Agent Micheletti
Jean-Guy Allard
THE late CIA agent Philip Agee, who dedicated
himself to identifying and denouncing his crimes
after resigning from the agency, would have
predicted it some time ago: Robert Micheletti,
current leader of the Tegucigalpa military/business
junta, has all the characteristics of a yanki
intelligence agent, recruited at a certain moment by
some Langley official assigned to the Honduran
Embassy.
It’s
important to observe the emotion that the future
Honduran dictator had on July 16, 2008, when he was
president of the National Congress, when he
conferred The Great Cross with Gold Badge, the
Central American country’s highest distinction, to
Charles Ford, the U.S. ambassador to Honduras at the
time.
This was the same Ford who a month early had
rudely proposed to the country’s new President,
Manuel Zelaya, that Honduras should provide refuge
for international terrorist Luis Posada Carriles.
For this act of servility, Micheletti called
together members of the same coup leadership that
conspired for 11 months to remove the legitimate
president from the country.
Other officials present at the meeting included
Vilma Morales, the president of the Supreme Court of
Justice; General Romeo Vásquez Velásquez and several
of his officials; the attorney general and deputy
attorney general; the human rights commissioner, and
the president of the Supreme Electoral Court.
The mafia was completed by the heads of the one
dozen families who dominate the country and who saw
to Zelaya’s kidnapping and expulsion to Costa Rica.
When, during this same period, the then-U.S.
deputy secretary of state and undercover CIA agent
John Negroponte visited Honduras, he paid particular
attention to Micheletti.
The former Bush ambassador in Baghdad had just
finished a tour that suspiciously took him to
Guatemala and El Salvador as well.
In Tegucigalpa he visited President Zelaya, with
whom he discussed the decision of the president to
convert the Palmerola base, occupied by the United
States, into a civilian airport, to which he
commented, "It can’t be done overnight."
Negroponte later met in private with Micheletti,
but nothing is known of the content of that
extensive encounter. "He did not disclose the main
subjects discussed in his conversation," a local
newspaper reported.
But it is known that Negroponte –official CIA
founder of the cruel 316 battalion – later had
secret meetings with the president of the Supreme
Court, Vilma Morales, Micheletti’s eminent
accomplice; former presidents Ricardo Maduro and
Carlos Flores, front line coup members; and the
pathetic "Human Rights" Commissioner, Ramón
Custodio.
However, there is much more to Micheletti’s file.
In 1985, when Honduras was being suffocated by
the imperial boot and – thanks to Ronald Reagan and
George Bush Sr. – the country turned into a yanki
base for defeating the revolutionary Sandinista
government in Managua, the representative Micheletti
was an accomplice to a parliamentary coup attempt
when he tried to turn Congress into a constituent
assembly.
The intention of the plot was to guarantee pro-U.S.
President Roberto Suazo Córdova’s stay in power.
Córdova was implicated up to his neck, like his
master Negroponte, in the Iran-Contra scandal that
involved the trafficking of drugs for arms.
Suazo Córdova was the "little yanki" president
who covered up a period of savage repression that is
still spoken about with fear in Honduras today.
It’s said that in the 1960s, the present coup
dictator was a noncommissioned officer in the
Presidential Guard under Ramón Villeda Morales,
whose overthrow marked the beginning of a never-ending
military dictatorship.
As the son of an Italian immigrant, Micheletti’s
political career would be truly inexplicable if he
didn’t have some "miraculous" connection. In his
case, it was the U.S. ambassador in Tegucigalpa.
Is Micheletti a product of the diabolic machinery
whose operation was described in such detail by
Philip Agee?
There is much more to say about the hidden
relations of the illegitimate president, from his
weakness for the murderer and torturer Billy Joya to
his affiliation with the Yehuda Leitner smuggling
network to his connections to drug traffickers or
the yanki congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen, recently
awarded by a branch of the CIA.
Micheletti has all the markings of an agent.
Nothing is missing, not even the arrogance of
someone who thinks that, no matter what the
headlines say, he has the trust of his masters.
Translated by Granma International