Conclusions and Recommendations
excerpted from the book
State Terrorism and the United
States
From Counterinsurgency to the
War on Terrorism
by Frederick H. Gareau
Clarity Press, 2004, paper
p216
The first sentence of the report of the truth commission for Argentina
probably expressed what must have been a common reaction of many
of the readers of this study. "Many of the events described
in this report will be hard to believe."
p217
The findings of five truth commission reports were the major source
used for convicting the governments of El Salvador, Guatemala,
Chile, Argentina, and South Africa of state terrorism and of having
committed many more atrocities than the guerrillas. These reports
in turn were based on thousands of interviews, mostly with the
victims of terrorism.
p217
... the countries which perpetrated, te terrorism upon their own
citizens were supported by Washington. Father [Roy] Bourgeois
is correct that it is at the School of the Americas "that
the killing starts," that soldiers from Latin America learned
counterinsurgency warfare there. Thousands of its graduates and
those from other similar schools supported by Washington learned
the techniques of state terrorism or techniques which, when slightly
modified could be so used. Two of the three dictators who ruled
Argentina during the dirty war were educated at the School of
the Americas.
True, the typical military government
practicing terrorism did not receive the huge subsidy received
by El Salvador, which received six billion dollars in aid from
Washington in the period 1979 to 1992. But U.S. aid was often
military, and often dispensed when by all estimates, Washington
knew that the terrorism was taking place. In the case of Chile,
the CIA has verified this fact, reporting that: "US military
assistance and sales grew significantly during the years of greatest
human rights abuses." In the case of Indonesia, Washington
was afraid that General Suharto lacked the "courage to go
forward" against the communist party and its allies and sympathizers.
The bright prospect of witnessing the physical destruction of
the Communist Party of Indonesia led Washington to encourage the
slaughter that followed. U.S. support of Israel, which practices
state terrorism against the Palestinians, has been massive, to
the current tune of some three billion per year. Support for the
former Shah of Iran took the form of the sale of the latest weapons
to this oil rich country. Aid from Washington in the case of South
Africa reached the extravagant level of help in producing weapons
of mass destruction. These efforts were successful, and South
Africa produced some chemical weapons and six atomic bombs.
p218
Washington's support for rightwing dictators was bipartisan, but
with the Republicans being more supportive than the Democrats.
Schmitz traced the policy of support back to 1922, named it the
Root Doctrine, and alleged that observance of it during the Cold
War was a continuation of such observance in an earlier period.
p218
The Truman doctrine divided the world into the part that was free
and the communist part that was totalitarian. The Truman administration
then put rightwing dictatorships, if anti-communist, in the free
world camp. President Kennedy befriended Mobutu, a dictator who
ruled and plundered the Congo for 32 years. President Johnson
invaded the Dominican Republic, overturned a regime that had been
democratically elected, and helped install a dictator who ruled
there for decades. President Carter supported the Shah of Iran.
A major theme that runs through the study
is anti-communism, the ideology that supposedly fueled Washington
as well as the rightwing dictatorships it supported. Also significant
was Washington's concern to maintain stability in the countries
given support so as to promote trade and investment opportunities
for American business. The president of the Coca Cola company
expressed his enthusiasm for expanding sales to Indonesia in this
way. "When I think of Indonesia-a country on the equator
with 180 million people, a median age of 18, and a Muslim ban
on alcohol-I feel I know what heaven looks like." This remark
gains salience in the context of America's new global enemy-resurgent
Islam-and the fact that some 52 countries of the world have predominantly
Muslim populations.
Most often during the Cold War period,
the opposition to the dictatorships was not really communist,
but activists struggling for some form of lesser social change.
While resurgent Islam has replaced communism as the targeted ideology
in the new war on terrorism, the struggle for social change in
order to ameliorate well being remains a constant factor. The
struggles could better be denominated as the ins versus the outs,
or the haves versus the have-nots. Certainly an analysis of the
victims of the rightwing dictatorships would lead to that conclusion.
