Trump wades into Honduran vote, raising questions about American drug trafficking strategy

A presidential candidate in Honduras backed by President Donald Trump is leading the preliminary count to become the Central American nation’s next leader, scrambling a narrative about the U.S. war on drugs that the Trump administration has pushed in recent months.

The United States has carried out more than 20 military strikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats off the coast from Venezuela this fall in the name of unseating an authoritarian leader who the U.S. says heads up a narco-terrorist operation. Yet Mr. Trump last week made endorsements and pledges in Honduras that seemed to contradict those goals.

Mr. Trump endorsed Nasry “Tito” Asfura of the conservative National Party just days before the election, saying the two could work together to combat drug trafficking. Two days later on Nov. 28, Mr. Trump pledged to pardon former President Juan Orlando Hernández, a member of Mr. Asfura’s party, who was extradited to the U.S. in 2022 and sentenced to 45 years in U.S. prison, convicted of drug trafficking. At the Manhattan-based trial, the U.S. prosecutor said Mr. Hernández as president of Honduras had boasted that he and his collaborators were “going to shove the drugs right up the noses of the gringos.”

Why We Wrote This

President Donald Trump has vowed to attack drug trafficking across Latin America. But in promising to pardon a convicted trafficker from Honduras, he has swayed politics and unsettled policy.

The incongruity of chasing and attacking alleged drug traffickers in the region, at the same time that a powerful political player convicted of these very crimes is promised a U.S. reprieve, points to political and ideological motivations by the Trump administration, experts say, rather than a security plan.

“There is a strategy from the White House to consolidate the right in the western hemisphere,” says Lester Ramírez, a Honduran political analyst who teaches public policy at the Central American Technological University in Tegucigalpa. “It’s about creating a hegemony of the right.”

Presidency Honduras/Reuters/File

Then-President Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras and U.S. President Donald Trump pose for a picture during the signing of an agreement in which the Central American nation agreed to accept more asylum-seekers heading to the United States, in New York, Sept. 25, 2019.

Tipping the scales

With just over 57.3% of votes counted by Monday afternoon, Mr. Asfura, a former mayor of Tegucigalpa, has 39.91% of the vote. He’s closely trailed by populist candidate Salvador Nasralla (39.89%) from the Liberal Party, and Rixi Moncada from the ruling LIBRE party has garnered 19.86% of the vote. The difference between Mr. Asfura and Mr. Nasralla is just 515 votes. There is still a chance that Mr. Nasralla could emerge as the next president.

In a flurry of social media posts last week, Mr. Trump called Ms. Moncada a “communist” and Mr. Nasralla a “borderline communist.” He painted Mr. Asfura, referred to as Tito and Papi colloquially here, as “the only real friend of Freedom in Honduras.”

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