An old
bumper sticker said: "Your taxes pay for torture, rape, and murder
in Latin America." Especially true in the bloody 1980s, it's unfortunately
still true today. We spend about 20 million dollars annually on the
Army's "School of the Americas" (SOA) at Ft. Benning, Georgia. Latin
American military personnel congregate there, most of the "instructors"
are selected from among them, and so many "graduates" have committed atrocities
that the SOA has been dubbed "School of Assassins."
Manuel
Noreiga attended, as did 1972 alumnus Roberto D'Aubuisson, who (according
to a 1993 UN Truth Commission Report) ordered the assassination of Salvadoran
Catholic Archbishop Oscar Romero and organized El Salvador's infamous death
squad network. Other graduates include Peruvian Major Carlos Pichilingue
Guevara (convicted of the 1992 murder of 9 university students and a professor)
and Salvadoran Colonel Francisco Elena Fuentes, who planned the 1989 massacre
of six Jesuit priests along with their housekeeper and her daughter.
A 1973 grad, Elena Fuentes was described by US Ambassador William Walker
as "among the worst in terms of human rights," but nevertheless served
as an SOA instructor in 1985 and 1986.
SOA
graduates were prominent in Guatemala's "scorched earth" campaign of the
early 1980s, in which thousands of indigenous villagers were slaughtered
and buried in mass graves. The 1994 Guatemalan Commission for Historical
Clarification documented 626 massacres by Guatemalan forces, and "in the
majority of these massacres there is evidence of multiple acts of savagery."
The organization School of Americas Watch names 13 SOA alumni deeply involved
in Mexico's recent brutal policies in Chiapas. A 1997 resolution
passed by the State Assembly of New Jersey calling for closure of the SOA
states that 10 of 12 officers cited for the 1981 massacre of hundreds of
civilians at El Mozote in El Salvador were SOA graduates, as were 19 of
26 officers cited in the aforementioned murder of Jesuit priests.
The list goes on and on. In 1995, the Associated Press reported that
a
French court had issued international arrest warrants
for four Salvadoran SOA grads for the 1989 rape, torture, and murder of
a 27 year old French nurse, whose abused and bullet-ridden body was found
with the left hand severed.
It's
easy to think of thousands killed, but difficult to imagine one person
being tortured and murdered. Reflect for a moment on what the French
woman must have felt in her final hours, and you will know clearly
what's at stake here.
The
full scale of atrocities will never be known because Latin American militaries
are often "above the law." Investigation of crimes is sometimes likely
only if foreign victims are involved, but much more commonly, these killers
butcher their own people.
There
is a growing movement in the US to close the SOA. A partial list
of groups calling for closure includes Amnesty International, the United
Church of Christ, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church, Grandmothers
for Peace, the Jesuit Conference, the Presbyterian Church of the USA, the
United Methodist Council of Bishops, the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers,
and the VFW of Santa Cruz. In November 1997, over 2000 protested
at Ft. Benning and 601 were arrested for non-violent civil disobedience.
Judges sent 25 "repeat offenders" to prison for 6 months, including Father
Roy Bourgeois of the Maryknoll order, and United Methodist pastor Carol
Richardson--leaders of "SOA Watch" (www.soaw.org). In November
1998, 7000 protested at Ft. Benning with over 2300 risking arrest by "crossing
the line." The authorities made no arrests this time, probably to
minimize publicity. This year, protests are planned for May in Washington
DC, and again in November at Ft. Benning.
Congressional
legislation to cut SOA funding has been repeatedly proposed: in 1997,
the vote lost 217-210; last year it lost 212-201. This year's bill,
House Resolution 732, again calls for closure of the SOA. Similar
legislation will probably be introduced soon in the Senate.
The
SOA was established in Panama in 1946 to train US Army personnel in the
region. By 1956, the purpose had shifted to training Latin American
military, and the instruction was all in Spanish. In 1984, the "school"
relocated from Panama to Georgia; Panama didn't want it, and terms of the
Panama Canal Treaty enabled them to get rid of it. Panama's president
at the time, Jorge Illueca, called the SOA "the biggest base for destabilization
in Latin America."
Why
has the mighty USA condoned atrocities in Latin America? The answer
lies in Calvin Coolidge's famous quote: "the business of America
is business." In Coolidge's day, the United Fruit Company made phenomenal
profits in bananas, and (backed by the US government and military) wielded
extreme power in Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and other countries.
Local civilian and military "leaders" were richly rewarded for implementing
policies friendly to United Fruit, and for "suppressing" individuals (such
as labor organizers) who threatened the arrangement.
This
basic pattern has continued. The best agricultural land is planted
in export crops such as pineapples, bananas, or coffee--while local people
have scarcely enough to eat. Field workers are poisoned with pesticides
banned in the US. Wealthy landowners, of course, get ridiculously
rich. Priests or others who inspire the poor to improve their condition
are killed or "disappeared." Los pobres (the poor) eke out a living
farming marginal land--often on steep hillsides, leading to terrible erosion
problems. Many work long hours in corporate manufacturing or assembly
plants for meager pay with marginal or horrendous working conditions, thereby
displacing US workers from their jobs here while driving up the Dow-Jones
with cost reductions and record profits.
When
governments arise that actually promote the interests of a majority of
their people, they are quickly eliminated. Two very popular administrations
governed Guatemala from 1944 to 1954, and that time is still remembered
there as the "Ten Years of Spring." Springtime ended abruptly with
a CIA-orchestrated military coup in 1954. Another CIA-backed coup
eliminated elected President
Allende from Chile in 1973, installing the infamous General
Pinochet who is only now being held for some of his crimes against humanity.
The brutal Samoza regime in Nicaragua was replaced in the late 1970s by
the popular Sandinista government, which greatly improved health care and
education--until it was completely undermined by a relentless Reagan adminstration
through proxy attacks carried out
by "freedom fighters" financed by trade in cocaine and
by illegal arms sales.
Why
do we do such things, or look the other way when our henchmen do them?
We want a "stable" world with a "favorable climate" for corporate investment.
Father William Bichsel, who went to prison for participation in the 1997
SOA protest, said Latin American terrorism "is perpetuated in order to
assure cheap labor to the corporations operating in those countries."
In addition
to rightly condemning the killers who disgrace us with their SOA credentials,
we must also question our own responsibility in the matter. Just
where do those inexpensive tennis shoes at K-Mart come from, and
under what conditions are they made? What kinds of investments do
our mutual funds make? The world is interconnected; morality requires
us to consider the consequences of our actions.
The
movie "Romero" dramatizes events surrounding the 1980 murder of the Salvadoran
archbishop; the 70s film "Missing" (with Jack Lemmon) retains its power
as a riveting study of an American family caught up in the 1973 Chilean
coup.
The
history of the "School of the Americas" is too sordid to justify an attempt
at "reform." It should be closed--the sooner the better. Tell
your representatives; just a few more voices, and the votes in Congress
will be there.
School
of the America's Watch has abundant information, including press releases,
reports, and newspaper articles about the SOA, internet links, and extensive
lists of SOA graduates organized by country, and what crimes they are implicated
in.
The report
of the Guatemalan Commission
for Historical Clarification is very sobering indeed.
Witness
for Peace "is a politically independent, grassroots organization. We
are people committed to nonviolence and led by faith and conscience. Our
mission is to support peace, justice and sustainable economies in the Americas
by changing US policies and corporate practices which contribute to poverty
and oppression in Latin America and the Caribbean."