Honduras is a small mountainous country in Central America with a storied history. Originally settled by indigenous tribes, Honduras was colonized by Spain by Christopher Columbus in 1502 and remained part of the Spanish empire until 1821. It was in 1821 when the Spanish granted Honduras its independence. Rich farmland drew foreign investors from all over the world, including America, and many US companies established banana plantations in the region. After much political turmoil during the 20th Century, Honduras's economy fell into recession, and the country was forced to rely on the United States for aid.Hurricane Mitch, in 1988, devastated Honduras, with more than $3 billion in damages. Numerous human rights violations have persisted from the country's 1980s conflicts with Nicaragua and El Salvador. In addition, the country is still reliant on the US Millennium Challenge Grant for help in maintaining infrastructure, developing agriculture, and bringing its products to market.
Lay of the Land: A mountainous country in Central America, Honduras has a long Caribbean coastline but only a short Pacific one. The coastal lowlands are tropical, but the central highlands, where most of the people live, have a slightly more pleasant climate. The country is heavily forested and home to many exotic birds, insects, and reptiles.
Honduras was originally inhabited by indigenous tribes, including the Maya. The Lencas inhabited the western-central part of Honduras and maintained trading relationships with other groups as far as Panama and Mexico, as well as the Maya domestically.
The Peace Corps has been active in Honduras since 1962. During the 1980s, Honduras supported the United States' opposition to the Marxist government in Nicaragua, as well as the leftist insurgency in El Salvador. This strengthened relations between the two countries. The Reagan administration used profits from the sale of arms to the Iranian government to supply money to the Nicaraguan Contras, a rebel group opposed to the leftist Sandinista government. Southern Honduras became the gateway through which the Contras entered Nicaragua.
Honduras generally supports the international efforts of the US. Shared initiatives between the two nations include counternarcotics and counterterrorism. Honduras was among the first countries to sign an International Criminal Court (ICC) Article 98 Agreement with the US, which Washington uses to protect American citizens and military personnel from being subject to ICC actions (and links to American aid if governments don’t sign the agreements). Also, the Honduran port of Puerto Cortes is part of the US Container Security Initiative (CSI).
The United States is Honduras’ chief trading partner, with two-way trade in goods increasing to over $7 billion in 2006. US-Honduran trade is dominated by the Honduran maquila industry, which imports yarn and textiles from the United States and exports finished articles of clothing.
Ousting of President Manuel Zelaya
Honduran President is Ousted in Coup (by Elisabeth Malkin, New York Times)
Behind the Honduran Coup (by Geoff Thale, Foreign Policy in Focus)
The State Department reports that the Honduran government or its agents have committed arbitrary or unlawful killings. NGOs reported killings of youths and children by vigilante groups that also may have included members of the security forces. There were no charges filed against or convictions of any persons in relation to these killings.
Honduran President is Ousted in Coup (by Elisabeth Malkin, New York Times)
Behind the Honduran Coup (by Geoff Thale, Foreign Policy in Focus)
John Slidell
Marlon Tábora Muñoz, who has spent much of his career working on his nation’s finances, presented his credentials as Honduras’ ambassador to the United States to President Donald Trump on April 24, 2017. It’s his first such post.
Tábora was born April 3, 1969, to José Ernesto and Hilda Muñoz Tábora in Santa Rosa de Copan, in Honduras’ western region. He went to José María Medina school there until moving to Tegucigalpa, Honduras’ capital, in the fourth grade. Tábora then began at Instituto Salesiano San Miguel, where he completed secondary school.
Despite spending much of his career working on financial issues, Tábora started on a path to be an engineer. He earned a B.Eng. mechanic industrial engineering in 1990 from Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras, and then a master’s in technical marketing and international business in 1994 from Universidad Tecnológica Centroamerica (Unitec). Tábora later continued his education with a doctorate in science administration in 2001 from Universidad Católica de Honduras and finally a master’s in public policy from George Washington University in 2013.
