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Copyright 1989 The Times Mirror Company
Los Angeles Times
April 2, 1989, Sunday, Home Edition
SECTION: Opinion; Part 5; Page 5; Column 4; Op-Ed Desk
LENGTH: 816 words
HEADLINE:
RESIST THE TEMPTATION TO RIG NICARAGUAN VOTE
BYLINE: By WILLIAM M. LeoGRANDE, William M. LeoGrande, a professor of government at
American University in Washington, is co-editor with Morris Blachman and
Kenneth Sharpe of Confronting Revolution: Security Through Diplomacy in Central
America (Pantheon, 1986).
BODY:
Like two punched-out prizefighters staggering in a clinch, the Democratic
Congress and the Republican Administration embraced last week, agreeing to end
their eight-year fight over aid to the Contras. As much out of exhaustion as
conviction, they decided to call it a draw.
Unable to persuade Congress to resume military aid, the White House had to give
up former President Ronald Reagan's quest for a Contra victory. But as their
part of the bipartisan bargain, congressional Democrats agreed to continue
non-military aid to the Contras, thereby keeping them together,
"body and soul" as Reagan used to say, in case the Nicaraguan elections next February go awry.
The Bush Administration has by no means abandoned its hope of ousting the
Sandinistas; it will now simply shift its efforts from the battlefield to the
electoral arena. U.S. officials are advising Contra leaders to return to
Nicaragua and
"think political."
The last time
Nicaragua held elections, in 1984, the outcome was not in doubt. Virtually everyone,
including U.S. officials and opposition leaders, conceded that the Sandinistas
would win a fair contest. At Washington's behest, most of the opposition
boycotted the election so that the Sandinistas would gain no stature from it.
Five years later, life in
Nicaragua is much harder. The mantle of legitimacy that the Sandinistas won by ousting
Anastasio Somoza has been tarnished by the collapse of the economy. Nearly a
decade of war, combined with incessant conflict between a socialist-minded
government and a capitalist private sector, has
driven
Nicaragua's standard of living below pre-revolutionary levels.
Economic privation has badly eroded the Sandinistas' popular support. An
independent public opinion poll taken last year by the Catholic University in
Managua found that only 42% of respondents approved of Daniel Ortega's
performance as president and only 28% identified with the Sandinista party. If
the internal opposition could unify behind a single candidate and put forward a
credible political program, it would stand an excellent chance of winning next
February.
But thus far the opposition has proven utterly unable to take advantage of the
public's disaffection with the Sandinistas. Only 9% of respondents identify
with the opposition; the vast majority (63%) said they identified with no one.
The opposition remains splintered in more than a dozen mini-parties. The return
of various Contra leaders from exile
will probably aggravate these divisions. The Contras, after all, bickered
constantly, uniting only under orders from Washington.
Will the United States, so accustomed to directing every facet of the armed
opposition, stand idly by while the civic opposition squanders an opportunity
to drive the Sandinistas from office by the ballot? Not likely. The Bush
Administration will be sorely tempted to save the opposition from its own
liabilities with large-scale covert assistance. In
Nicaragua's depressed economy, a few million would weigh heavily in the electoral balance.
Covert involvement in foreign elections is a well-established technique in the
CIA's repertoire. Moreover, covert aid has been flowing to
Nicaragua's civic opposition for over a decade. Jimmy Carter initiated the program and
Reagan expanded it until the recipients of CIA largess included the
press, private sector, opposition political parties, trade unions and the
Catholic Church. Expanding this aid as the election approaches will not seem
like a radical new departure in policy. Nor is it likely to provoke much
complaint from congressional Democrats, who, despite their opposition to
paramilitary aid for the Contras, never raised serious objections to aiding the
civic opposition.
Yet a major CIA campaign to influence the Nicaraguan election has several major
drawbacks. When it is disclosed, as it inevitably will be, the recipients of
CIA aid will be branded as disloyal agents of a foreign power. No candidate's
campaign could benefit from such a stigma.
Moreover, if the opposition appears to have a real chance of winning,
Sandinista hard-liners will argue for halting the election process rather than
risking defeat. If they can make a convincing
case that the election is being distorted by U.S. interference, they are likely
to prevail. That would destroy hopes for democracy in
Nicaragua, demolish the Central American peace accords and probably lead to a resumption
of the Contra war.
If we believe that the merit of free elections is to let people decide their
own fate, covert foreign interference negates their
raison d'etre. The Bush Administration justified its neutrality in the recent elections in
El Salvador by arguing that the integrity of the democratic process was more
important than who won, even if the winner was not Washington's preferred
candidate. That is a good maxim to abide by in
Nicaragua as well.