book review
America's 100 Years of Overthrow
The US is addicted to overthrowing
foreign governments -- 14 in the past century -- from Cuba to
Chile to Iran.
by Stephen Kinzer
review by Robert Sherrill
Texas Observer, July 25, 2006
- http://www.alternet.org/
George Bush and Dick Cheney may get your
vote as the worst, the dumbest, the most venal, and the most dangerous
bunglers in foreign affairs in U.S. history. But this book will
show you that their equals have appeared before. Author Stephen
Kinzer's Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change From Hawaii
to Iraq (Times Books, 2006) is an infuriating recitation of our
government's military bullying over the past 110 years -- a century
of interventions around the world that resulted in the overthrow
of 14 governments -- in Hawaii, Cuba, the Philippines, Puerto
Rico, Vietnam, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, Panama, Chile,
Iran, Grenada, Afghanistan, and ... Iraq.
Stephen Kinzer, who spent years on various
front lines for The New York Times, calls these regime changes
"catastrophic victories," but of course some were more
catastrophic than others.
Most of these coups were triggered by
foreign combatants and then taken over and finished by us. But
four of them, in many ways the worst of the lot, were all our
own, from conspiracy to conclusion. "American agents engaged
in complex, well-financed campaigns to bring down the governments
of Iran, Guatemala, South Vietnam, and Chile. None would have
fallen -- certainly not in the same way or at the same time --
if Washington had not acted as it did.
"Each of these four coups was launched
against a government that was reasonably democratic (with the
arguable exception of South Vietnam). ... They led to the fall
of leaders who embraced American ideals, and the imposition of
others who detested everything Americans hold dear. They were
not rogue operations. Presidents, cabinet secretaries, national
security advisers, and CIA directors approved them. ... The first
thing all four of these coups have in common is that American
leaders promoted them consciously, willfully, deliberately, and
in strict accordance with the laws."
For all 14 regime changes, Kinzer assigns
blame to the smug American belief that we are the most righteous
people in the world and that we are obliged to force our version
of righteousness on nations we judge to be backward -- especially
if they have a bountiful supply of minerals that our corporations
want (i.e., oil in Iran, copper in Chile). In short, our military
conquests have been launched under the glorious banner of Bible-thumping
Christian capitalists.
Yes, of course, you immediately think
of George Bush, but he is just the last of a long line.
Though World War I is beyond the scope
of this book, it must be mentioned simply to bring in the pronouncement
of President Woodrow Wilson as he prepared to lead us into that
war: "There is a mighty task before us. .... It is to make
the United States a mighty Christian nation, and to Christianize
the world." (Some of the more radical senators of that era
doubted his piety and were convinced he wanted to help England
and France win so that they could pay their huge debts to our
arms merchants.)
Of the four regime changes launched independently
by the United States, two were concocted in the sedate office
of John Foster Dulles. (That office, as Kinzer reminds us, has
been moved and reconstructed, down to Dulles' silver tea set,
at the University of Texas, at the Harry Ransom Center.) Of this
book's several candidates for the title Most Dangerous Nutcase,
my odds-on favorite is Dulles, President Eisenhower's secretary
of state. His influence over Ike in foreign affairs seems to have
been as strong as Cheney's influence over Bush.
Dulles was the grandson and son of preachers,
and, being exceedingly devout himself, he would have gone into
the clergy if he had not decided to enter an even more suspect
profession: law. For years he worked for some of the world's richest
corporations, and as secretary of state he continued to serve
them.
In 1953 the brutal, venal shah of Iran,
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was pushed into exile by Mohammad Mossadegh,
the democratically elected prime minister.
"Modern Iran has produced few figures
of Mossadegh's stature," Kinzer says.
Iranians loved Mossadegh. He made clear
that his two ambitions were to set up a lasting democracy and
to strengthen nationalism -- by which he meant get rid of the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., which had been robbing Iran for half a
century. Indeed, the British company had been earning each year
as much as all the royalties it paid Iran over 50 years. Mossadegh
intended to recapture those riches to rebuild Iran.