The Catholic Church, particularly its progressive wing, those
who favored the theology of liberation, stood up to the dictatorships
in Latin America, and often suffered the consequences. This church
can hardly be accused of being communist. I accept class as the
major motive that runs through the study, opposite movements struggling
to change or to preserve the basic structure of society. Insofar
as the individual societies themselves are not isolated from global
society, with its existing socio-economic relations and attendant
relative benefits for the dominant countries, and the U.S. in
particular, it is hard to escape the implications of classic notions
of imperialism and local resistance to it.
Even though class is a common theme that
runs through the volume, subsidiary issues arise, and they do
have impact. On this point I agree with Father Falla who accepted
class as the central motive for state action in Guatemala, but
recognized the ancillary role of the mestizos' prejudice against
the Mayas. Similarly the domination of one people or peoples by
another people or peoples also occurred in South Africa and was
manifest in the struggle for self-determination in East Timor.
But the racial divisions in South African society follow class
divisions as well, and the struggle over East Timor had a class
side to it as well as the more obvious nationalist side. "The
dirty war" in Argentina had a more obvious subsidiary side,
namely anti-Semitism. With the war on terrorism directed primarily
at Islamic populations, it is to be expected that defense of Islam
will play a further role in marshalling local resistance to negative
socio-economic conditions and domination from outside, as will
Islamic ideology in guiding it.
... the CIA actually planned the coup
in Guatemala that brought down the democratic government bent
on reform. In Chile it was in communication with three groups
that were planning coups against the Allende government. It aided
one such group, but claimed that it did not aid the one that succeeded.
In Iran, the CIA was responsible for the toppling of the secular
Mossadegh government, ushering in the rule of the Shah, which
led in turn to the Iranian Islamic revolution. It set out to assassinate
President Lumumba of the Congo, but someone else evidently beat
the agency to it. It organized the Contras and carried out a series
of attacks on Nicaragua's ports. It aided Saddam Hussein when
he came to power in 1963 by providing him with a list of his opponents
so that he could assassinate them. It launched a disinformation
campaign in Indonesia in 1965 intended to induce the communist
party to assassinate General Yani and to encourage the rightwing
military to slaughter the communists and their sympathizers.
p219
Washington as the Supplier of Arms to the World and Aid to the
Violators of Human Rights
... Amnesty International found Washington
to be the premier exporter of armaments that are often imported
by nations that violate human rights Between 1989 and 1996, Washington
sold over $117 billion worth of arms, 45 percent of world sales.'
In the year 2000, Washington again was first in sales, and its
share of the world market stood firm at 45.8 percent of the total.
In that year, Russia ranked second and France third. Israel ranked
first in the year 2000 as the premier importer of weapons of those
countries ranked as developing countries. Washington's sales are
often lubricated and supported by financial assistance and military
training. Since 1990 the hegemon has given away an additional
$8 billion in "surplus" equipment from American stocks.
These gifts included 4,000 heavy tanks, 500 bombers, and 200,000
light arms.
In September 1997 Washington released
figures on exports of rifles, small arms, and riot control weapons-the
dual use materials that can be used for police protection or for
the violation of human rights including the practice of state
terrorism. The figures showed that these exports were increasing
rapidly. In the opinion of Amnesty International, they were exported
to countries where human rights violations by governments were
persistent and severe-Bahrain, Bolivia, Colombia, Egypt, Israel,
Mexico, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. From September 1991
to December 1993 the U.S. Commerce Department issued over 350
licenses for the export of such items as thumb cuffs, thumbscrews,
leg irons, and shackles. The exports were to 57 countries, many
of which had poor human rights records. Over 2,000 licenses were
issued to 105 countries under another program for the sale of
electro-shock batons, cattle prods, shotguns, and shotgun shells.
In addition, thousands of military personnel are trained by Washington
either in the homeland or overseas. Over 100,000 from more than
100 countries have been trained under the International Military
and Education Training program since its establishment in 1976.
