Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Trump's Honduras Gamble: How A Narco-Case Pardon Became An Election Message


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Juan Orlando Hernández should have spent most of the rest of his life in a U.S. prison. The former Honduran president was sentenced to 45 years after a New York jury agreed with prosecutors that he helped turn the country into a corridor for hundreds of tons of cocaine.

The drugs were destined for American streets. Instead, he has walked free thanks to a full pardon from Donald Trump. For readers outside Central America, this is more than a strange courtroom twist.

Hernández was once Washington's favoured partner: tough-on-crime speeches, close security cooperation, reassuring signals to investors.

The same man was later painted by U.S. prosecutors as the political boss of a“narco-state,” where traffickers bought protection from police, soldiers and party insiders in exchange for campaign money and personal gain.

Trump has now erased that landmark sentence at a very specific moment: Honduras is in the middle of a bitter election.


Hernández pardon reshapes Honduran power and U.S. ties
The conservative National Party, Hernández's old political home, is trying to claw back power from a left-leaning government that has talked about realigning foreign policy and softening its stance toward U.S. security priorities.

Into that battle drops a presidential signature. Hernández sent Trump a deeply flattering, almost devotional letter from prison, casting himself as the victim of politicised justice under the current U.S. administration and presenting their struggles as similar.

Longtime operatives helped carry that message. The pardon that followed is formally about“correcting an injustice” – but in Honduras it is heard as something more.

For many voters and elites, the timing looks like a signal: if a government friendly to Trump's circle is elected, Honduras can expect warmth, access and deals; if not, the relationship will be colder and more unpredictable.

The message is aimed as much at political insiders, business families and security chiefs as at ordinary citizens. For expats and foreign observers, the case is a sharp reminder of how power really works in the region.

A years-long investigation, a 45-year sentence and grand speeches about the war on drugs were overturned by one relationship and one decision – and used, very likely, as a tool in another country's election.

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The Rio Times

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