Friday, July 31, 2009

Sovereign Investing in Times of Crisis: Part V, The Case of China

This is the FIFTH of a multi-part series exploring the rise of a new form of integrated sovereign investing. The focus will be on the regulatory framework that is being developed in the West and the reality of innovative sovereign investing being implemented in China. A complete version of these materials will be published in the University of Iowa College of Law Journal, Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems. The manuscript of which may be accessed HERE.

The materials will be divided into the following parts:

Part I. Introduction

Part II. Projections of Public Economic Power in Private Form: Contextualizing Sovereign Wealth Funds--Form, Function and Policy.
A. Form in SWF Definition and Operation.
B. Function in Sovereign Investing.
C. Form and Function in the Policy Context on the Eve of Financial Crisis.

Part III. Complexity and Coordination in Sovereign Investing: The State Owned Enterprise as Sovereign Investment Vehicle.

Part IV. The Expression of Dissonance in Regulatory Responses.
A. National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The United States, Canada, Australia
2. Europe
B. Proposed Non-National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The European Union
2. American Bi-Lateralism
3. Santiago Principles.
4. OECD Soft Standard Setting

Part V. Coordination, Development, Opposition and the Challenges of Sovereign Investing in the Context of Global Economic Crisis: The Case of China.
A. “Go Global” Strategy and the Consolidation of Sovereign Investment
B. The Organization and Operation of Chinese Sovereign Investing.
C. Sovereign Investment as Cooperative Public-Private Networks: CIC and Its Subsidiaries.
D. Conformity to Current Regulatory Models and Policy Ramifications.

Part VI. Conclusion.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Sovereign Investing in Times of Crisis: Global Regulation of SWFs, SOEs and the Chinese Experience--Part IV, Regulatory Dissonance

This is the FOURTH of a multi-part series exploring the rise of a new form of integrated sovereign investing. The focus will be on the regulatory framework that is being developed in the West and the reality of innovative sovereign investing being implemented in China. A complete version of these materials will be published in the University of Iowa College of Law Journal, Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems. The manuscript of which may be accessed HERE.

The materials will be divided into the following parts:

Part I. Introduction

Part II. Projections of Public Economic Power in Private Form: Contextualizing Sovereign Wealth Funds--Form, Function and Policy.
A. Form in SWF Definition and Operation.
B. Function in Sovereign Investing.
C. Form and Function in the Policy Context on the Eve of Financial Crisis.

Part III. Complexity and Coordination in Sovereign Investing: The State Owned Enterprise as Sovereign Investment Vehicle.

Part IV. The Expression of Dissonance in Regulatory Responses.
A. National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The United States, Canada, Australia
2. Europe
B. Proposed Non-National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The European Union
2. American Bi-Lateralism
3. Santiago Principles.
4. OECD Soft Standard Setting

Part V. Coordination, Development, Opposition and the Challenges of Sovereign Investing in the Context of Global Economic Crisis: The Case of China.
A. “Go Global” Strategy and the Consolidation of Sovereign Investment
B. The Organization and Operation of Chinese Sovereign Investing.
C. Sovereign Investment as Cooperative Public-Private Networks: CIC and Its Subsidiaries.
D. Conformity to Current Regulatory Models and Policy Ramifications.

Part VI. Conclusion.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Sovereign Investing in Times of Crisis: Global Regulation of SWFs, SOEs and the Chinese Experience--Part III, Complexity, Coordinationand the SOE

This is the THIRD of a multi-part series exploring the rise of a new form of integrated sovereign investing. The focus will be on the regulatory framework that is being developed in the West and the reality of innovative sovereign investing being implemented in China. A complete version of these materials will be published in the University of Iowa College of Law Journal, Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems. The manuscript of which may be accessed HERE.

The materials will be divided into the following parts:

Part I. Introduction

Part II. Projections of Public Economic Power in Private Form: Contextualizing Sovereign Wealth Funds--Form, Function and Policy.
A. Form in SWF Definition and Operation.
B. Function in Sovereign Investing.
C. Form and Function in the Policy Context on the Eve of Financial Crisis.

Part III. Complexity and Coordination in Sovereign Investing: The State Owned Enterprise as Sovereign Investment Vehicle.

Part IV. The Expression of Dissonance in Regulatory Responses.
A. National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The United States, Canada, Australia
2. Europe
B. Proposed Non-National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The European Union
2. American Bi-Lateralism
3. Santiago Principles.
4. OECD Soft Standard Setting

Part V. Coordination, Development, Opposition and the Challenges of Sovereign Investing in the Context of Global Economic Crisis: The Case of China.
A. “Go Global” Strategy and the Consolidation of Sovereign Investment
B. The Organization and Operation of Chinese Sovereign Investing.
C. Sovereign Investment as Cooperative Public-Private Networks: CIC and Its Subsidiaries.
D. Conformity to Current Regulatory Models and Policy Ramifications.

Part VI. Conclusion.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Sovereign Investing in Times of Crisis: Global Regulation of SWFs, SOEs and the Chinese Experience--Part II, Projections-Public Power,Private Form

This is the SECOND of a multi-part series exploring the rise of a new form of integrated sovereign investing. The focus will be on the regulatory framework that is being developed in the West and the reality of innovative sovereign investing being implemented in China. A complete version of these materials will be published in the University of Iowa College of Law Journal, Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems. The manuscript of which may be accessed HERE.

The materials will be divided into the following parts:

Part I. Introduction

Part II. Projections of Public Economic Power in Private Form: Contextualizing Sovereign Wealth Funds--Form, Function and Policy.
A. Form in SWF Definition and Operation.
B. Function in Sovereign Investing.
C. Form and Function in the Policy Context on the Eve of Financial Crisis.

Part III. Complexity and Coordination in Sovereign Investing: The State Owned Enterprise as Sovereign Investment Vehicle.

Part IV. The Expression of Dissonance in Regulatory Responses.
A. National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The United States, Canada, Australia
2. Europe
B. Proposed Non-National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The European Union
2. American Bi-Lateralism
3. Santiago Principles.
4. OECD Soft Standard Setting

Part V. Coordination, Development, Opposition and the Challenges of Sovereign Investing in the Context of Global Economic Crisis: The Case of China.
A. “Go Global” Strategy and the Consolidation of Sovereign Investment
B. The Organization and Operation of Chinese Sovereign Investing.
C. Sovereign Investment as Cooperative Public-Private Networks: CIC and Its Subsidiaries.
D. Conformity to Current Regulatory Models and Policy Ramifications.

Part VI. Conclusion.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Sovereign Investing in Times of Crisis: Global Regulation of Sovereign Wealth Funds, State Owned Enterprises and the Chinese Experience--Part I, Intro

This is the FIRST of a multi-part series exploring the rise of a new form of integrated sovereign investing. The focus will be on the regulatory framework that is being developed in the West and the reality of innovative sovereign investing being implemented in China. A complete version of these materials will be published in the University of Iowa College of Law, the full manuscript of which may be accessed HERE.

The materials will be divided into the following parts:

Part I. Introduction

Part II. Projections of Public Economic Power in Private Form: Contextualizing Sovereign Wealth Funds--Form, Function and Policy.
A. Form in SWF Definition and Operation.
B. Function in Sovereign Investing.
C. Form and Function in the Policy Context on the Eve of Financial Crisis.

Part III. Complexity and Coordination in Sovereign Investing: The State Owned Enterprise as Sovereign Investment Vehicle.

Part IV. The Expression of Dissonance in Regulatory Responses.
A. National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The United States, Canada, Australia
2. Europe
B. Proposed Non-National Approaches to Regulatory Reform.
1. The European Union
2. American Bi-Lateralism
3. Santiago Principles.
4. OECD Soft Standard Setting

Part V. Coordination, Development, Opposition and the Challenges of Sovereign Investing in the Context of Global Economic Crisis: The Case of China.
A. “Go Global” Strategy and the Consolidation of Sovereign Investment
B. The Organization and Operation of Chinese Sovereign Investing.
C. Sovereign Investment as Cooperative Public-Private Networks: CIC and Its Subsidiaries.
D. Conformity to Current Regulatory Models and Policy Ramifications.

Part VI. Conclusion.


Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Emine Tahsin on ALBA (The Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of Our America) and the Cuban Economy

Outside of Latin America, the Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) has been treated as something of a joke. It is the mad product of nondemocratic regimes, the only output of any consequence of which has been photo opportunities. Worse, from the perspective of developed states, it is little more than a reactive stance—a means for generating a propaganda front against the global system of economic organization, and for the usual rants about the United States. I have recently suggested that ALBA is an international force whose strengths ought not to be underestimated by the United States. See, Larry Catá Backer and Augusto Molina, Cuba and the Construction of Alternative Global Trade Systems: ALBA and Free Trade in the Americas, University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law, Vol. 31(3) (forthcoming 2010).

But ALBA has begun to assert its influence within the Caribbean in increasingly powerful ways. The are also becoming an important force within regional organizations, like the Organization of American States. For doubters, the influential role played by ALBA and its member states in the international reaction to the aborted constitutional coup of Honduras’ former President Zelaya, and his removal by the legislative and executive branches of that country should serve as a reminder that ALBA is starting to be a force to be reckoned with, at least in the Caribbean. On the Honduran Revolutions, see Larry Catá Backer, Reflections on the Declaration of Independence: From a Crisis of U.K. Constitutionalism in the Americas to a Global Constitutional Crisis in Honduras, Law at the End of the Day, July 4, 2009. ALBA’s position and characterization of the events in Honduras quickly became the standard version of reality. “The regional bloc of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) condemned the coup in Honduras that ousted President Manuel Zelaya Sunday. A statement issued after a special meeting of foreign ministers urged the reinstatement of Zelaya, and said the ALBA member countries will not recognize any government or person rising from the coup.” ALBA condemns Honduran coup, Zelaya participates meeting, People’s Daily Online, June 29, 2009. As one commentator suggested:

That said, the international response, seeking to reinstate Zelaya without any mention of his illegal acts, has been highly inadequate. The Organization of American States, led by its secretary-general, Jose Miguel Insulza, has acted like Venezuela’s poodle. At Chavez’s request, Insulza went to Nicaragua, where a summit of the anti-democratic ALBA group became the hemisphere’s political center of gravity following the coup. Insulza and other populist presidents said nothing about Zelaya’s dictatorial conduct leading to last Sunday’s events and simply echoed Venezuela’s self-serving stance. Efforts by other countries, including the United States and many South American governments, to put some nuance into the public statements were neutralized by the spectacle unfolding in Nicaragua, which was widely reported across the Spanish-speaking world. Alvaro Vargas Llosa, Honduras—Zelaya’s Coup, The Independent Institute, July 1, 2009.
Yet, ALBA has been instrumental in staging the events in Honduras to great effect. On the basis of their joint efforts, the imperfect impeachment of former President Zelaya has been reconstituted as a coup and produced significant diplomatic victories for the revolutionary efforts of former President Zelaya amongst foreigners, especially in Europe. Most spectacularly, perhaps, was the recent announcement by the European Union that it would suspend $90 Million in aid to Honduras until Honduras agrees to take Mr. Zelaya back. “The EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said in a statement: "In view of the circumstances, I have taken the difficult decision to suspend all budgetary support payments. ‘I strongly appeal to both parties to refrain from any action or declaration which might further escalate tension, thus making the prospect of a solution more difficult.’” EU Suspends $90 million Aid to Honduras, BBC News Online, July 13, 2009. Still, as Sir Ronald Sanders notes, “As Larry Binns, Director of the Council for Hemispheric Affairs based in Washington, has pointed out: ‘By presenting his government as under attack by rightist, anti-constitutional elements intent on overthrowing his presidency, Zelaya has managed to present himself as an emblem of democracy and legitimacy.’ He is far from it.” Ronald Sanders, Coup Provoked, BBC Caribbean.com, July 13, 2009. It is for that reason, if no other, that greater attention ought to be paid to ALBA and its growing importance in the economic and political networks through which the Caribbean region is increasingly ordered.