A larger number receive training under the auspices of the Foreign
Military Sales program. More than 150 facilities in the United
States and overseas are maintained for this purpose such as the
infamous School of the Americas,(mentioned above) whose graduates
have become notorious for their gross violations of human rights.
p222
WASHINGTON'S POLICY TOWARD THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
By April 11, 2002, sixty-six nations had
ratified the treaty establishing the International Criminal Court
(ICC), thus assuring that the court would become a reality. 12
This is the first permanent tribunal established by the international
community with the power to try individuals no matter their nationality
or the scene of their crime for genocide, crimes against humanity,
and war crimes. Following the terms of its constitutive treaty,
its jurisdiction went into effect on July 1, 2002. The ICC is
a great improvement over the long established World Court that
can try cases only among states and cannot try the culprits, the
individuals, who actually commit the crimes. The new court also
represents a great improvement over the international criminal
courts established for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Washington
played a leading role in the establishment of the International
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal
Tribunal for Rwanda, and these tribunals' jurisdictions were restricted
solely to their specific situations. The new court is the appropriate
court for trying those accused of terrorism, including those accused
by Washington of this crime. As indicated below, however, in all
likelihood, this is not to be.
The International Criminal Court has been
broadly welcomed by democratic nations, human rights organizations,
and American lawyers associations. Most democratic nations have
ratified the treaty that established it, including all members
of the European Union. The Secretary General of the United Nations
welcomed its establishment, exclaiming: "The long held dream
of the International Criminal Court will now be realized. Impunity
has been dealt a decisive blow." He added that its establishment
constituted "a giant step forward in the march towards universal
human rights and the rule of law." Richard J. Goldstone,
the former chief prosecutor of the United Nations International
Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, declared
that: "It will also be necessary to visit pariah status upon
any nations that persistently refuse to become parties to the
[ICC Rome] treaty" that established the court. His statement,
if taken seriously, would require that "pariah status"
be visited upon Washington.
Washington's seat at the birthday celebration
of the court was empty. This was symbolic not merely of the Bush
administration's refusal to become a member of the court, but
also of its hostility to the court. The New York Times remarked
in an editorial: "But it (the court) has an implacable foe
in the Bush administration, which argues that the court will open
American officials and military personnel in operations abroad
to unjustified, frivolous, or politically motivated suits."
The main initial reason Washington gave for its opposition is
that members of the American armed forces might be called before
it for prosecution... Later the Bush administration added the
specter of high civilian officials being tried before it as well.
Administration officials informed Washington's allies in Europe
that a major reason for seeking exemption was "to protect
the country's top leaders from being indicted, arrested, or hauled
before the court on war crimes charges."' To make their point,
these officials referred to the pending trials of Henry Kissinger
before American and Peruvian courts. The former Secretary of State
is accused of aiding the coup that brought Pinochet to power and
of supporting the ensuing dictatorship. (Information presented
in Chapter Three suggests that he is guilty of the latter charge.
The officials said that at the heart of their concern was the
fate of President Bush and Secretaries Rumsfeld and Powell.
Congress demonstrated that it is a foe
of the court by passing a law forbidding Americans at all levels
of government from cooperating with it-even as Washington seeks
to have Americans exempted from its jurisdiction. The administration
informed the Security Council that Washington would not take part
in any peacekeeping operations unless its personnel are exempted
from the jurisdiction of the court. Some two weeks later on June
30, 2002, Washington's delegate vetoed the extension of the peacekeeping
force in Bosnia, giving as its reason the danger faced by American
soldiers of frivolous and politically motivated suits from the
International Criminal Court. 16 Kofi Annan argued that the action
of the American government put the entire peacekeeping system
of the United Nations at risk. 17 The problem was temporarily
solved, or at least put off, when it was discovered that in the
Rome treaty there was provision for immunity from its jurisdiction
for one year for peacekeeping personnel from those countries that
do not accept the court.