In a scheme to get rid of Mossadegh, the
British enlisted Secretary of State Dulles; he in turn enlisted
his brother, CIA Director Allen Dulles, and what ensued was a
truly masterful piece of skullduggery. First came a propaganda
campaign to convince the West that Mossadegh was a communist,
which in the U.S. of the 1950s put him on the level of a child
molester. Actually, Mossadegh hated communists, but most of our
press swallowed the lie. Time Magazine had previously called Mossadegh
"the Iranian George Washington" and "the most world-renowned
man his ancient race had produced for centuries." Now it
called him "one of the worst calamities to the anti-communist
world since the Red conquest of China."
The propaganda program on the outside
was followed by a bogus "revolution" inside Iran, with
a CIA agent-provocateur hiring such a huge army of thugs and terrorists
to roam the streets of Tehran that the town fell into violent
anarchy. The CIA plotters ousted Mossadegh and restored the shah
to his Peacock Throne.
For Secretary of State Dulles and his
old law clients -- including Gulf Oil Corp., Standard Oil Co.
of New Jersey, Texaco Inc., and Mobil Corp., who were subsequently
allowed to take 40 percent of Iran's oil supply -- the shah's
return was a happy and very lucrative event. But, Kinzer reminds
us, "The shah did not tolerate dissent [to silence some,
he simply killed them] and repressed opposition newspapers, political
parties, trade unions, and civic groups. As a result, the only
place Iranian dissidents could find a home was in mosques and
religious schools, many of which were controlled by" radical
fundamentalists. So when the revolution against the shah finally
broke out in 1979, it was inevitable that these clerics led it.
They then went on to sponsor acts of terror
from Saudi Arabia to Argentina, mostly to humiliate the United
States, and "their example inspired Muslim fanatics around
the world, including those who carried out the attacks on the
United States on September 11, 2001. None of this ... might have
happened if Mossadegh had not been overthrown."
At roughly the same time Secretary of
State Dulles was destroying democracy in Iran, he was also busy
destroying democracy in Central America, and once again it was
on behalf of a renegade industry: United Fruit Co. If any bureaucrat
deserved to spend the rest of his life in prison for conflict
of interest, it was Dulles. And several of his bureaucratic buddies
would have been right there beside him breaking rocks.
"Few private companies have ever
been as closely interwoven with the United States government as
United Fruit was during the mid-1950s," writes Kinzer. For
decades, Dulles had been one of its principal legal counselors.
(At one time Dulles negotiated an agreement
with Guatemala that gave United Fruit a 99-year lease on a vast
tract of land, tax free.) Dulles' brother -- Allen, the CIA Director
-- had also done legal work for the company and owned a big block
of its stock. So did other top officials at State; one had previously
been president of United Fruit. The head of our National Security
Council was United Fruit's former chairman of the board, and the
president of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
was a former board member.
These fine chaps and their numerous colleagues
in our government were, not surprisingly, very upset when between
1944 and 1954, Guatemala entered what would be known as its "democratic
spring," denoting the presidencies of Juan José Arevalo
and -- after the first peaceful transfer of power in Guatemalan
history -- Jacobo Arbenz.
What those two did was nothing less than
breathtaking. Under Arevalo, the National Assembly was persuaded
to establish the first social security system, guarantee the rights
of trade unions, fix a 48-hour workweek, and even slap a modest
tax on the big landholders -- meaning three American companies:
a huge electric monopoly, a rail monopoly, and, of course, United
Fruit, which controlled the other two.
Arbenz was even bolder. He persuaded the
National Assembly to pass the Agrarian Reform Law, which gave
the government the power to seize and redistribute uncultivated
land on estates larger than 672 acres. United Fruit owned more
than 550,000 acres, about one-fifth of the country's arable land,
but cultivated less than 15 percent -- while many thousands of
Guatemalans were starving for land. So in 1953, Arbenz's government
seized 234,000 uncultivated acres of United Fruit's land, for
which the government offered in compensation (one can imagine
the vengeful hilarity this must have stirred in Arbenz's circle)
a paltry $1.185 million -- the value United Fruit had declared
each year for tax purposes.