But ALBA also has begun to have effects on the internal economies of its member states. Dr. Emine Tahsin, of the Istanbul University Faculty of Economics, has written an excellent analysis of the internal workings of ALBA within the Cuban economy. Emine Tahsin, “Looking to the Future: Considering the Role of ALBA in the Cuban Economy,” paper presented at the conference, The Measure of a Revolution: Cuba, 1959-2009, held May 7-9, 2009, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario CANADA.

Tahsin first contextualizes ALBA within its ideological and reactive framework. It is, as she nicely explains, a creature born of the positive and now mature ideology of the Cuban Revolution combined with the reactive anti-Americanism that in some respects has defined Cuba and impelled Cuban activity as much as its ideology. “ALBA was born as an alternative to the US Government’s ‘Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTTAs)’, on the principles of integration to reinforce sovereignty and just social relations, as opposed to liberalization and denationalization. ALBA is simply a reaction to neoliberal policies in search of alternatives. The path of socialist Cuba and Bolivarian revolution of Venezuela are the main driving forces in the emergency of ALBA project. Also the bilateral agreements between Cuba and Venezuela are the main pillars of ALBA integration process.” Tahsin, supra, draft at 2 (citing Alejandro Bendaña, “From Development Assistance to Development Solidarity: the Role of Venezuela and ALBA" (02.02.2009); Osvaldo Martinez, Neo liberalismo ALCA y Libre Comercio, Editorial Ciencias Sociales, Cuba, 2005 and Osvaldo Martinez (edt.), La Integracion en America Latina: De La Retorica A La Realidad, Editorial Ciencias Sociales, Cuba, 2008). She also well summarizes the ideological basis of ALBA, as both key to its difference from standard models of regional trade and integration arrangements, and as an institutionalized nexus of formal opposition to the United States. Tahsin, supra, draft at 4-10. These strands were much in evidence in pronouncements from the ALBA Extraordinary Summit Of the ALBA Final Declaration, April 29, 2009. These, Tahsin summarizes as “-solidarity and complementarity, not competition; a system in harmony with our mother earth and not plundering of human resources; a system of cultural diversity and not cultural destruction and imposition of cultural values and lifestyles alien to the realities of our countries; a system of peace based on social justice and not on imperialist policies and wars; in summary, a system that recovers the human condition of our societies and peoples and does not reduce them to mere consumers or merchandise.” Tahsion, supra, draft at 6.

The heart of the distinction between ALBA and traditional regional trade agreements is ALBA’s focus on development and its emphasis on state control of economic policy in the service of that development. “The main sectors of the economy should be determined by the state instead of market mechanisms. Public goods and basic sectors should belong to the state. Public property rights instead of private property in these sectors are necessary for the complementary principle.” Tahsin, supra, at 9. Thus, the path to greater integration at the level of the worker and peasant is to de emphasize the centrality of the private sector in development. “Endogenous development is defined as a necessity in order to eliminate poverty and over come social exclusion. Due to these the quality of employment should be guaranteed. Oppositely from the FTTAs, ALBA oppose to the diversification of production. . . . Trade and investment should provide economic development rather than specialization. ALBA defends self-sufficiency so that liberalization attempts that destroy this principle is rejected. Instead of markets liberalization and minimizing the role of the state policies, the interest of the socities should be aimed.” Id., and at 7-8. These notions recall an earlier era, one in which de-colonization generated an all embracing ethos of state construction and policy. Fundamental to that ethos was the notion, popular among most states in the 19th and early 20th century, of self sufficiency as the key to independence, and the corollary notion that only equally self sufficient states could attempt integration as equals. Dependence, whether social, religious, cultural or economic was viewed, in this framework, as a symptom of re colonization, and, as such, required resistance. Resistance, for many, could best be measured by a conscious remaking of the social, economic cultural and religious order distinct from that of former colonial powers. And the perversity, of course, was that this vector of political ideology was maturing at just the time that developed states sought to move from systems of mutual sufficiency to networked dependency within a privatized world order. But of course this move could be viewed with nothing but suspicion from a world order sensitive to the political ramifications of dependence within a history of colonization. ALBA, ironically, then, could be understood in this sense as a path toward the maturity of the status of colonizer as a necessary predicate for acquiring the maturity necessary to consider networks of mutual dependence.

Tehsin then suggests the connection between the construction of the Cuban state apparatus and its economic policy, with the construction of ALBA. In a sense, ALBA represents the reconstitution of the Cuban state apparatus on the supra-national level. Tahsin, supra, at 10-16. “Considering ALBA agreements and the related principles it is seen that the experiences of Cuban socialism have been carried out.” Id., at 16. That template, projected throughout the ALBA region has had effects on internal policy. “For the application of social programmes or for the nationalization of private sectors in order to obtain free public services and transfer of income to these areas it is possible to claim that ALBA and therefore Cuban experiment acts as an accelerator.” Id., at 17. At the same time, Tahsin notes the blow back from ALBA states into the Cuban economy. “Cuba have welcomed ALBA under these conditions, looking to the experiences under ALBA integration it is seen that mutually ALBA and Cuba have influences on each other. Briefly considering socio-economic measurements, energy integration, food security, infrastructure and investment and trade relations in ALBA countries these effects are clearly seen.” Id., at 19. The construction or announcement of a variety of programs through bi lateral arrangements (on a sort of inverted ALADI model) points to the ways in which mutual bi lateral integration has begun to reshape both the Cuban economic sector and those of other ALBA states. This is an important and under examined insight. It is one that will require substantially more theoretical and empirical study in the future.

Tahsin concludes:
ALBA have influenced by Cuban experiences also played a role in order to weaken the vulnerabilities of Cuban economy. In the titles of self-sufficiency, providing basic needs, increasing product diversification, ALBA has critical contribution to Cuban economy. ALBA also has a contribution to lessen the burden of the blockade in many ways. Especially externalities created by the energy integration leads not only economic growth but also development of other sub sectors. ALBA might have been seen as an opportunity to develop manufacturing sectors, increasing infra structure and technology use on the basis of equity and complementary. In case of ALBA experience, ideological challenge combining with these factors might have give answers in searching for alternatives economic development models. Id., at 29-30

She is right, of course. And the importance of ALBA has assumed a political as well as economic dimension. For the Americans, especially, top continue to ignore it will likely come to haunt American interests in the future.

Friday, July 17, 2009

How Not to Engage in Broadcast Warfare: On TV Martí as Failure and (Limited) Success

In 1979, John Spicer Nichols explored the power of broadcasting as a weapon in warfare. The object of his study was the insurgency that would, after 1959, be known as the Cuban Revolution.

WHEN CUBAN REVOLUTIONARIES Fidel Castro and Ernesto (Ché) Guevara dis­cussed Guevara's proposal for establishing a rebel radio station, the guerrilla movement was faltering. Castro's troops were not properly fed and equipped and were desperately short of weapons. They had suffered a succession of mili­tary setbacks and could not break out of their rebel stronghold in the Sierra Maestra, a mountain range in the southeastern part of the island.

The purchase of even a small, dilapidated radio transmitter would be a major investment for the revolutionary forces. It would mean the continued shortage of arms and other basics. But Castro, having a keen sense for the value of propaganda, concluded that in the long run a radio station might be more critical to the success of the rebellion than guns and ammunition. Guevara was authorized to start the station.

. . . . But on February 24, 1958, most of the technical problems had been solved and, preceded by the tune of "Invaders' Hymn," Radio Rebelde officially went on the air. "This is Radio Rebelde, voice of the 26th of July Revolutionary Movement and the Rebel Army, transmitting from Free Territory of Cuba in the Sierra Maestra."

Before the end of the year, Radio Rebelde could be heard throughout the country and much of the Caribbean. Each night, eager to hear something not censored by the incumbent government of Fulgencio Batista, a growing number of Cubans would listen to a barrage of bulletins recounting the military vic­tories of the guerrillas, manifestos, and patriotic poems and music on Radio Rebelde. Castro frequently polished his oratorical skills over the air, and by the time the revolutionaries took control of the government, he had refined his abil­ity to the point that many analysts already considered him the greatest political speaker of this era. John Spicer Nichols, Cuba: Right Arm of Revolution, in Keeping the Flame: Media and Government in Latin America, 80 (Robert N. Pierce and John Spicer Nichols; New York: Hastings House., 1979).

This much of the story is well known. The Castro forces understood the importance of propaganda, the utility of modern transmissions vehicles for its distribution, and the sensibilities and needs of its market. They, like others before and after them, successfully used radio as an important weapon in their insurgency campaigns. And, indeed, Cuba after 1959 continued to refine and utilize media transmission for what became the very successful business of the projection of ideas on a global basis. They continue to be a world leader in the use of the media for the exportation of ideas. Many continue to consume the product of these Cuban efforts, especially in the Caribbean and Latin America.