Then Washington opened the war against
the court on another front. It concluded pacts with Rumania and
Israel whereby these countries agreed not to send American personnel
to the court for prosecution."' Later Tajikistan and East
Timor signed on as well. The agreement with Israel was a two-way
instrument. Washington also agreed that it would not send Israeli
personnel to the court for prosecution. The deputy chief of mission
at the Israeli embassy in Washington claimed that Israel shared
America's concerns. It fears that its troops could be tried for
actions taken against the Palestinians. An anti-terrorism law
passed in early August 2002 provided Washington with teeth in
negotiating such bilateral agreements. By its terms the administration
can terminate all military aid to those countries that upon becoming
members of the court do not pledge not to deliver Americans for
trial by the court. Members of NATO and other very close allies
of the United States are exempt from this provision, but many
more countries are included.(As a Pentagon spokeswoman declared,
practically every other country except those referred to above
and those on the list of countries accused of aiding terrorists
receive some type of military aid from the United States) Pursuant
to this act, aid to thirty-five countries has been suspended .20
Another provision of the anti-terrorism law allows the president
to free any American who is in the custody of the court by "any
necessary and appropriate means," including the use of the
military. The European Union reacted to this policy by warning
those nations wishing to join the organization to resist signing
such agreements. This in turn resulted in a strong response from
Washington. At the time of this writing, it appears that those
nations that wish to join NATO might be caught between the conflicting
policies of Washington and Europe.
The Bush administration also "unsigned"
the Rome treaty, a most unusual procedures.
p224
Washington's preference for situation-specific international criminal
courts should be viewed in the broader context of its policy of
exposing and calling for the punishment of those states regarded
as its enemies that violate human rights and practice terrorism,
while covering over and excusing from punishment its allies and
friends for committing the same offenses or worse. Washington's
policy with respect to these courts is generically ... exposing
and calling for punishment for the communists and their allies
that violate human rights and practice terrorism while covering
over, supporting, and excusing from punishment friendly rightwing
dictatorships. This policy violates the principle of universality,
a norm that Goldstone argues is the "essence of justice."
He put it this way: "A decent and rational person is offended
that criminal laws should apply only to some people and not to
others in similar situation S."25 He went on to say that
he felt distinctly uncomfortable when in October 1994 in Belgrade,
he was asked by the Serbian minister of justice why the United
Nations had established a tribunal for the former Yugoslavia while
it had not done so for Cambodia and Iraq. Why were the Serbs being
treated differently? Was this an act of discrimination? The only
answer Goldstone could think of was that the international community
had to begin somewhere. However, "if there were no follow-through
and if other equivalent situations in the future were not treated
comparably, then the people of the former Yugoslavia could justifiably
claim discrimination .
Obviously, the Bush administration has
no intention of using the International Criminal Court to prosecute
suspected terrorists. It intends to establish special military
tribunals for this purpose, an announcement that has sparked considerable
controversy. Human rights advocates argued that the special courts
would not only violate the civil liberties guaranteed under American
law, but that they would breach international law guaranteeing
fair treatment for prisoners of war, such as the Geneva Conventions.
p228
Preemption and counter-proliferation are violations of international
law and of the principles of morality as well. History offers
numerous cases of invasions of Latin American countries by Washington.
But the Bush administration has now made preemption a declared
policy of the United States, a standard way of fighting the war
on terrorism. Obviously, this is no way to carry on a project
of defense-the policy raises questions as to whether the war on
terrorism is intended in actuality to serve as an umbrella for
the expansion of U.S. imperial presence abroad and to deepen the
funding trough for the military industrial complex.
The adoption by the world's sole remaining
superpower of the doctrines of preemption and counter-proliferation
represents a severe setback for the development of international
law. Reacting to the enormous amount of bloodshed and destruction
caused by two world wars, the international community has been
attempting to outlaw aggression and punish those responsible for
it. The reaction has seen the establishment of the World Court,
the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal, the International Military
Tribunal for the Far East, and the International Criminal Court.