That did it. The Dulles gang back in Washington,
all "products of the international business world and utterly
ignorant of the realities of Guatemalan life, considered the idea
of land redistribution to be inherently Marxist," writes
Kinzer. So they began using the same techniques as in Iran, although
much more elaborately played out -- first portraying Guatemala
as having fallen into the hands of Communists, a falsehood that
was supported by the U.S. press, including a series in The New
York Times. Dulles even got Francis Cardinal Spellman, the most
powerful and most hysterically anti-communist priest in America,
to recruit Guatemala's Catholic clergy to "rise as a single
man against this enemy of God and country." Then the CIA
launched a bogus "invasion" by an "anti-Communist"
force, followed by a bogus "revolt."
Arbenz was forced into exile and replaced
by Col. Carlos Armas, who promptly canceled reforms and established
a police state. He was soon assassinated, but bedlam continued.
By overthrowing Arbenz, writes Kinzer, "the United States
crushed a democratic experiment that held great promise for Latin
America. As in Iran a year earlier, it deposed a regime that embraced
fundamental American ideals but that had committed the sin of
seeking to retake control of its own natural resources."
The dismantling of Arbenz's administration
was named, with the usual buffoonery of our undercover government,
"Operation Success."
When Guatemalans saw that democracy was
dead, thousands revolted, took to the hills, and, inspired by
Fidel Castro's victory in Cuba, formed guerrilla bands. "To
combat this threat," writes Kinzer, "the Guatemalan
army used such brutal tactics that all normal political life in
the country ceased. Death squads roamed with impunity, chasing
down and murdering politicians, union organizers, student activists,
and peasant leaders. Thousands of people were kidnapped... and
never seen again. Many were tortured to death on military bases
... This repression raged for three decades, and during this period
soldiers killed more civilians in Guatemala than in the rest of
the hemisphere combined." A United Nations commission put
the toll at 200,000.
It was a great victory for Dulles' side;
today 2 percent of the people in Guatemala still own half the
arable land.
To maintain that status quo, the United
States from 1960 to 1990 gave Guatemala hundreds of millions of
dollars in military aid, including training and arming its death
squads. Guatemala didn't need an air force; we dispatched our
own planes from the Canal Zone to drop napalm on suspected guerrilla
camps.
"This bloodiest of all modern Latin
American wars would not have broken out if not for Operation Success,"
writes Kinzer. "Operation Success taught Cuban revolutionaries
-- and those from other countries -- that the United States would
not accept democratic nationalism in Latin America. It gave them
a decisive push towards radicalism."
Never mind the regime change in Vietnam.
The heart of it was simply the stupidity and administrative paralysis
of the Kennedy administration. At the very moment when a close
watch on the turmoil in South Vietnam was vitally needed (hey,
it was supposedly "our" government), Kennedy and his
important cabinet members were out of town, playing golf, sailing,
or at a baseball game. In their absence, lesser officials sent
word to dump Ngo Dinh Diem, our unpopular puppet president of
South Vietnam. (Diem, by the way, was another protégé
of Dulles and Francis Cardinal Spellman.) When the Kennedy insiders
returned to their duties, they dithered for four days, largely
agreeing that the dumping was a bad idea, but doing nothing to
cancel it.
Nor, writes Kinzer, were any of the counselors
bright enough to suggest that it might be a perfect time to walk
away from the mess and leave it all to the Vietnamese. "That,"
writes Kinzer, "would probably have led to the establishment
of a Communist... rule over the entire country, but that is what
ultimately happened anyway." And a withdrawal at this point
"would have saved hundreds of thousands of lives... and spared
the United States its greatest national trauma since the Civil
War."
Once dumped, Diem was assassinated. With
a bizarre measurement of historical events, this seemed to bother
Kennedy the most. Historian Ellen Hammer writes that he was "shaken
and depressed" to realize that "the first Catholic ever
to become a Vietnamese chief of state was dead, assassinated as
a direct result of policy authorized by the first American Catholic
president."
What a pleasure it is to move away from
sheer stupidity and back to sheer meanness, supplied by the man
many love to hate, Henry Kissinger, and his part in Kinzer's fourth
featured regime change, in Chile. Misplaced piety cannot be blamed
for any part of this. The motivation was entirely capitalistic.
"For us there are two sorts of people in the world,"
Dulles once said. "There are those who are Christian and
support free enterprise, and there are the others." Leaving
out the Christians, Kissinger would have agreed.