Thirty years later, the same John Spicer Nichols could examine another great propaganda effort and pronounce it a failure. TV Marti Has Virtually No Audience, Violates International Law, And Should Be Closed, Prepared Statement Of John S. Nichols Before the Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights and Oversight Committee on Foreign Affairs, U.S. House of Representatives, Hearings on "TV Marti: A Station in Search of an Audience?', June 17, 2009. Professor Spicer's arguments are straightforward, and from the perspective of American abilities in the art of cultural and political warfare, a cautionary commentary on the failure of what can only be described as symbolic action in the service of half hearted efforts more notable for its form than its function. "

Television Marti has virtually no audience in Cuba and has little relevance in the Cuban domestic dialogue about the historic political transition currently taking place there. Although estimates vary, the total expenditures - including both direct federal appropriations and the substantial indirect costs -- to operate TV Marti since it went on the air in 1990 probably exceed a half-billion dollars of taxpayer money." Id.

Professor Nichols starts with the question considered by the House Committee: Does TV Martí have an audience on the Island? For that purpose he raises and answers two questions. The first is whether TV Martí can be seen on the Island.
The answer to the first sub-question is: the broadcast version of TV Marti is not seen in populated areas of Cuba and, almost without exception, has not been seen since the station went on the air in 1990. Despite the many expensive technological gimmicks funded by Congress, such moving from VHF to UHF broadcasts and changing the transmitter platform from an aerostat to an airplane, the basic physical properties of television broadcasting prevent TV Marti from delivering a signal to the island that is sufficiently strong to compete with Cuban counter-broadcasts and that can be seen by any significant number of people there. Id.
Professor Nichols emphasized: "Therefore, unless TV Marti figures out a way to overcome the laws of physics (which I seriously doubt), its broadcasts cannot be seen on the island without the compliance of the Cuban government - no matter how many more expensive technologies the U.S. government invests in." Id. At first blush it sounds silly to expend funds for television transmission that will failure to reach its audience. But perhaps it does. TV Martí, conventioanlly broadcast does reach a significant target audience--people living in the UNited States, many of whom might be interested in the existence of the programming, and even more of whom vote. . . in thre United States. Still, TV Martí does manage to reach Cuba. Professor Nichols explained:
the transmissions of the two satellite services that simultaneously carry TV Marti programming can be seen in Cuba. The coverage area of the Hispasat satellite blankets the entire island, and Direct TV local spot beam reaches the North Central portion of the country with a high-grade signal. In addition, there are an unknown - but probably significant - number of satellite dishes in use in Cuba. As a result, TV Marti - along with scores of other television programming options - is easily available to those who are connected to these bootleg satellite reception networks. Although it is much easier to jam a satellite circuit than an over-the-air broadcast signal, to do the former would be a serious violation of international telecommunication regulations and, as a result, Cuba has not hindered the satellite transmission of TV Marti. Id.
The question, then, beyond the obvious one of service delivery, is on meeting market needs, at least those of the people in Cuba potentially interested in listening to the American position on those matters transmitted in TV Martí. Here again, Professor Nichols suggests, the American effort falls far short of the success of ther far more primitive efforts of the Cuban insurgents in the 1950s.
Of those Cubans who can view U.S. programming via an illegal satellite dish connection, how many choose TV Marti over the wealth of programming options, including Spanish-language content from Miami commercial stations and other countries in the region? While it is nearly impossible to precisely quantify the number, the answer to the question is that the audience of the satellite version of TV Marti is very small. Surveys by both the U.S. and Cuban governments, in-country reporting by foreign journalists, and anecdotal evidence all indicate that the overwhelming majority of Cubans with access to satellite dish television strongly prefer other - primarily entertainment - programming. My Cuban friends, for example, regularly watch House and CSI-Miami. Id.

There is substantial irony in this conclusion. American television penetration of the Island is strong. The power of American broadcasting may be significant. But those efforts are most successful when exercised by the commercial sectors--including its informational arm, than by government supported programs. But of course, this should come as no surprise to those who have sought to support public involvement in television through subsidies to efforts like PBS. And indeed, I would suspect that the cultural, and values laden programming of the commercial stations available not only from the United States but also from Latin America might pose a greater risk to the project of ideology culture building in Cuba than the programming available through the fertile imaginings of TV Martí--and available at substantially negligible cost to the state.

But the irony is compounded, suggests Professor Nichols, because the TV Martí project appears to violate the substantive norms of the International Telecommunications Convention very treaty system the United States helped put in place to prevent the uncontrolled use of TV aggression of the type it now indulges through TV Martí. "The very provisions that TV Marti flouts were adopted as international law in the late 1940s at the insistence of the United States - and over the stiff opposition of the Soviet Union - because they not only ensure the most efficient use of the international airwaves for the benefit of all countries but also are critical in protecting the U.S. domestic broadcast system from external interference." Id. On the other hand, these suggestions of violation of "law" do not necessarily capture the complications flowing from the way in which international law is understood and incorporated into the American legal order, at least as "law." Generally treaties do not create law in the United States unless they are deemed to be "self-executing. Most treaties tend not to be self-executing, either because they explicitly so state or because under principles of American jurisprudence, they do not meet the standards for treatment as self-executing instruments. Such treaty obligations become "law" within the United States only when their provisions are transposed into the domestic legal order--through the passage of appropiate legislation or the actions and acquiescence of federal officials with the constitutional authority to act. But, transposition into domestically binding law does not produce a special status for international law obligations. Instead, international law domestically enacted has no higher status as law than ordinary statute, at least as a general matter. As a consequence, treaty obligations, and other aspects of international law is binding in the United States only to the same extent that other federal law is binding. Such law is always subject to further modification and repeal by subsequently passed legislation. To the extent that such subsequently passed legislation effectively breaches the understanding of the state parties ot international agreements, that becomes a matter between states, but at least within the United States, does not affect the status of otherwise validly passed legislation. Violations of international law, when directly connected to constitutionally valid enactment of subsequent inconsist legislation, then, constitutes no violation of law domestically and from the internal perspective of the United States, is best understood as political rather than legal flouting. of obligations. See Medellin v. Texas, 552 U.S. -- (March 25, 2008).

As such, the creation and maintenance of TV Martí, as a valid exercise of federal constitutional authority is perfectly valid as "law" within the United States, even if it has the effect of substantially modifying (or perhaps even undoing) the internal effect prior provisions, including those derived from the International Telecommunications Convention. That the effect might be to breach the obligations of the United States under this Convention is, then, a political matter between the United States and the other state parties to that Convention. Those states may argue a breach of international law, as such. But that breach is between the United States and the other parties ot the Convention, and can be effectively dealt with only by recourse to the remedial provisions of that Convention, or through resort to the usual arsenal of techniques available to manage the relations between states. Those who would seek a "higher" place for the domestic effect of international law might find this distressing, and seek to change it. But there is no "law" that an American court can enforce in those circumstances, at leats within the United States. That, for the the moment, at least, that is effectively the way the United States operates.

However, the irony becomes perverse when Professor Nichols must look to the Cuban government to supply him with information about Radio Martí that the American government refused to supply.
I have filed numerous Freedom of Information Act requests for relevant unclassified documents, but almost all of those requests have been ignored or inappropriately denied. It is equally ironic that most of the three-way correspondence among the United States, Cuba, and the International Telecommunication Union was supplied to me by Cuban officials. (I wish to acknowledge in particular the cooperation of Carlos Martinez Albuerne, the director of the Cuban counterpart to the Federal Communications Commission, for releasing considerable documentary evidence to me. Id.
And thus two very different models of the us eof technology for th eprojection of propaganda and the influencing of cultural or nornative beliefs, leading to political action. On the one hand, the success of the Cuban insurgents in the 1950s,and American commercial television today. On the other hand, the expensive oddity of TV Martí.

And yet, there is something wrong with this analysis. I am not sure that TV Martí is a failure , even on its own terms. It is possible to think about the success of TV Martí from a different perspective when one looks to the operations of TV Martí rather than its self proaganda. If one considers TV Martí as an effort to influence the American population by appearing to influence the Cuban population on the Island, it might then be possible to argue that its efforts are a success. It may also be a way to aid the Cuban community in the United States in the development of a unified and coherent ideological stance to be deployed, at some point, against the current government in Cuba. Thus, as an internal device, TV Martí may well serve important goals, but they are hardly the goals for which the enterprise was said to have been funded. TV Martí, like Radio Rebelde, may have a limited range, but each appears to have successfully tuned in successfully to a limited political market segment. The only trouble with TV Martí is that the real object of its broadcast activities may be less obvious.

All of this may be coming to an end. It has been rumored that TV Martí may fall victim to the change in Administration. Phil Peters, TV Martí Funds Cut, The Cuban Triangle, July 9, 2009. "The Senate committee also struck $15 million for the U.S. television service it beams into Cuba, known as TV Marti, after Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan said the signal was jammed by the Communist government so no one there could see it." Jeremy Pelofsky and Susan Cornwell, U.S. House backs $48.8 billion foreign aid funding bill, The Washington Post, July 9, 2009. In the end, as Fidel Castro himself has taught, a well conceived and executed program of directed propaganda, used to develop and project a coherent ideological position in a way that appeals to a targeted audience, can be instrumental in political struggles. That is a lesson the Americans thought they had learned after 1945. But apparently not well enough with TV Martí. Of course, Radio Martí and Radio Martí on twitter may be another story. Yet even here, the direct target appears to be the population of Florida, rather then the people of Cuba. Even Cuban dissidents complain that the content of the programs of these efforts appear to serve the local political agendas of South Florida rather than the purported goal of effecting political dialogue within Cuba. See, Juan Carlos Chavez, Disidentes cubanos piden cambios de programación en Radio Martí, El Nuevo Herald, Jan. 16, 2009 (""Nosotros esperamos que se haga un análisis de todo lo que ha sucedido, porque la programación es tan mala y tan poco interesante para el pueblo cubano que nadie la escucha'', afirmó Vladimiro Roca, portavoz de la agrupación durante una entrevista telefónica con El Nuevo Herald. Roca enfatizó que la reclamación tocó la puerta al más alto nivel en Washington, debido a que la emisora radial está más en sintonía con las políticas locales del exilio en Miami, 'lo que ocasiona que el cubano de a pie no tenga motivación ni interés''." Id.). As a weapon against the current Cuban state apparatus, the TV Martí efforts might be a failure. It is substantially irrelevant, except for its power to sid the Cuban state in its own efforts to convince global opinion of American overreaching. To that extent it is unfortunate that the American government insists on funding propaganda efforts turned against it. Yet, as a tool for the disciplining of the American political community and the development of its position as against the current Cuban state apparatus, it appears to have achieved a measure of success.