International lawyers have even incorporated some of the principles
of just war theory into their legal lexicon .
If its motive is truly self-defense, Washington
should not seek self-defense by means that would provide seeds
which, when planted and cultivated, would produce a new crop of
terrorists. This was the way the Cold War was fought. In pursuing
its goal of defending against terrorism, Washington should not
support a host of dictators who wage terrorist campaigns against
or trample on the rights of their own citizens. And in particular,
in relation to the populations most concerned in the present war
on terrorism, Washington should not duplicate its activities in
the Arab-Israeli conflict by supporting a democratic government
that wages terror against the Palestinian Arabs. The war on terrorism
is intimately connected with the Arab-Israeli struggle. Arab and
Muslim terrorists have forged this connection by blaming the United
States for its support of Israel, a country that practices state
terrorism against an Arab people.
p230
Washington seems to be oblivious to addressing the injustices
generated by past U.S. policy, absorbed as it is with its own
"war on terrorism" directed at the Middle East. President
Bush's resolve to capture the terrorists and bring them to justice
is compartmentalized and exclusive. It does not include the members
of the death squads in Guatemala, nor Generals Pinochet and Suharto
and the other military officers, former state terrorists, who
are enjoying their retirement with their families in their own
countries or in the sunshine of Southern Florida. They will not
be hunted down to be caught dead or alive, or even brought to
justice. In fact, their terrorist activities will not be exposed
by Washington unless its policy changes. This exemption from justice
could reasonably be presumed to increase the resentment and bitterness
of the surviving victims of state terrorism against their former
rulers and also against the United States in the many cases in
which Washington served as an accomplice to the state terrorists.
This exemption by definition is ironic, but more importantly,
it is unjust, and it could be the source of future terrorism against
the United States.
p230
A TRUTH COMMISSION FOR WASHINGTON
The American public is generally unaware
that Washington aids state terrorists, an ignorance somewhat similar
to that of the publics in countries where rightwing dictators
practiced state terrorism. Usually, state terrorism took place
in secret, and often what the state did was blamed on the guerrillas.
This ignorance of what happened was nowhere more evident than
in South Africa. As Archbishop Tutu pointed out, the townships
that housed the blacks were usually out of sight of the whites
who lived in their affluent suburbs. It was inconvenient for whites
to visit a black township. Some did, but the great majority preferred
to remain in their privileged, segregated suburbs. The geographic
distance that separated these whites from the black victims of
state terrorism is nothing like that which separates the American
public from the victims of the state terrorism supported by Washington.
Nonetheless, the levels of ignorance of these whites and the American
public were similar until the publication of the truth commission
report for South Africa. The existence of "the free press"
in the United States has not made up for the lack of a truth commission
nor obviated the need for the establishment of such a commission.
The ignorance of the American public is fed by Washington's narrow,
self-serving definition of terrorism that excludes state terrorism
from coverage. This definition is picked up by the media, applied
to the news, and distributed to the American public.
Another factor is the widespread belief
in the myth of American "exceptionalism," a central
feature of the socialization process in the United States: that
the U.S. acts in the world not out of selfish interests, but as
a force for good. During the Cold War this myth was used to find
a congruence between Washington's interests and human rights observance,
or as usually put, with "democracy. "311 Those regimes
that promoted the interests of Washington's elites, the anti-communists,
were by definition, "democratic," or at least, purported
not to be tyrannical. Firm believers in the myth find it hard
to believe, as an instance, that the elites in Washington tried
to initiate the massacre of the Indonesian Communist Party and
its sympathizers-that these elites did everything in their power
to encourage Suharto to commit this barbaric act. Not a single
one of the officials in Washington or Djakarta questioned the
policy on either ethical or political grounds.
p231
The public should be educated as to what its governments have
done. What is needed is full disclosure with adequate ventilation
of the bleaker side of Washington's policies and actions since
1945, exposed and repeated so that the American people will realize
what has been done in their name.
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