The Chilean foreign minister once accused
him of knowing nothing about the Southern Hemisphere. Kissinger
nodded, saying, "And I don't care ... The axis of history
starts in Moscow, goes to Bonn, crosses over to Washington and
then goes to Tokyo. What happens in the South is of no importance."
Unless it carried the odor of Soviet influence.
And Kissinger, then secretary of state, was certain he detected
the odor of communism in the election of Salvador Allende Gossens
to the presidency of Chile. "Kissinger would be more directly
responsible for what happened in Chile than any other American,"
writes Kinzer, "with the possible exception of Nixon."
Chile was one of the most stable countries
in South America, with a high literacy rate, a relatively large
middle class, and a strong civil society. But millions of its
people lived in desperate poverty, and Allende made no secret
of his ambition to lift that class -- and to do it by controlling
some of the giant corporations operating in Chile but owned by
yanquis.
Topping his hit list, besides consumer-product
companies like PepsiCo Inc., were the world's two largest copper
mining companies, Kennecott Corp. and Anaconda Mining Co., and
International Telephone and Telegraph Co., all owned by U.S. interests.
Allende wanted the Chilean government to take them over.
The men running these outfits, along with
swingers like Kissinger's close friend David Rockefeller of Chase
Manhattan Bank, which had multibillion-dollar interests in South
America, struck back and got all the help they needed. Banks were
persuaded to put a devastating credit squeeze on Allende's government.
The CIA (though some of its officers wanted nothing to do with
these dirty tricks) was turned loose, hiring assassins, paying
for strikes that caused severe shortages of food, gasoline, electricity,
and other materials. "Within two years, one-third of Chile's
buses and 20 percent of its taxis were out of service due to lack
of spare parts." Much, but not all, of the Chilean military
was corrupted. Ditto the Chilean press.
Kinzer's account of these rebellious years
ends with the death of Allende in La Moneda, the presidential
palace and traditional seat of Chilean democracy. He had been
president for 1,042 days. He refused an offer of free passage
out of the country and committed suicide.
So Kissinger and Nixon and Rockefeller
and their friends got what they wanted: a Chile run by Gen. Augusto
Pinochet, who took office after the coup of September 11, 1973.
His first act was to order a nationwide roundup of tens of thousands
of leftists and other supporters of the Allende regime. Thousands
were tortured in prison. Many were never seen again.
In 1976, Kissinger met privately with
Pinochet in Santiago to assure the dictator that although his
upcoming speech to the Organization of American States "would
include a few perfunctory references to human rights, it was 'not
aimed at Chile ...' We are not out to weaken your position.'"
Okay, so after that depressing encounter
with Kissinger, you need to get back to someone who can offer
you piety, comedy, and, well, brutality of a different sort. Meet
the inflated president, William McKinley, elected by midwestern
industries. He launched the Spanish-American War in 1899, which
brought Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines into the U.S. kennel.
Later he would admit he saw the war as "a commercial opportunity,"
but at first he peddled the war as a sacred duty, telling a group
of Methodist missionaries that while he wrestled with the question
of taking the Philippine archipelago (which he at first had trouble
finding on the map), he fell to his knees in the White House on
several evenings and "prayed Almighty God for light and guidance.
One night late, it came to me that there was nothing left for
us to do but to take them all, and to educate the Filipinos and
uplift them and Christianize them."
Kinzer points out that McKinley obviously
didn't realize that most Filipinos were already practicing Catholics.
Nor did he have a clue as to the natives' feelings about being
"saved" by force. McKinley's missionary invasion ended
only after three and a half years of horrific fighting (deaths:
4,374 American soldiers, 16,000 guerrillas, and at least 20,000
civilians) in which both sides engaged in wholesale torture. Abu
Ghraib was a cakewalk compared with some of the things our soldiers
did in that war. "The most notorious was the 'water cure,'
in which sections of bamboo were forced down the throats of prisoners
and then used to fill the prisoners' stomachs with dirty water
until they swelled in torment. Then soldiers would jump on the
prisoner's stomach to force the water out."
Actually, the people of the Philippines
and Cuba didn't need our help to whip Spain. The natives of those
places had been hitting their Spanish overlords so hard for so
many years that Spain was already willing to give Cuba home rule.