Saturday, July 11, 2009

Opening Up the Process of Reforming China's State Secrets Law

I have written recently on the use of China's state secrets law to project public regulatory power in private market economic relations, especially where economic contests involve state owned enterprises. See Larry Catá Backer, State Owned Enterprises and the Integrity of Private Markets and Commercial Activity: On the Arrest of the Rio Tinto Executive, Law at the End of the Day, July 10, 2009. I have suggested that the conflation of state roles evidenced by the use of the state secrets law in furtherance of Chinalco's business might have strategic consequences, whether inadvertent or deliberate.

The role of the state secrets law in the regulation of economic activity appears to be in a dynamic stage. M. Ulrich Killion, of Shanghai International Studies University, 620 Gubei Road, Shanghai, China, has recently posted (China seeks public opinion on draft of new State Secrets Law , July 6, 2009) the following:

In a move toward what is no less than a possible greater transparency in the mainland, China's government has made available to the public its "People's Republic of China State Secrets Law (Revised Draft)" [保守国家秘密法(修订草案)向社会公开征集意见], and is seeking public opinions on the new draft of the State Secrets Law.

Chinese citizens are instructed that they can log on directly to the National People's Congress Network at www.npc.gov.cn and submit their opinions regarding the draft or they can submit their opinions by mail to the following address: NPC Standing Committee (West Xicheng District, Beijing on the 23rd Lane, Postcode: 100805. The cut-off date for submitting opinions is July 31, 2009.

The text of the public notice reads as follows:

保守国家秘密法(修订草案)向社会公开征集意见

新华网消息 日前,《中华人民共和国保守国家秘密法(修订草案)》在中国人大网全文公布,向社会公开征集意见。

中国人大网的消息说,十一届全国人大常委会第九次会议初次审议了《中华人民共和国保守国家秘密法(修订草案)》。现将《 中华人民共和国保守国家秘密法(修订草案)》及草案说明在中国人大网公布,向社会公开征集意见。社会各界群众可以直接登录中国人大网(www.npc.gov.cn)提出意见,也可以将意见寄送全国人大常委会法制工作委员会(北京市西城区西交民巷23号,邮编:100805,信封上请注明保守国家秘密法修订草案征集意见)。意见征集截止日期:2009年7月31日。

Source (来源): 保守国家秘密法(修订草案)向社会公开征集意见, 2009年07月01日, 新华网.

You can follow Mr. Killion's work at his blog site and at M. Ulric Killion's Space.

Of course, transparency comes in small steps, and has consequences for those willing to access the system. In order to post comments on the State Secrets Law draft, one needs to fill out a form on line to provide your name, address, phone number and e-mail , and only then is it possible to access the system to post your comments. For a critical discussion of the State Secrets Law, with links the the English translation of the current version, see, China's State Secrets Law to Focus on Internet Leaks, China Journal, Wall Street Journal Blogs, June 23, 2009 ("China’s state secrets law . . .has long been the subject of criticism for its vagueness and broad sweep. . . . A lengthy 2007 report by the New York-based Human Rights in China tracked how China’s complex system of state secrets laws has been used to keep a variety of statistics - on issues such as occupational diseases, human trafficking, and pollution - under wraps. . . . Legal experts who have viewed drafts of the new state secrets law say that the new law doesn’t provide additional support for the open government regulations, and may in fact have the effect of strengthening the government’s grip on information, the South China Morning Post reports" Id.). The Chinese authorities, on the other hand, appear to be targetting the mechanics of transmissions of secrets, rather than the scope of what can constitutte a state secret--and thus a political wrong.

Xia Yong, head of the National Administration for the Protection of State Secrets (NAPSS), said parts of the existing secrets law had become obsolete. The current law took effect on May 1, 1989. "New situations and problems have emerged in guarding state secrets as the country's social and economic development advances rapidly, especially with the introduction and development of information technology and the application of e-government." The materials to preserve and handle state secrets have changed from paper to acoustic, optical, electronic and magnetic forms, which created the need for corresponding policies, according to the official. China to Amend State Secrets Law, to Avoid Internet Leaks, Xinhua News Agency, June 22, 2009.
It seems that the conflation of politics and economics remains undisturbed; business torts become acts against the state itself. If this approach becomes the standard, then the projection of economic power by state owned enterprises may well serve to extend state political power as well, and not just with respect to state secrets.


The Other Side of State Manipulation of Economic Markets: The United States, Israel and India

I have suggested that state owned enterprises continue to affect the development of normative frameworks through which private markets are conceived and thus regulated. The role of state owned enterprises in such markets suggest the leading edge of what may be the merger of politics and economics in the construction of future markets for goods and services. A sense of the resulting public-private market construct is very much in evidence in the markets for armaments and arms technology. A recent example provides a window on the way these markets function.
Under pressure from the Pentagon, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) has been forced to back out of a joint partnership with a Swedish aerospace company to compete in a multi-billion dollar tender to sell new multi-role fighter jets to the Indian Air Force. The deal, estimated at a whopping $12 billion for over 120 new aircraft, is being fought over by Lockheed Martin's F-16, Boeing's F-18/Hornet, Russia's MiG-35 and BAE's Eurofighter. IAI was asked by Saab, manufacturer of the Gripen, to jointly develop an advanced model which would compete for the deal. The Defense Ministry ordered IAI to back out of the deal after the Pentagon expressed concern that American technology, used by Israel, would be integrated into the Gripen offered to the Indians. Yaakov Katz, IAI Forced Out of Indian Jet Fighter Bid, Jerusalem Post, July 5, 2009.
The heavy handedness was very much in evidence. Elements of the American government, using their relationships and positions within the federal government used issues of national security to affect the competitive framework in the global market for jet fighters and jet fighter development. The parallels to the almost simultaneous actions by the Chinese government in creating a political element in the framework for the operation of private global markets in natural resources are quite striking. See Larry Catá Backer, State Owned Enterprises and the Integrity of Private Markets and Commercial Activity: On the Arrest of the Rio Tinto Executive, Law at the End of the Day, July 10, 2009. It suggests that what had been more commonly accepted in the elaboration of markets for armaments might now become the standard for other sectors of economic activity.

The conflation of public and private interests in the American actions to intervene in the competition was quite open.
"The stated concern was that Western technology in Israeli hands would make its way to the Indians," one Israeli official said. What was strange with the American request was that Boeing and Lockheed Martin - the two largest US defense contractors - are also competing for the Indian deal. For this reason, Israeli officials said it was more likely that the Americans were concerned that if IAI competed for the deal with Saab, it would force the American companies to lower their prices. Yaakov Katz, IAI Forced Out of Indian Jet Fighter Bid,supra.
Moreover, it is well known that the Israeli partner on the proposed bid, SAAB, had been an American owned company until very recently. Indeed, the timing of the American pressure was suspicious, coming within weeks of the announcement of the sale by General Motors of its interests in SAAB to foreign interests. David Jolly, GM Sells SAAB to Swedish Automaker, New York Times, June 16, 2009. It seems that the Israeli participation became a problem only when it ceased partnering with an American owned firm. And worse, the new SAAB would have been in some sense an instrumentality of the Swedish state, if only indirectly. "The companies said a deal was contingent on $600 million of financing from the European Investment Bank that is to be guaranteed by the Swedish government. They did not release further financial details of the deal, which is expected to close in the third quarter." Id. Not that the Gripen entry is dead--it is just that the Americans have ensured that SAAB will have to scramble for a new partner , likely raising the cost of their bid. In the name of secrecy, the American state has ensured that those secrets will be shared only through planes developed by American based enterprises with significant relationship to the American military establishment--if such planes are actually chosen by the Indian military.

The focus on the SAAB-Israel partnership could be understood in terms of power relationships at the political level. The Americans could effectively project its political power on the Israeli State in ways that would have been more difficult with respect to the governments of the other competitors for the Indian jet. At any rate, with the SAAB-Israel jet bid more crippled, the American government increased the changes that an American firm would win at least a part of the contract. It also reduces the possibility that BAE, another competitor, will win part of the bid through its association with the Gripen. State intervention, then, was used to reduce competition and to "nudge" the results to make it more likely that American private interests would profit. And this was done in the name of political, secrecy, concerns.
This is not the first time that an Israeli company has been forced out of a deal due to concerns that competing with American companies would endanger Israeli-US relations. Last summer, the MoD ordered Israel Military Industries (IMI) to back down from submitting a bid for a half-a-billion dollar deal to develop and manufacture a new tank for the Turkish Armed Forces. At the time, Turkey had informed the MoD of its interest in developing a new tank and asked if IMI would want to submit a bid. SIBAT - the MOD's Foreign Defense Assistance and Defense Export Organization - decided not to submit an Israeli offer so not to compete with the Americans and endanger Israeli-US defense relations. Yaakov Katz, IAI Forced Out of Indian Jet Fighter Bid,supra.
And thus a possible template for regulated markets of the future, where economics and politics are amalgamated. People may be complaining about Chinese heavy handedness in the Rio Tinto drama, but that may well be little more than a harbinger of the future of global markets. When states become market actors, it will be difficult for them to refrain from using sovereign power in aid of market strategies.

In the market for armaments, this conflation has already been internalized within its framework. This is well brought out n a recent analysis of the competitors for the Indian fighter order. India’s MMRCA Fighter Competition, Defense Industry Daily, May 25, 2009. The report noted: "Recent changes in India’s needs and the contest participants are changing the relative rankings of the contenders. Geopolitical considerations are also intruding, as most of these choices have the potential to improve relations with an important potential ally. Standardization arguments will also carry weight. As of January 2006, India’s Air Force operated 26 different aircraft types, and the IAF is not eager to add to its support headaches." Id. With respect to the Gripen, the Report concluded: "The Gripen’s acceptance carries no spin-off geopolitical benefits, however, and that last weakness may prove to be the plane’s most critical hindrance in this competition." Id.