Tábora began his work career at the Honduran Telecommunications Company (HONDUTEL), serving as a project engineer and an infrastructure project manager. In 1993, he left to manage construction of the headquarters for the Banco Central de Honduras Central (Honduras’ Central Bank). In 1995, he joined the Grupo Inversiones La Paz, also known as Groupo Maduro, which was led by Ricardo Maduro, who was elected president of Honduras in January 2002.
In March 2002, Tábora was named president of Comision Nacional de Telecomunicaciones (CONATEL), Honduras’ national commission on telecommunications. He resigned in June 2004 and worked for a couple years as a consultant for the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Tábora moved to Grupo Terra, a Honduran company involved in infrastructure construction, real estate development and power generation, as new business development manager in 2006. The following year, he was made vice president of infrastructure.
In November 2009, Tábora was elected as the first deputy of the National Party in the department of Francisco Morazán.
In January 2010, he took over as vice minister of the presidency and chief of staff to Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, after serving as an advisor to his presidential campaign. Five months later, Tábora moved to Washington to serve as senior counselor at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which finances development in Latin America. In 2013 he was made IDB’s alternate executive director for Central America and Belize and was named coordinator of the government’s economic cabinet.
Tábora returned to Tegucigalpa in January 2014 to take over as president of Honduras’ Central Bank—just ten years after, as an engineer, he had overseen construction of its headquarters. However, his tenure there lasted only until August 2015. He then was back at IDB, this time as executive director for Central America and Belize, a post he held until taking over the embassy.
Tábora and his wife, Saira Esmeralda Ponce, have two children, Marlon and Isabela. Ponce has served most recently as Honduras’ alternate representative of Honduras to the Organization of American States.
-Steve Straehley, David Wallechinsky
To Learn More:
Marlon Tábora Muñoz (Wikipedia)
El BCH No Está Diseñado Para Financiar Déficit Público (El Heraldo)
Honduran President Lobo’s Cabinet Takes Shape (U.S. State Department/Wikileaks)
On May 1, 2014, President Barack Obama nominated James D. Nealon Jr. to be U.S. Ambassador to Honduras, and he was confirmed by the Senate on July 15, It is the first ambassadorial post for the career Foreign Service officer.
Nealon was born and raised in Virginia, where his father was a surveyor and later a land developer. His mother had worked for the State Department as an administrative assistant. Nealon graduated from Brown University in 1980 with a B.A. in American History. Before joining the State Department, he spent a few years as a high school coach and teacher.
In 1984, Nealon joined the Foreign Service. His early posts included being an assistant press attaché in the U.S. embassy in Chile, cultural attaché in the embassy in Uruguay and media attaché in the embassies in Hungary and the Philippines.
Nealon returned to Hungary as counselor for public affairs and later served in Madrid in the same capacity.
In 2005, Nealon returned to Uruguay as deputy chief of mission (DCM) and chargé d’affaires at the embassy in Montevideo, running the mission in the absence of an ambassador. He took a similar job in Peru in 2007 and was again DCM in Ottawa, Canada beginning in 2010. While in Peru, Nealon wrote a report, later released by WikiLeaks, expressing concern about “anti-system radicals” who might “lay the groundwork for a more systematic assault on the pro-growth model.”
He added, “To many (and to us), the similarity of this subversive campaign to events that unfolded in Bolivia in 2003 - with the unwitting help of well-meaning actors and the active support of able political radicals is uncanny.”
In December 2012, President Obama proposed Nealon as the ambassador to Bolivia, but, not surprisingly considering his comments, Nealon was rejected by the Bolivian government. There has been no U.S. ambassador in that country since September 2008 because of friction between Washington and the left-leaning government in La Paz.
Nealon was named civilian deputy to the commander and foreign policy advisor to the U.S. Southern Command, based in the Miami area, in 2013. The Southern Command is responsible for U.S. military planning and operations in Central and South America and the Caribbean.
Nealon’s wife Kristin, a fellow Brown graduate, teaches English as a second language. They have four children—Rory, Katie, Maureen and Liam—all born overseas while Nealon was on assignment. Nealon speaks Spanish and Hungarian.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Official Biography (pdf)
Statement before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (pdf)
moreCareer diplomat Lisa J. Kubiske received her first chance to become an ambassador on July 26, 2011, when she was sworn in as ambassador to Honduras.
