It's pathetic that the US pressured Micheletti to agree to anything, but it looks like he didn't concede much. It is highly unlikely that the legislature or the court would allow Zelaya to return. I think both were nearly unanimous in supporting his removal.
But I wonder what "to return" means? Does that mean return to the country or return to the presidency?
And what is meant by a coalition government? Honduras doesn't have a parliamentary government, and beyond that Zelaya and Micheletti were members of the same party, so I don't get what the practical meaning of this would be.
“Coalition” is the way the left is currently overturning the electoral process and getting its people into power no matter what. Obama and his minions managed to do this in Kenya, where Obama’s Muslim Marxist cousin lost the election (even after leading his supporters in bloody mayhem throughout the country) but then charged fraud and used the threat of more violence to force Kenya to install him as a sort of “co-president,” even though there is no provision in the Kenyan constitution for this type of thing.
Obama has pushed for the same thing (a “coalition government”) in Afghanistan, where he is for some reason very eager to install Abdullah Abdullah, even though the latter lost the election and there is no provision for “coalitions” in Afghan law.