The idea that economics is political, and that politics is economics, and that direct state interventions in all sectors of market activity is necessary, cannot be far behind. But understand, this is not a reversion to the Stalinism of the last century that passed for political economics. That model clearly remains discredited. Instead, it might be better understood as a modern, and globalized normative framework of a pre-Stalinist conception of the unity of the legal order.
In the eyes of the Marxists the economic structure of society is the fundamental factor for regulating social relationships. 'Private law' is therefore wholly dependent on public law because the latter gives legal form to this economic structure. To deny the distinction between public law and private law is therefor to affirm the unity of law, and this unity results form the fact that law, in all its branches, is essentially a reflection of the economic organization of society. René David and John E.C. Brierley, Major Legal Systems in the World Today (New York: Free Press, 1978), at 265.
But these are not merely Marxist notions. They conflate with a stream of fascism well understood before its erasure in the mutual triumph of capitalism and Marxist Leninism in 1945. Fascism suggests the merger of of state and enterprise.
Fascism, rejecting the distributionist preoccupations of socialism, advocated a program of national industrial development. Its focus was productionist . . . Fascist thought turned on two constants: production and the nation. The nation required rapid industrial expansion and to this end all the productive categories were to cooperate.A. James Gregor, The Ideology of Fascism: The Rationale of Totalitarianism (New York: Free OPress, 1969), at 161-162.
But this was not a 20th century re-articulation of 19th century economic liberalism. Rather it pointed to the conflation of state and economy within a context in which economic actors were autonomous but subject to the political will of the state, to the extent, at least, that the state could enforce that will. Id., at 162. "Because the functions of the private merchant and industrialist are functions of national concern, they are obliged to execute them in conformity with the national interest and in the direction of production they are responsible before the state. Id., at 295 (quoting La Carta del Lavro, Guiseppe Bottai, ed., Rome, 1928 (commentary)). This appears to find echos in recent actions by many major political players.

While these notions might have been laughable, and unworkable, or frightening, within traditional states--where power and territorial control provided a distinctive fundamental organizing principle of the state--it appears to have acquired some power, in fact (if not in form), at the transnational level. Here, there is governance without government, and government without a state, a global order in which states and enterprises govern through networks of power that are not tied to territory but to function. Economic globalization may therefore provide the only context in which it is possible to elaborate systems grounded in (1) the unity of law, as traditionally understood, but in which public law is not limited to assertions by the apparatus of states and (2) the episodic and partial merger of state and enterprise within a global context in which no state and no enterprise can assert a monopoly of economic or political power sufficient to dominate globally. Governance without government, then, may produce a revolution in the way in which legal frameworks are conceived.

Friday, July 10, 2009

State Owned Enterprises and the Integrity of Private Markets and Commercial Activity: On the Arrest of the Rio Tinto Executive

Over the last decade states have aggressively projection of state power into private markets. But they have also evidenced a desire to preserve the legal and political divisions between their role as sovereigns and as actors in private markets. The object, of course, is to preserve a monopoly of political power in states while allowing the leaking of this state power within the private markets in which individuals and juridical persons (corporations and other aggregate entities) might assert power. This has been most apparent in recent moves to create a soft regulatory environment for the outbound investment activities of sovereign wealth funds. See Larry Catá Backer, Sovereign Wealth Funds as Regulatory Chameleons: The Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Funds and Public Global Governance Through Private Global Investment, Georgetown Journal of International Law, Vol. 41, No. 2, 2009. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1398835

But the ability, or even the willingness, of states to preserve this division between public and private power has proven to be hard to maintain. This is especially the case, it seems, when a melding of the private and sovereign roles of the state suit its particular purposes. Consider the following as a harbinger of things to come:
China confirmed Thursday that it had detained an Australian executive and three Chinese employees of the Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto on suspicion of spying on China, stealing state secrets and causing the country “enormous economic losses.” The executive, Stern Hu, is believed to be one of the highest ranking Western executives ever accused of spying on China. “The Chinese government has gained strong evidence to prove they were spying and stealing China’s state secrets,” Qin Gang, a spokesman for the foreign ministry, said at a press briefing in Beijing on Thursday. David Barboza, China Said to Arrest Rio Tinto Executive, The New York Times, July 10, 2009.
What makes the case interesting is the conflation of a state and market activities. When the state is participant in private market activities, actions that might be considered good or bad business practice can be transformed from economic to political criminality. The stakes become much higher for private market participants, but only in their interactions with states as private actors in markets.
The case sent shock waves through the global mining industry, and Australian politicians suggested the detentions were retaliatory. Rio Tinto scrapped plans last month to accept a $19.5 billion investment from Chinalco, a Chinese state-owned company. Rio Tinto chose instead to raise money from existing shareholders and form a joint venture with another Anglo-Australian company, BHP Billiton. Barboza, supra.
When the character of commercial activity, even wrongly activity, changes character from an economic to a political crime, the distinction between private and public spheres is more likely to collapses. Thus, "Rio Tinto made no comment Thursday, but a day earlier, it issued a statement saying the company did not believe any of its employees in China had engaged in espionage." And that may be true enough--the actions were not directed against the state, as sovereign. But it does appear that the activity was intended to advantage Rio Tinto in its dealings with competitor enterprises in markets that touched on Chinese state economic policies affecting enterprises controlled by the state. That had the effect of transforming competitive market activity into anti state activities. That is certainly how the Chinese officially saw it.
Qin confirmed that four employees from Australian firm Rio Tinto Group’s Shanghai office, including Stern Hu, general manager of the office, were detained on the evening of July 5 by China’s state security department, on suspicion of espionage and stealing national state secrets for other countries. Qin said that the suspects were arrested once relevant departments had obtained conclusive evidence proving that they had been working as spies and had stolen national state secrets, severely damaging China’s economic interests and security. Rio Tinto Spy Case Should Not Affect China-Australia Relations, People's Daily Online, July 10, 2009.
And indeed, from the Chinese perspective, the issues were state to state rather than market commerce oriented.
"Qin pointed out that this is just one individual judicial case that should not affect overall China-Australia economic and trade cooperation, adding that China-Australia economic and trade cooperation is win-win. China will continue to positively support China-Australia economic and trade cooperation, including cooperation between enterprises of the two countries, because these activities are not only beneficial to China, but also to Australia. Relevant parties should not exaggerate or politicize the case." Rio Tinto Spy Case Should Not Affect China-Australia Relations, supra.

Yet that transformation might well produce collateral effects--from a suspicion of the integrity of markets, to the inability of the Chinese state apparatus to convince others that its enterprises are not public interventions in otherwise private markets. Moreover, the privileging of this political transformation also hides the commercial issues underlying the events--recent attempts to purchase a large stake in Rio Tinto by Chinalco, a Chinese State Owned Enterprise, had been resisted. And on the eve of the arrest, Chinalco was again attempting to increase its stake in Rio Tinto.
Aluminum Corporation of China (Chinalco) confirmed Thursday it had bought 1.5 billion U.S. dollars of Rio Tinto shares to cement its 9 percent shareholding in the miner. The deal was made to maximize the interests of Chinalco, Lu Youqing, Chinalco's vice president, told Xinhua. If Chinalco did not made the deal, its shareholding in the miner would decrease from 9.3 percent to about 6 percent. The deal came after Chinalco's 19.5 billion U.S. dollars bid failed last month to raise its stake in Rio Tinto. Chinalco confirms buying $1.5 bln of Rio Tinto shares, People's Daily Online, July 2, 2009.
"Chinalco was established in 2001 when 12 Chinese enterprises and institutions in the aluminum industry were consolidated into Chinalco." Chinalco, History. And indeed, "Chinalco maintains an ongoing global expansion strategy and has made significant steps towards its goal of being a leading globally diversified mining company. . . . Aluminum Corporation of China Limited (“Chalco”), a subsidiary of Chinalco (38.56% owned), is listed in New York, Hong Kong and Shanghai and has a BBB+ credit rating from Standard & Poor’s. Chinalco also indirectly owns 26.61% of Yunnan Copper Co. Ltd, a Shenzhen-listed company." Chinalco, Key Facts and Numbers.

The implications are difficult to avoid. The suspicion of the use of state power, and the politization of maneuverings among commercial enterprises can only raise the suspicion that private market activity is "rigged." Or, perhaps worse, that states will use their sovereign power to aid their state owned or privileged enterprises in their commercial dealings with other private enterprises. In the context of the Rio Tinto episode, this has been a long time coming.
Within China, there is plenty of speculation that Beijing had a hand in the Chinalco-Rio deal, which has cast uncertainty over Anglo-Australian resources giant BHP Billiton's plan to complete a hostile takeover of Rio Tinto for $100 billion. BHP must make a formal offer by Feb. 6 or withdraw its bid for at least six months (BusinessWeek.com, 2/1/08). The assumption among some observers is that China is raising a warning flag to alert BHP that any move to take over Rio will not go unchallenged. "From what we understand, [Chinalco] is representing the Chinese government in this deal," says Ren Baifeng, an analyst with Antaike, a market research firm focused on the metals industry. "Two Fridays ago, there was word that Rio Tinto's management was secretly in Beijing for talks about this deal," he adds. Dexter Roberts and Chi-Chu Tschang,Why Chinalco's Buying Into Rio Tinto: The Chinese giant's new stake in the mining outfit is seen as Beijing's attempt to head off a BHP Billiton takeover, to protect the mainland's supply of ores, Business Week, February 5, 2008.
But that sort of conflation of public and private activity--projection of political power abroad indirectly through private state owned enterprises to mask (and not all that well) for the purposes of executing political goals also tends to affect perceptions of the integrity of markets. And it can produce reciprocal action, all to the detriment of the private in economic activity. This has been the great fear of sovereign wealth fund activity. But it seems that the greater danger might well come form the investment activities of state owned enterprises acting as surrogates for the state. For some, especially those who believe that all economic activity is essentially political, and that political activity ought to be exercised by ort through the state, this is a positive development in the destruction of the global system of private and private activity privileging markets. Yet, it appears to contradict the collective policies that have produced the ground rules of economic globalization. Perhaps it also signals the need to extend enterprises like those that produced the Santiago Principles for sovereign wealth fund behavior, as flaws as I have suggested they might be (See Larry Catá Backer, Sovereign Wealth Funds as Regulatory Chameleons: supra), to state owned enterprises as well. And the OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance of State-Owned Enterprises might also serve that purpose (more on this in a later post). But the arrest of the Rio Tinto executive suggests the difficulty of maintaining the wall of separation between state sovereign and participatory activity especially in the conduct of the activities of its state owned enterprises.

And what applies to China today might well apply to that nearly constituted giant American state owned enterprise--General Motors. "The new General Motors Co. was born this morning in the offices of a bankruptcy lawyer in New York, a quiet moment after a year of turmoil for the nation's largest automaker, as GM's CEO vowed that "business as usual is over." . . . The documents creating the sale of most of the old GM's assets to a new company owned chiefly by the U.S. government were executed about 6:30 a.m." Justin Hyde and Tim Higgins, Henderson: 'Business as Usual' Over is at GM, Detroit Free Press, July 10, 2009. The irony and double meaning is likely lost on most. And indeed, the hand of its new owners were already very much in evidence in discussions about the labor relaitons issues tied to the GM restructuring. "Steve Rattner, the head of the Obama administration's autos task force, said earlier this week that it would be "natural" for Henderson to cut layers of management to make the company "a bit closer to the ground, leaner and meaner."" Kevin Kroliki, With good assets sold, "New GM" exits bankruptcy, News Daily, July 10, 2009.