Honduras is a small mountainous country in Central America with a storied history. Originally settled by indigenous tribes, Honduras was colonized by Spain by Christopher Columbus in 1502 and remained part of the Spanish empire until 1821. It was in 1821 when the Spanish granted Honduras its independence. Rich farmland drew foreign investors from all over the world, including America, and many US companies established banana plantations in the region. After much political turmoil during the 20th Century, Honduras's economy fell into recession, and the country was forced to rely on the United States for aid.Hurricane Mitch, in 1988, devastated Honduras, with more than $3 billion in damages. Numerous human rights violations have persisted from the country's 1980s conflicts with Nicaragua and El Salvador. In addition, the country is still reliant on the US Millennium Challenge Grant for help in maintaining infrastructure, developing agriculture, and bringing its products to market.
Lay of the Land: A mountainous country in Central America, Honduras has a long Caribbean coastline but only a short Pacific one. The coastal lowlands are tropical, but the central highlands, where most of the people live, have a slightly more pleasant climate. The country is heavily forested and home to many exotic birds, insects, and reptiles.
Honduras was originally inhabited by indigenous tribes, including the Maya. The Lencas inhabited the western-central part of Honduras and maintained trading relationships with other groups as far as Panama and Mexico, as well as the Maya domestically.
The Peace Corps has been active in Honduras since 1962. During the 1980s, Honduras supported the United States' opposition to the Marxist government in Nicaragua, as well as the leftist insurgency in El Salvador. This strengthened relations between the two countries. The Reagan administration used profits from the sale of arms to the Iranian government to supply money to the Nicaraguan Contras, a rebel group opposed to the leftist Sandinista government. Southern Honduras became the gateway through which the Contras entered Nicaragua.
Honduras generally supports the international efforts of the US. Shared initiatives between the two nations include counternarcotics and counterterrorism. Honduras was among the first countries to sign an International Criminal Court (ICC) Article 98 Agreement with the US, which Washington uses to protect American citizens and military personnel from being subject to ICC actions (and links to American aid if governments don’t sign the agreements). Also, the Honduran port of Puerto Cortes is part of the US Container Security Initiative (CSI).
The United States is Honduras’ chief trading partner, with two-way trade in goods increasing to over $7 billion in 2006. US-Honduran trade is dominated by the Honduran maquila industry, which imports yarn and textiles from the United States and exports finished articles of clothing.
Ousting of President Manuel Zelaya
Honduran President is Ousted in Coup (by Elisabeth Malkin, New York Times)
Behind the Honduran Coup (by Geoff Thale, Foreign Policy in Focus)
The State Department reports that the Honduran government or its agents have committed arbitrary or unlawful killings. NGOs reported killings of youths and children by vigilante groups that also may have included members of the security forces. There were no charges filed against or convictions of any persons in relation to these killings.
Honduran President is Ousted in Coup (by Elisabeth Malkin, New York Times)
Behind the Honduran Coup (by Geoff Thale, Foreign Policy in Focus)
John Slidell
Marlon Tábora Muñoz, who has spent much of his career working on his nation’s finances, presented his credentials as Honduras’ ambassador to the United States to President Donald Trump on April 24, 2017. It’s his first such post.
Tábora was born April 3, 1969, to José Ernesto and Hilda Muñoz Tábora in Santa Rosa de Copan, in Honduras’ western region. He went to José María Medina school there until moving to Tegucigalpa, Honduras’ capital, in the fourth grade. Tábora then began at Instituto Salesiano San Miguel, where he completed secondary school.
Despite spending much of his career working on financial issues, Tábora started on a path to be an engineer. He earned a B.Eng. mechanic industrial engineering in 1990 from Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras, and then a master’s in technical marketing and international business in 1994 from Universidad Tecnológica Centroamerica (Unitec). Tábora later continued his education with a doctorate in science administration in 2001 from Universidad Católica de Honduras and finally a master’s in public policy from George Washington University in 2013.
Tábora began his work career at the Honduran Telecommunications Company (HONDUTEL), serving as a project engineer and an infrastructure project manager. In 1993, he left to manage construction of the headquarters for the Banco Central de Honduras Central (Honduras’ Central Bank). In 1995, he joined the Grupo Inversiones La Paz, also known as Groupo Maduro, which was led by Ricardo Maduro, who was elected president of Honduras in January 2002.