The chief organizer of the rebellion at that stage, José
Martí, encouraged his fighters to push on, not only to
win freedom from Spain but "to prevent, by the independence
of Cuba, the United States from spreading over the West Indies
and falling, with that added weight, upon other lands of our America."
Uh oh. That kind of talk scared the devil
into American businessmen who had more than $50 million -- big
bucks in those days -- invested in Cuban agriculture. Obviously
a war to pre-empt the Martí crowd was needed. That was
nicely cooked up by a "friendly" visit of the U.S. battleship
Maine to the Havana harbor, where an explosion killed 250 of its
sailors, and the Hearst newspapers were filled with mendacious
stories fixing the guilt on Spain. Hearst and his loud crowd called
for all-out war. McKinley enthusiastically complied.
But there were enough members of Congress,
touched by the Cubans' long fight for freedom, who refused to
back a pro-war resolution until McKinley agreed to an amendment
promising that at war's end, we would leave the government and
control of the island to its people. When the promise was made,
our military's brief, Hollywood-style part in the liberation of
Cuba took place. Kinzer tells us, "in three one-day battles,
the most famous being one in which [Teddy] Roosevelt, dressed
in a uniform he had ordered from Brooks Brothers, led a charge
up Kettle Hill" and "American cruisers destroyed the
few decrepit Spanish naval vessels anchored at Santiago"
in a single day.
"Just 385 Americans had been killed
in action, barely more than Sioux Indians had killed at Little
Big Horn in the country's last major military engagement, twenty-two
years before." No wonder the American statesman John Hay
called it "a splendid little war."
As for our promises to let Cuba rule itself,
we quickly backed off on that. Republicans in Congress and much
of the press greatly exaggerated our part in whipping Spain and
argued, successfully, that Cubans had little to do with it and
deserved to rule themselves only so long "as they allowed
the United States to veto any decision they made." Castro
was still a long way off. A couple of Kinzer's regime changes
are pure comic opera.
Grenada for example -- a tiny, former
British colony in the Caribbean. On October 21, 1983, eager to
get away from Washington for a few rounds of golf at Augusta,
President Reagan hurriedly signed an order for a naval task force
heading for Lebanon to change course and go to Grenada to ...
Well, nobody was exactly sure, but apparently a couple of wacky
"Marxist" cliques were in a shooting donnybrook to see
who would have political control down there. And maybe a couple
of hundred American students at a medical school on Grenada were
in danger. Actually, when polled by their dean, 90 percent of
the students said they felt perfectly safe. But the naval task
force steamed on.
The invasion -- named Operation Urgent
Fury -- would not be easy. The Pentagon had no up-to-date maps
of Grenada, so some of our troops had to use photocopies of tourist
maps. About 6,000 troops landed in Grenada, "at least twice
the number needed for the job," writes Kinzer. A mental hospital
was accidentally bombed, killing more than a dozen patients. Several
dozen others stumbled away, dazed, and some were still wandering
days later.
Oops! Neither Reagan nor any other American
official had told the Brits what we were up to. "The United
Nations General Assembly overwhelming passed a resolution 'deeply
deploring' ... a flagrant violation of international law."
But Representative Dick Cheney of Wyoming
said the invasion made "a lot of folks around the world feel
we are more steady and reliable than heretofore."
Reagan was doggone proud, too. In a speech
to the Congressional Medal of Honor Society in New York, he proclaimed,
"Our days of weakness are over! Our military forces are back
on their feet, and standing tall."
Except for the 250 Marines who had been
killed by a bomb in Lebanon at the same time we were invading
Grenada.
And finally we musn't forget our very
first regime change, in 1893, when a few dozen sugar planters
and descendants of missionaries, wanting more control of island
commerce, overthrew Queen Liliuokalani of Hawaii. It wasn't a
fair fight. The sugar planters got the help of 162 American Marines
and sailors who were passing through. The queen's "army"
consisted of the Honolulu police chief.
Texas Observer contributor Robert Sherrill's
most recent book is First Amendment Felon: The Story of Frank
Wilkinson, His 132,000 Page FBI File and His Epic Fight for Civil
Rights and Liberties (Nationbooks, 2005).
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