States have been at some pains to construct for the assurance of each other (as they project economic power into each others' territories) and for the assurance of private economic actors (as they seek to distinguish between regulatory actions meant to protect the integrity of markets from participatory actions meant to protect their investments like other private actors). See Larry Catá Backer, The Private Law of Public Law: Public Authorities as Shareholders, Golden Shares, Sovereign Wealth Funds, and the Public Law Element in Private Choice of Law, Tulane Law Review, Vol. 82(1):1801-1868, 2008. . Now that distinction between states as sovereigns and states as participants has been exposed as less an accomplishment (or even a desire among states) than as a potentially empty assurance, especially in the hard cases.

With the rise of great sovereign industrial giants under the framework rules of economic globalization, including the United States and China, the haphazard amalgamation of sovereign and market power, when directed to the benefit of sovereigns as market participants, bodes ill for the preservation of market integrity and the maintenance of level playing fields in the economic sphere. States, it seems, may as easily regulate and control private markets indirectly, by displacing private actors in private markets, as by direct regulation, even as they regulate those markets directly in the traditional manner (through law and other expressions of public power). But when sovereigns use sovereign power for the economic advantage of their forays into markets under the guise of acting like other private participants in markets, which they might not directly regulate, while using sovereign authority to regulate those portions of markets under their political control, then the notion of the private in markets may lose all current meaning. What emerges remains to be seen. But for a hint of one possibility of the direction of drift, see, Larry Catá Backer and Augusto Molina, Cuba and the Construction of Alternative Global Trade Systems: ALBA and Free Trade in the Americas, University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law, Vol. 31, No. 3, 2010 (forthcoming).

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Reflections on the Declaration of Independence: From a Crisis of U.K. Constitutionalism in the Americas to a Global Constitutional Crisis in Honduras

The 4th of July is traditionally used as a day to celebrate the first formal acknowledgment of a rupture within a nation state, one that led to violent separation and the recognition of the autonomy of one territorial unit from out of what had been an integrated territorial kingdom, formed in a manner that was conventional for the time. But those who celebrate have always been cautious in the way in which the focus of the event is directed. And that, in part, is because unconstrained by a vigilant elite serving as mediators and interpreters of the document, the Declaration of Independence can easily spill its banks and serve as a basis for unruliness of all kinds. It has as easily served to justify the secession of the short lived Confederate States of America as it has for the revolutionary change in the constitutional settlement of 1789. See Larry Catá Backer, Some Thoughts on the American Declaration of Independence and the Irish Easter Proclamation, 8 Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law 1 (2000). It has been used to advance the cause of constructing plural societies where different communities live in equal dignity as well as the cause of separation of communities living side by side based on these very differences. See Larry Catá Backer, Kosovo: A Threat to China and Russia; a Great Benefit to Israel, Law at the End of the Day, March 14, 2008. And it has been a source of reflections on rule of law.

The Declaration of Independence is, in fact, a protean document, whose thrust can serve those with the will and the fortitude to see things through. And it has come to serve as a proxy for all sorts of endeavors. It quickly lost its historical ties to the context in which it was fashioned. And within several generations it even lost its necessary connection with political revolution. No longer merely a justification for wars of separation of territorially discrete areas, it had come to serve as a foundation for internal revolutions--from the abolition of slavery in the United States, to the emancipation of women to the construction of pluralist societies--or their tearing asunder.
Frederick Douglas famously put the utility of the Declaration of Independence within its modern framework in 1852:
Would you have me argue that man is entitled to liberty? That he is the rightful owner of his own body? You have already declared it. Must I argue the wrongfulness of slavery? Is that a question for republicans? Is it to be settled by the rules of logic and argumentation, as a matter beset with great difficulty, involving a doubtful application of the principle of justice, hard to understand? How should I look today in the presence of Americans, dividing and subdividing a discourse, to show that men have a natural right to freedom, speaking of it relatively and positively, negatively and affirmatively? . . . .
What to the American slave is your Fourth of July? I answer, a day that reveals to him more than all other days of the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mock; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are to him mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy - a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. Frederick Douglas, Speech on the 4th of July, 1852 Sponsored by the Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society of Rochester, New York.
The Declaration of Independence thus has become more than a mere pronouncement with no legal effect. It has been transformed, much like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights centuries later, into a legitimating framework for political action and the constitution of its communities. It is now the revolutionary smelter within which constitutional orders are tested, as well as the normative foundation for reordering political settlements.

It's methodological and legitimating essence, however, is not moral or ethical. It is not found in its normative manifesto, the ambiguous but nicely worded and often quoted sentence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Declaration of Independence para. 2.
Rather, it is better understood in its closing:
And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor. Declaration of Independence para. 32.
It is with this in mind that it might be useful to consider the Honduran Revolutions. I say two revolutions because the expulsion of former President Zelaya masked the complexity of the revolutionary situation in Honduras immediately before his translation outside the country. Both revolutionary movements are transnational in character. Both, though steeped in local desires, are also to a great extent a creature of and captive to the desires and impositions of the community of nations aligned in various camps. On the one hand there is the revolution slyly instigated by the recently removed and now former president of Honduras, Mr. Manuel Zelaya. As representative of the executive power of the state, and of the people, he sought, through use of the extra constitutional tactics of increasingly popular mass democratic politics to insinuate himself in power by reforming the state to suit his purposes. The Zelaya Revolution would subvert the Honduran constitutional order by rejecting the constitutional order's fundamental norms and replacing them with a system that would dramatically increase his power in a new constitutional order. But like many new Latin American leaders, he has suggested the traditional constitutional order is not worth keeping, and that irrespective of its language and its embrace of fundamental norms deemed irrevocable, neither can stand in the way of the popular will exercised whenever it can be mobilized for the purpose. See, e.g., Latin America: Coups and Constitutions, BBC News On Line , June 30, 2009.

Mr Zelaya planned to hold a non-binding public consultation on 28 June to ask people whether they supported moves to change the constitution. . . . Mr Zelaya's critics said the move was aimed at removing the current one-term limit on serving as president, and paving the way for his possible re-election. The consultation was ruled illegal by the Supreme Court and Congress, and was opposed by the army. . . . Mr Zelaya sacked the head of the armed forces, who refused to give logistical support for the 28 June vote. The Supreme Court overruled him, saying the army chief should be reinstated. When Mr Zelaya insisted the referendum would go ahead, Congress voted to remove him for what it called "repeated violations of the constitution and the law", and the Supreme Court said it had ordered the president to be removed from office to protect law and order. Q&A: Crisis in Honduras, BBC News On Line, July 5, 2009.
But what appears benign on it surface acquires a more complex dimension when considered in context. First, the political context was ambiguous. "Despite his centre-right credentials, the former businessman moved Honduras away from its traditional ally the US, winning the support of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and other leftist leaders. . . . Publicly backed by such leftists as Mr Chavez, Bolivian President Evo Morales and former Cuban leader Fidel Castro, Mr Zelaya began to lose the support of his own party."Profile: Hondura's Manuel Zelaya, BBC News Online, July 2, 2009. He began imitating his mentors, raising the spectre of authoritarianism in the face of the difficult problem of drug trafficking and poverty in Honduras. "In May 2007, Mr Zelaya ordered all of the country's TV and radio stations to carry government propaganda for two hours a day, accusing them of giving his government unfair coverage. In August 2008, he took Honduras into the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (Alba)." Id. On ALBA, see, Larry Catá Backer and Augusto Molina, Cuba and the Construction of Alternative Global Trade Systems: ALBA and Free Trade in the Americas, University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law, Vol. 31, No. 3, 2010 (forthcoming).

Second, the constitutional issues were serious and Mr. Zelaya's actions subject to varying characterizations, not all of them benign. While it appeared unproblematic for Mr. Zelaya to seek to test the will of the people by public consultation or other means, under Honduran constitutional law, that effort, when ordered by the President in his official capacity, raised potentially serious constitutional issues. Whatever one thinks of its value in a constitutional order, the people of Honduras had bound themselves to a specific provision that appeared to cover Mr. Zelaya's conduct:

ARTICULO 239.- El ciudadano que haya desempeñado la titularidad del Poder Ejecutivo no podrá ser Presidente o Vicepresidente de la República.

El que quebrante esta disposición o proponga su reforma, así como aquellos que lo apoyen directa o indirectamente, cesarán de inmediato en el desempeño de sus respectivos cargos y quedarán inhabilitados por diez (10) años para el ejercicio de toda función pública. (""No citizen who has already served as titular head of the Executive Power can be President or Vice-President of the Republic. Whoever violates this law or proposes its reform, as well as those that support such violation directly or indirectly, will immediately cease in their functions and will be unable to hold any public office for a period of 10 years."")

It is possible to suggest that the Honduran Constitution has provided that where a person seeks to change the provision of the Constitution dealing with the term of the President, that action itself results in an immiate and self executing removal from office--not at the instance of the legislative or judicial branches, but by operation of law. The only task for whether the legislative or judicial branch would be to determine that in fact, Mr. Zelaya had proposed such a reform. And that is precisely what the legislature did on the basis of the findings of a special commission constituted for the purpose of investigating such violation. Congreso destituye a Zelaya y Roberto Micheletti asume como nuevo Presidente, Noticias 24, June 28, 2009. Moreover, the Honduran Constitution provided for a particular method of constitutional amendment, and made certain constitutional provisions inviolate--that is not subject to ordinary constitutional amendment.

ARTICULO 373.- La reforma de esta Constitución podrá decretarse por el Congreso Nacional, en sesiones ordinarias, con dos tercios de votos de la totalidad de sus miembros. El decreto señalará al efecto el artículo o artículos que hayan de reformarse, debiendo ratificarse por la subsiguiente legislatura ordinaria, por igual número de votos, para que entre en vigencia. Artículo interpretado por Decreto 169/1986

ARTICULO 374.- No podrán reformarse, en ningún caso, el artículo anterior, el presente artículo, los artículos constitucionales que se refieren a la forma de gobierno, al territorio nacional, al período presidencial, a la prohibición para ser nuevamente Presidente de la República, el ciudadano que lo haya desempeñado bajo cualquier título y el referente a quienes no pueden ser Presidentes de la República por el período subsiguiente.

