a
year
on
whether
to
pass
the
waiver.
This
is
the
first
time
it
has
been
struck
down.
More
from
Nicaragua:
Non-Sandinistas
need
not
apply
US
support
in
multilateral
institutions
comes
from
what’s
called
a
property
waiver,
which
makes
support
conditional
on
the
country’s
progress
resolving
pending
claims
by
US
citizens
who
had
their
properties
confiscated
by
the
Sandinista
government
in
the
1980s.
Canceling
the
property
waiver
would
jeopardize
$1.4
billion
in
approved
development
loans
over
the
next
five
years.
The
one-two
waivers
whack
by
the
United
States
wouldn’t
be
quite
as
devastating
as
the
trade
embargo
imposed
on
the
Sandinista
government
in
the
1980s,
but
Nicaraguan
business
leaders
say
it
would
feel
like
“an
atomic
bomb”
had
been
dropped
on
the
country’s
recently
budding
economy.
Though
previous
aid
reductions
from
the
US
and
half
a
dozen
European
countries
have
been
underwritten
by
Venezuela’s
oil-rich
president,
even
Hugo
Chavez
would
have
a
hard
time
cutting
a
check
to
cover
$1.4
billion.
In
strict
monetary
terms,
canceling
the
transparency
waiver
is
more
like
a
distant
(and
perhaps
unheard)
warning
shot
than
a
direct
hit.
The
amount
of
aid
the
US
is
cutting
— a
paltry
$3
million
— is
equivalent
to
what
Ortega
gets
every
two
days
from
Chavez,
who
provided
his
Sandinista
comrade
with
$557
million
in
2011
and
more
than
$2
billion
over
the
past
five
years.
Venezuelan
aid
is
managed
privately
by
Ortega
in a
parallel
economy
that
operates
under
the
auspices
of
Chavez’s
Bolivarian
Alliance
for
Our
Americas
(ALBA)
—
hence
the
transparency
troubles.
The
US,
meanwhile,
has
been
trimming
economic
assistance
to
Nicaragua
for
years.
In
June
2009,
Washington
slashed
$64
million
in
Millennium
Challenge
funding
after
the
Sandinistas
were
accused
of
stealing
40
polls
in
the
2008
municipal
elections.
Five
and
a
half
years
after
Ortega’s
return
to
power
in
2007,
US
aid
for
Nicaragua
has
been
whittled
to
about
$30
million.
About
10
percent
of
that
goes
toward
funding
a
government
HIV
program
and
to
military
training
that
Nicaragua
stopped
sending
its
officers
to
in
2010.
The
other
$27
million
goes
to
Nicaraguan
civil
society
groups,
which
will
not
be
affected
by
the
transparency
waiver
cut,
nor
will
several
million
dollars
worth
of
drug-war
operational
assistance
channeled
through
the
US
Department
of
Defense.
More
from
Nicaragua:
Where
leftists
get
religious
over
free
trade
The
possible
loss
of
the
property
waiver,
however,
would
be a
much
more
serious
blow
to
the
country.
The
property
waiver
prohibits
US
economic
assistance
or
support
in
international
financial
institutions
to
any
country
where
US
citizens
have
not
received
compensation
for
confiscated
property.
For
the
past
18
years,
the
government
of
Nicaragua
has
compensated
1,864
US
citizens
a
total
of
$433
million
for
properties
confiscated
in
the
1980s.
So
far
this
year,
the
Sandinista
government
has
resolved
more
than
50
cases
and
is
on
track
to
reach
last
year’s
record
of
62.
Officials
hope
that
accomplishment
will
ensure
an
extension
of
the
transparency
waiver
next
month.
If
the
US
decides
to
suspend
the
property
waiver
anyway
—
something
Republican
congressional
leaders
are
pushing
for
— it
would
be
the
metaphoric
bomb
that
business
leaders
are
worried
about.
Nicaragua
would
stand
to
lose
vital
budget
and
development
funding
from
the
Inter-American
Development
Bank,
the
World
Bank
and
other
multilateral
lending
institutions
in
which
the
US
has
a
strong
voice
and
vote.