In March 2002, Tábora was named president of Comision Nacional de Telecomunicaciones (CONATEL), Honduras’ national commission on telecommunications. He resigned in June 2004 and worked for a couple years as a consultant for the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Tábora moved to Grupo Terra, a Honduran company involved in infrastructure construction, real estate development and power generation, as new business development manager in 2006. The following year, he was made vice president of infrastructure.
In November 2009, Tábora was elected as the first deputy of the National Party in the department of Francisco Morazán.
In January 2010, he took over as vice minister of the presidency and chief of staff to Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, after serving as an advisor to his presidential campaign. Five months later, Tábora moved to Washington to serve as senior counselor at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which finances development in Latin America. In 2013 he was made IDB’s alternate executive director for Central America and Belize and was named coordinator of the government’s economic cabinet.
Tábora returned to Tegucigalpa in January 2014 to take over as president of Honduras’ Central Bank—just ten years after, as an engineer, he had overseen construction of its headquarters. However, his tenure there lasted only until August 2015. He then was back at IDB, this time as executive director for Central America and Belize, a post he held until taking over the embassy.
Tábora and his wife, Saira Esmeralda Ponce, have two children, Marlon and Isabela. Ponce has served most recently as Honduras’ alternate representative of Honduras to the Organization of American States.
-Steve Straehley, David Wallechinsky
To Learn More:
Marlon Tábora Muñoz (Wikipedia)
El BCH No Está Diseñado Para Financiar Déficit Público (El Heraldo)
Honduran President Lobo’s Cabinet Takes Shape (U.S. State Department/Wikileaks)
On May 1, 2014, President Barack Obama nominated James D. Nealon Jr. to be U.S. Ambassador to Honduras, and he was confirmed by the Senate on July 15, It is the first ambassadorial post for the career Foreign Service officer.
Nealon was born and raised in Virginia, where his father was a surveyor and later a land developer. His mother had worked for the State Department as an administrative assistant. Nealon graduated from Brown University in 1980 with a B.A. in American History. Before joining the State Department, he spent a few years as a high school coach and teacher.
In 1984, Nealon joined the Foreign Service. His early posts included being an assistant press attaché in the U.S. embassy in Chile, cultural attaché in the embassy in Uruguay and media attaché in the embassies in Hungary and the Philippines.
Nealon returned to Hungary as counselor for public affairs and later served in Madrid in the same capacity.
In 2005, Nealon returned to Uruguay as deputy chief of mission (DCM) and chargé d’affaires at the embassy in Montevideo, running the mission in the absence of an ambassador. He took a similar job in Peru in 2007 and was again DCM in Ottawa, Canada beginning in 2010. While in Peru, Nealon wrote a report, later released by WikiLeaks, expressing concern about “anti-system radicals” who might “lay the groundwork for a more systematic assault on the pro-growth model.”
He added, “To many (and to us), the similarity of this subversive campaign to events that unfolded in Bolivia in 2003 - with the unwitting help of well-meaning actors and the active support of able political radicals is uncanny.”
In December 2012, President Obama proposed Nealon as the ambassador to Bolivia, but, not surprisingly considering his comments, Nealon was rejected by the Bolivian government. There has been no U.S. ambassador in that country since September 2008 because of friction between Washington and the left-leaning government in La Paz.
Nealon was named civilian deputy to the commander and foreign policy advisor to the U.S. Southern Command, based in the Miami area, in 2013. The Southern Command is responsible for U.S. military planning and operations in Central and South America and the Caribbean.
Nealon’s wife Kristin, a fellow Brown graduate, teaches English as a second language. They have four children—Rory, Katie, Maureen and Liam—all born overseas while Nealon was on assignment. Nealon speaks Spanish and Hungarian.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Official Biography (pdf)
Statement before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (pdf)
moreCareer diplomat Lisa J. Kubiske received her first chance to become an ambassador on July 26, 2011, when she was sworn in as ambassador to Honduras.
Comments