Taken together, it might have been possible to construe Mr. Zelaya's acton as a movement to the effectuation of an unconstitutional reform of the constitutional order. Such a move, in the context of the political actions taken before June 28, 2009 and potentially sanctioned by something that appeared to manifest the will of the people in a pseudo-plebiscite might appear as a subversion of the constitution and actions sufficiently serious to warrant the invocation of procedures in the legislative and judicial branches for the equivalent of impeachment and removal. Mr. Zelaya was not just an ordinary president going about his ordinary business. He was working diligently to undo the Honduran constitution in a way that was at best provocative and at worst illegitimate. Left to his own devices, Mr. Zelaya appears to have been playing fast and loose with the Honduran political system. He would undo the constitution because he finds it inconvenient. And for that purpose he would mobilize the sovereign will, but would do so precisely in the manner forbidden him as the President of the Republic, though not as a privatre individual. That is an irony--Mr. Zelaya was free to do as he pleased as a private citizen; he knew that he was disabled from seekin the changes he sought as a sitting President. He could have resibned and sought a constitutional convention, but his chances of mobilizing the popular will as a private citizen was substantially smaller than as a sitting President controlling the machinery of executive power. And that, perhaps, is precisely why the constitution disabled a sitting President from using his authority to upend the constitutional order. The consequences ought to be a matter of Honduran law, determined by those democratically elected or appointed for the purpose. And those determinations would have to be made by the Honduran legislature and judiciary in accordance with Honduran law.

On the other hand there is the revolution of the Congress and the Courts, also representing the people of Honduras, in their legislative and judicial authority. The proponents of the Juridico-Legislative Revolution would subvert the Honduran constitutional order by the methods chosen to "save" it. They removed Mr. Zelaya and ordered the military, acting as the domestic police force, to physically effect that removal, on the grounds that Mr. Zelaya had betrayed his oath to uphold the constitution and maintain the integrity of the constitutional system on which the state was founded. Congreso destituye a Zelaya y Roberto Micheletti asume como nuevo Presidente, Noticias 24, June 28, 2009 ("el Congreso Nacional aprobó primero el informe de una comisión especial nombrada el pasado jueves para investigar las actuaciones del gobernante y luego la resolución de su separación. La comisión estableció que Zelaya incurrió en dichas violaciones durante el proceso que pretendía culminar precisamente hoy con una consulta promovida por él para instalar una Asamblea Constituyente que reformara la actual Constitución, vigente desde 1982 o emitir una nueva." Id.). The impeachment and remova were effected in summary fashion--the Congreso de Diputados met in session to consider a hastily put together report of a special commission, which deteremined that the President had violated his duties. They then immediately voted to remove the President. "Tras la lectura del informe, el secretario del Parlamento presentó el decreto de separación de Zelaya, que fue aprobado de inmediato por los diputados, que luego abrieron un debate sobre la decisión recién asumida." (Id.).

The Honduran Constitution provides, among the powers of the legislature, the following:

ARTICULO 205.- Corresponde al Congreso Nacional, las atribuciones siguientes:

10. Interpretar la Constitución de la República en sesiones ordinarias, en una sola legislatura, con dos tercios de votos de la totalidad de sus miembros. Por este procedimiento no podrán interpretarse los Artículos 373 y 374 Constitucionales.

12. Recibir la promesa constitucional al Presidente y Vicepresidente de la República, declarados elegidos, y a los demás funcionarios que elija; concederles licencias y admitirles o no su renuncia y llenar las vacantes en caso de falta absoluta de alguno de ellos;

21. Nombrar comisiones especiales para la investigación de asuntos de interés nacional. La comparecencia a requerimiento de dichas comisiones, será obligatorio bajo los mismos apremios que se observan en el procedimiento judicial;

In addition, the Honduran Constitution includes self protective provisions against its illegitimate modification.

ARTICULO 375.- Esta Constitución no pierde su vigencia ni deja de cumplirse por acto de fuerza o cuando fuere supuestamente derogada o modificada por cualquier otro medio y procedimiento distintos del que ella mismo dispone. En estos casos, todo ciudadano investido o no de autoridad, tiene el deber de colaborar en el mantenimiento o restablecimiento de su afectiva vigencia.

Serán juzgados, según esta misma constitución y las leyes expedidas en conformidad con ella, los responsables de los hechos señalados en la primera parte del párrafo anterior, lo mismo que los principales funcionarios de los gobiernos que se organicen subsecuentemente, si no han contribuido a restablecer inmediatamente el imperio de esta Constitución y a las autoridades constituidas conforme a ella. El Congreso puede decretar con el voto de la mayoría absoluta de sus miembros, la incautación de todo o parte de los bienes de esas mismas personas y de quienes se hayan enriquecido al amparo de la suplantación.

But these provisions do not suggest either removal or expulsion from the nation. And, indeed, the Constitutional oversight of this function has disappeared. See Honduras Constitution of 1982, Art. 205:15 (which vested impeachment powers in the Congreso de Diputados and was abrogated in 2003).

On the other hand, the extensive provisions treating the responsibility of the state and its servants, Honduras, Constitution of 1982, arts. 321-327, might provide abasis both for the removal of President Zelaya and for the positive obligation of the Congreso de Diputados do actively remove him from office on a finding of violation of Mr. Zelaya's "constitutional promise" (Honduras Constitution art. 322).

CAPITULO XIII
DE LA RESPONSABILIDAD DEL ESTADO Y DE SUS SERVIDORES


ARTICULO 321.- Los servidores del Estado no tiene más facultades que las que expresamente les confiere la ley. Todo acto que ejecuten fuera de la ley es nulo e implica responsabilidad.

ARTICULO 322.- Todo funcionario público al tomar posesión de su cargo prestará la siguiente promesa de ley: "Prometo ser fiel a la República, cumplir y hacer cumplir la Constitución y las leyes".

ARTICULO 323.- Los funcionarios son depositarios de la autoridad, responsables legalmente por su conducta oficial, sujetos a la ley y jamás superiores a ella. Ningún funcionario o empleado, civil o militar, está obligado a cumplir órdenes ilegales o que impliquen la comisión de delito.

ARTICULO 324.- Si el servidor público en el ejercicio de su cargo, infringe la ley en perjuicio de particulares, será civil y solidariamente responsable junto con el Estado o con la institución estatal a cuyo servicio se encuentre, sin perjuicio de la acción de repetición que éstos pueden ejercitar contra el servidor responsable, en los casos de culpa o dolo. La responsabilidad civil no excluye la deducción de las responsabilidades administrativa y penal contra el infractor.

ARTICULO 325.- Las acciones para deducir responsabilidad civil a los servidores del Estado, prescriben en el término de diez años; y para deducir responsabilidad penal en el doble del tiempo señalado por la ley penal. En ambos casos, el término de prescripción comenzará a contarse desde la fecha en que el servidor público haya cesado en el cargo en el cual incurrió en responsabilidad. No hay prescripción en los casos en que por acción u omisión dolosa y por motivos políticos se causare la muerte de una o más personas.

ARTICULO 326.- Es pública la acción para perseguir a los infractores de los derechos y garantías establecidas en esta Constitución, y se ejercitará sin caución ni formalidad alguna y por simple denuncia.

ARTICULO 327.- La Ley regulará la responsabilidad civil del Estado, así como la responsabilidad civil solidaria, penal y administrativa de los servidores del Estado.
But this is a stretch as well, since the thrust of the provisions are meant to protect against administrative overreaching and damages resulting therefrom. t also appears to contemplate judicial rather than legislative action. (see id., art. 326). But there are relevant provisions--For example, Article 323 prohibits any state functionary, civil or military, from carrying out illegal or criminal orders. It is possible that the removal was the way in which the legislature, in its wisdom, determined to avoid complicity with Mr. Zelaya's illegal acts (and determined to be illegal by the legislature and Judiciary). On the other hand, the provision cuts both ways, and it might have serve to inhibit the military from putting Mr. Zelaya on a plane, though not from refusing to obey orders that the other branches of government have determined to be illegitimate. Critical to a discussion of legitimacy, of course, are those statutes and legislative decrees that may be applicable, but there has been little discussion about these.

In the absence of a satisfacxtory internal resolution of these constitutional issues, the internal dispute has been removed to the court of internaitonal opinion. And it is here that things get interesting. Both camps have accused the other of institgating a "coup" and thus violating the core parameters of the constitutional order of Honduras. Both are right, to some extent,; Honduras is undergoing what might euphemistically be understood as a constitutional moment. But, these are not coups in the conventional sense. This is not a set of coups designed to overturn the rule of law. Instead, these are maneuverings to either replace or to retain the current constitutional order by means that either retain a fidelity to or betray the current constitutional order. In slinging about the term "coup", outsiders tend to forget that both sides of this conflict are made up of the democratically elected representatives of the people of Honduras. Both represent the people within the constitutional order of Honduras. There's is a clash among the democratically elected representatives of the people. One of the the principals in this struggle, representing the combined legislative and judicual power of the state, was acting to avoidthe subversion of the current constitutional order, though its own methods may well have exceeded their collective asuthority. The other, representing the executive power of the state, was using his office to mobilize the popular will to replace the current constitutional system with something more to his liking--a task fiorbidden him, it seems, while in office. While that limitation might appear silly or worse, to outsiders, it is part of the rule fo law order in Honduras. To beocme complicit its its subversion, in the name of protecting rule fo law constitutionalism, is an awkward position to take, at best.

In that contest both sides have sought to manipulate legitimate constitutional process and meaning so much that they would, each in their own way, tear the Honduran system to pieces. Thus, I do not share the globally generated sympathy for Mr. Zelaya in his almost steretypical and pathetic role as an opportunitstic and underhanded manipultor of fundamental changes in the Honduran constittuional order for his own benefit, and the benefit of his masters abroad. There is a case to be made for the legitimacy of his removal within the Honduran constitutional framework. But neither do I find much that is sympathetic in the actions of the Congress and judiciary. Their own fidelity to the Honduran constitution, as they maneuvered to save it, evidences a singular lack of respect for its integrity. These branches of government did not invoke the processes for removal of a president acting lawlessly. Rather, they determined that this must be so and without more removed him from the country. An arrest and trial might have been more in accord with the rule fo law as set forth in the Honduran constitution. But that was not forthcoming. One cannot pick and chose what is worth saving in rescuing the constitutional order from attack, even from attack by the man holding the presidency.