Analysts
say
that
suspending
the
property
waiver
would
punish
Nicaragua’s
poor
and
radicalize
its
president
— a
man
who
once
played
the
role
of
Ronald
Reagan’s
tropically
mustachioed
Cold
War
nemesis
in
the
1980s.
Ortega
has
won
rare
praise
for
being
more
pragmatic
and
productive
in
his
second
go-round
as
president
(despite
his
penchant
for
hackneyed
revolutionary
boilerplate).
But
forcing
Ortega
back
into
a
corner,
the
Sandinista
leader
could
fall
further
into
the
dying
embrace
of
Chavez.
He
also
could
get
pushed
into
the
grinning
clutch
of
Iran’s
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad,
who
recently
offered
Ortega
a
$250
million
development
loan
for
mysterious
purposes.
“American
authorities
aren’t
going
to
make
Nicaragua
more
democratic
by
impoverishing
the
country
even
more,”
said
Jose
Adan
Aguerri,
president
of
Nicaragua’s
largest
federation
of
business
chambers.
“It’s
not
the
Nicaraguan
government
that
is
going
to
be
the
big
loser
from
the
loss
of
the
waivers.”
Nicaraguan
businessman
Cesar
Zamora,
vice
president
of
the
Association
of
American
Chambers
of
Commerce
in
Latin
America,
said
the
suspension
of
the
second
waiver
would
be
devastating
to
the
country’s
internal
twitchings
for
democracy.
From
the
Suite
Spot:
Banking
on
Africa’s
poor
“We
have
the
capacity
to
resolve
our
own
institutional
issues,
but
it’s
going
to
take
some
time,”
Zamora
said.
“In
the
meantime,
the
US
can’t
drop
a
nuclear
bomb
on
Nicaragua
and
say,
‘You
pick
up
the
pieces
and
then
you’ll
win
back
the
support
from
US
government.’”
Unfortunately
for
Nicaragua,
the
fate
of
the
property
waiver
will
be
decided
in
context
of a
heated
presidential
campaign
in
the
United
States.
What’s
best
for
Nicaraguan
democracy
— a
riddle
that
no
one
seems
to
have
been
able
to
solve
during
the
country's
191
years
in
existence
—
isn’t
exactly
a
top
concern
for
anyone
in
Washington
these
days.
“Just
a
few
months
before
a
critical
and
tight
presidential
election,
the
Obama
campaign
team
wants
to
make
sure
it
is
not
vulnerable
on
foreign
policy,
including
on
Latin
America,”
said
Michael
Shifter,
president
of
the
Inter-American
Dialogue,
a
think-tank
in
Washington.
“It
will
want
to
show
that
it
has
been
tough
on
anti-American
leaders
like
Ortega.
So
for
political
cover,
the
administration
may
want
to
cancel
both
waivers
to
shield
itself
from
the
critique
of
the
Romney
campaign.”
Others
think
the
US
government
might
be
more
hesitant
to
play
its
last
diplomatic
card.
Once
the
property
waiver
is
suspended,
the
US
would
essentially
lose
any
remaining
leverage
—
real
or
perceived
—
over
Ortega,
making
it
very
difficult
for
the
remaining
193
US
claimants
to
receive
compensation
for
their
properties
confiscated
by
the
Sandinistas
in
the
1980s.
Then
again,
Washington’s
bipartisan
exasperation
with
Ortega
may
have
reached
the
point
where
US
politicians
are
ready
to
pull
the
plug
and
walk
away.
“It’s
is
an
election
year,
Ortega
has
announced
he’s
going
to
Tehran,
he’s
now
stolen
two
elections,
and
his
rhetoric
is
as
heated
and
inane
as
always,
so
maybe
those
considerations
will
predominate,”
a
recently
retired
US
diplomat,
who
was
last
posted
in
Managua,
said.
Business
leaders,
however,
hope
the
cancellation
of
the
first
waiver
doesn’t
mean
the
fight
for
the
second
is
already
a
lost
cause.
“The
battle
is
for
the
property
waiver,”
Zamora
said.
“The
possibility
of
saving
the
second
waiver
represents
an
opportunity
that
we
can’t
afford
to
lose.”
By
Tim
Rogers
|
GlobalPost.com
|