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The Washington Times Online Edition

U.S. denies role in Honduras coup flight

Manuel Zelaya was deposed by the Honduran military after he sought to change the constitution to allow him to run for a second term as president.Manuel Zelaya was deposed by the Honduran military after he sought to change the constitution to allow him to run for a second term as president.

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — The U.S. military said Sunday its troops in Honduras did not know of and played no role in a flight that took ousted President Manuel Zelaya to exile during a military coup.

Mr. Zelaya has said the Honduran military plane that flew him to Costa Rica on June 28 stopped to refuel at Soto Cano, a Honduran air base that is home to 600 U.S. soldiers, sailors and airmen engaged in counternarcotics operations and other missions in Central America.

U.S. forces at Soto Cano “were not involved in the flight that carried President Zelaya to Costa Rica on June 28,” Southern Command spokesman Robert Appin said in an e-mail to the Associated Press. The American troops “had no knowledge or part in the decisions made for the plane to land, refuel and take off.”

Mr. Appin said the U.S. troops at Soto Cano have stopped conducting exercises with the Honduran military since the coup.

“The U.S. military recognizes that the situation must be resolved by Hondurans and their democratic institutions in accordance with the rule of law,” he said.

The Obama administration has cut off millions of dollars in military and development aid to Honduras in an effort to apply pressure for Mr. Zelaya’s reinstatement. It has stopped short of imposing trade sanctions that could cripple the Honduran economy, which is highly dependent on exports to the United States.

Mr. Zelaya, a wealthy rancher who aligned himself with leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez during his presidency, increasingly has voiced frustration with Washington for failing to impose tougher penalties.

During a visit to Brazil last week, Mr. Zelaya spoke of the stop at Soto Cano, also known as Palmerola, and voiced suspicions of U.S. complicity in the coup, although he stressed that he did not believe the highest levels of the Obama administration were involved.

“The Obama administration has been firm in condemning the coup and demanding my restitution. I do not see reasons to believe that the Obama administration has two faces,” Mr. Zelaya said.

“Now, there are some elements of the CIA that could have been involved. When they took me by plane to Costa Rica, it was a short flight, but the plane made a stop at the Palmerola air base to refuel,” he added. “Palmerola is a base administered by Honduran and U.S. troops. If it was a short flight, some 40 minutes, why did they have to refuel at Palmerola base?”

Patricia Valle, who served as Mr. Zelaya’s deputy foreign minister, reiterated those suspicions Saturday, although she gave no evidence that American personnel at the base interacted with the Honduran military officials on the plane or that they even knew Mr. Zelaya was there. She said Mr. Zelaya stayed on the plane during the stop.

“Zelaya was taken to Palmerola,” Ms. Valle told the AP. “The United States was involved in the coup against Zelaya.”

In Washington, State Department spokesman Fred Lash said in response to the claim that “the Soto Cano Air Base in Honduras is a Honduran military base under the control of the Honduran military authorities. The United States was not informed in advance of the use of the Soto Cano Air Base as a refueling stop for the aircraft that transported President Zelaya into exile.”

Palmerola was used by the United States during the Central American civil wars of the 1980s.

The government of interim President Roberto Micheletti is trying to withstand international pressure to restore Mr. Zelaya before scheduled Nov. 29 presidential elections. The government insists Mr. Zelaya was removed from office legally after violating court orders to call off a referendum asking voters whether they would support rewriting the constitution.

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