In both cases, then, ironically enough, each actor relies on normative concepts of the Declaration of Independence for their extra constitutional excesses. The legislative and judicial organs rely on the first part of that normative framework--"That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed." To preserve the government and the rights preserved thereby, an individual had to be removed from office. The supporters of the legisltive and judicial branches aregue the conformity to meta-constitutional norms by analogizing the actions of those branches to the English Glorious Revolution of 1688, the constitutional use of extra constitutional powers to preserve the constitutional order. See Carlos Pineda Pinel, On a Path to Distatorship, Philadelphia Inquierer, July 5, 2009 (Commentary authored by a former justice vice minister of Honduras). Mr. Zelaya relies on the more revolutionary second part of the normative principles of the Declaration of Independence, "That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness." Mr. Zelaya invokes the power of mass democracy exercised directly by the people under the guidance of those who understand the direction of and can articulate these manifestaitons of the popular will. He looks to the Continental Congress of the 1770s and eventually to something like the work of the Constitutional Convention of the 1780s. It is in this form that key ouside actors understand the nature of Presidential power; for example, Fidel Castro. Speaking of Mr. Zelaya, Mr. Castro declared:
Fue impresionante verlo a través de Telesur, arengando al pueblo de Honduras. Denunciaba enérgicamente la burda negativa reaccionaria de impedir una importante consulta popular. Esa es la "democracia" que defiende el imperialismo. Zelaya no ha cometido la menor violación de la ley. No realizó un acto de fuerza. Es el Presidente y Comandante General de las Fuerzas Armadas de Honduras. Lo que allí ocurra será una prueba para la OEA y para la actual administración de Estados Unidos. Fidel Castro Ruz, Un gesto que no se olvidará, Reflexiones del Compañero Fidel, June 25, 2009 ("It was impressive to see him on Telesur, exhorting the people of Honduras. He was strongly denouncing the crude reactionary refusal to stop an important popular consultation. That is the sort of "democracy" that is protected by imperialism. Zelaya has not committed the slightest violation of the law. He has not undertaken an act of force. He is President and General Commander of the Armed Forces of Honduras. What happens there will be a test for the OAS and the current U.S. administration.").
This view of the relaitonship of the popular will to constitutionalism, and of the executive to the other branches of state power, is incompatible with the view underlying the actions of the legislative and judicial branches. But both have been legitimately invoked in the past to support action.

Mr. Zelaya has appeared to have won the propaganda war in the combat between Executive, legislature and the judicial branches. And, indeed, the theatricality of his position, as well as of those Latin American leaders who sought to exploit it for their own purposes, has delighted the press in the developed world. Honduras to Stop Zelaya Plane, BBC News On Line July 5, 2009.

Mr Zelaya says he will fly back to the country from Washington, arriving between 1300 and 1400 local time (1900 - 2000GMT). "I ask all farmers, residents, Indians, young people and all workers' groups, businessmen and friends... to accompany me on my return to Honduras," he said in a taped statement sent to media outlets. "Do not bring weapons. Practice what I have always preached, which is non-violence. Let them be the ones who use violence, weapons and repression." Mr Zelaya says he will be accompanied by the leaders of Ecuador and Argentina. It has also been suggested that officials from the Organization of American States could go with him.

Id. It is not clear, though, whether these dranatics are meant for the manipulaiton of opinion through media interventions or refer to actual plans to physically return ot Honduras. See, e.g., Manuel Zelaya asegura que regresará a Honduras el próximo jueves, el economista.es, June 30, 2009 (suggesting a return on Thursday in the company of the Secretary General of the OAS). Whatever the outcome of this "human shields" strategy or its legitimacy as something other than extra legal maneuvering, there are more remarkable events. Among the more significant has been the way in which a president, losing popular support at home, has, by the theatrics of simultaneous Revolutions also managed to mask complicated constitutional issues that deserve some exposition. "The BBC's Stephen Gibbs, in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, says Mr Zelaya, whose popularity in Honduras had been plummeting in recent months, has garnered impressive support since his exile. " UN Backs Honduran Leader's Return, BBC News Online, June 30, 2009.

More remarkable still has been the way the ignorant have marched fearlessly into judgment on the constitutional and statutory issues involved. And by pronouncing on the nature, character and issues involved within Honduras, lend legitimacy to determinations with respect to which they have neither competence (in all its senses nor jurisdiction), as well as to their actions outside that state. "Our correspondent notes that even US President Barack Obama and his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez have found themselves in rare agreement over the issue - with both declaring that his expulsion was illegal. " UN Backs Honduran Leader's Return, BBC News Online, June 30, 2009. While Mr. Zelaya's exile is questionable, it is not clear that the judicial and legislative branches are disabled form performing their constitutional duties and removing Mr. Zelaya from office. Even in the United States, a Congress and judicial brach willing to bear the consequences of their decision, may impeach and remove a President for what they considers to be high crimes and misdemeanors, without a prior judicial determination of criminal conduct.

Yet the call to lofty ideal and emotion, to the emotive stance of the Declaration of Independence, seems to have prevailed. And more to the point, the critical understanding of that document has come into play. Both Mr. Zelaya and the rest of the constitutionally legitimate government of Honduras who stand in opposition to him, have decided to "pledge their lives, fortunes and sacred honor" to their respective causes. This is no longer a matter of constitutional law but one of international power. In this, the course of the Honduran Revolutions follows that of its American predessor, whose complection changed decisively when it was transformed from an internal issue of the nature of the constitutional order of the governmental system presided over by the King in Parliament in Westminster to an international dispute over the legitimacy of control over defined territorial units.

This time, it was not a matter of presuading the French monarch and wooing its aristocracy and intelligenstia, but of wooing the international political community, global civil society and its shills, and the global media that appears to have made all the difference. And indeed, without much of a glance at the complicated internal rule of law issues that brought the two Revolutions to a head, the international political community has quickly taken sides. "The United Nations General Assembly has approved a resolution calling for the reinstatement of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya. Mr Zelaya's expulsion by the army on Sunday has been criticised in Europe, Washington and Latin America as a coup." UN Backs Honduran Leader's Return, BBC News Online, June 30, 2009. In addition, the Organization of American States has moved swiftly to seek the return of Mr. Zelaya and apparaently the continuation of his brand of revolutionary struggle. Americas Group Suspends Honduras, BBC News On Line, July 5, 2009. This last was effected without a nod to its irony. "The OAS approved suspending Honduras by 33 votes to zero, with Honduras itself not voting.It was the first time the organisation had taken such a measure since Cuba was suspended in 1962, when it allied itself with the USSR." Id. And, like France in the 1770s, the international community has done so for a variety of reasons few of which are related at all to the internal conflict that brought either the removal of Mr. Zelaya, or the undoing of the Honduran constitutional order (whichever prevails).

In the end, there is very little that may be Honduran about the ultimate result of those Revolutions. That quesiton will be decoded by forces outside of the state and serving the geo-political, ideological and strategic interests of others. Post modern sensitivity developing nations has produced a variety of post colonialisms form the left and the right and from the developing and developed centers of power. Hugo Chavez, the leader of Venezuela, in the days before the removal of Mr. Zelaya, suggested intervention in the defense of the Honduran President and his efforts ot mobilize popular will.

El mandatario venezolano advirtió de que los gobiernos “revolucionarios” de la región no se van a quedar de brazos cruzados ante el eventual intento de derrocar a Zelaya, al que calificó como un “líder que surge y asume su responsabilidad”. “Estamos dispuestos a hacer lo que haya que hacer para que se respete la soberanía de Honduras y la voluntad del pueblo de Honduras”, afirmó Chávez después de revelar que en las últimas horas ha hablado sobre la situación hondureña con sus colegas de Bolivia, Evo Morales, y de Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega. Hugo Chevez Amanaza a Honduras, La Prensa, June 26, 2009 ("The Venezuelan leader warned that "revolutionary" governments of the region will not remain passive in the face of any attempt to overthrow Zelaya, who he described as a "leader who emerges and assumes its responsibility." "We are willing to do all that is required so that the sovereignty of Honduras and the will of the people of Honduras are respected," Chavez said after revealing that he had recently talked about the Honduran situation with his colleagues in Bolivia, Evo Morales, and Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega.").
There is irony, of course. For it is less than clear that Venezuela and its allies, in this situation, have not been using their former master's tools as effectively as they once bitterly complained they had been used against them. And masking national interests behind international organizations, as the Americans are doing, does little to veil the continuing managerial aspirations of the developed world, now more appropriately clothed in the values of the day, and an abiding embrace of democratic formalism. "Mrs. Clinton has piled on as well. Yesterday she accused Honduras of violating "the precepts of the Interamerican Democratic Charter" and said it "should be condemned by all." Fidel Castro did just that. Mr. Chávez pledged to overthrow the new government." Honduras Defends Its Democracy, Wall Street Journal, June 29, 2009.

I do not mean to suggest support for one or the other version of the recent Honduran Revolutions. Neither do I mean to suggest that one or the other side is in the right. I do mean to suggest, however, that those issues no longer matter, at least as the Revolutionary movements have become internationalized, and that this is an old pattern, which reflection on the American Declaration of Independence reminds us with some force. It appears that the lessons of the American Declaration remain aspirational, supra national and ultimately grounded in power., though not necessarily in the power of the people directly involved (except perhaps as useful props). Whether there is much room for Honduras within it, either way, remains to be seen. But what appears clear is that, whatever its current form, there appears less change than one might imagine in the dynamic of aspirations and global relations that marked the world which gave us the American Declaration of Independence.

And that brings us to the most interesting transformation of the American Declaration of Independence--its renewed connection with constitutionalism, now in its manifestation as transnational constitutionalism. See, Larry Catá Backer, God(s) Over Constitutions: International and Religious Transnational Constitutionalism in the 21st Century, Mississippi Law Review, Vol. 27, 2008; Larry Catá Backer, From Constitution to Constitutionalism: A Global Framework for Legitimate Public Power Systems, Penn State Law Review, Vol. 113, No. 3, 2009. It appears that the American efforts to create a basis for restraining constitutional excesses, put in place after 1945 has borne fruit. Traditional nationalist constitutionalism looks inward for its ideology as well as its yardstick for measuring others. Transnational constitutionalism looks to the common constitutional traditions of the community of states buttressed by international norms and organizations. Constitutional Law is no longer a matter for the people of the state subject to its strictures. Instead, the international community now appears to have a say. That, at any rate seems to be the case with respect to small states, against which action may be undertaken without much risk of retribution. The constitutional crisis in Honduras reminds us both that the community of nations now has reached consensus on the substantive principles it can invoke when it seeks to intervene in managing the constitutional actions of any of its members,and that, as the Founders knew, constitutional legitimacy is, ultimately, a matter to which its adherents must "pledge their lives, fortunes and sacred honor."