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http://www.tni.org/detail_page.phtml?act_id=16852

Four dead in Ohio: A rehearsal for Tiannamen Square?
Saul Landau
Progreso Weekly, 26 May 2007

Newly released documents show that US state and federal officials
authorised National Guardsmen to fire with live ammunition at unarmed
students in Ohio in May, 1970, killing four and wounding nine others,
writes Saul Landau.

In May 1970, 19 years before Chinese officials ordered troops to fire on
its students and other citizens demonstrating in favor of democracy at
Tiananmen Square in Beijing, U.S. state and federal officials had
authorized National Guardsmen to fire with live ammunition at unarmed
students -- in Ohio.

The massacre occurred on May 4. Thirty-seven years later, Alan Canfora
listened to the recording of the commander’s words. “Right here. Get set.
Point. Fire.” The tape then recorded 13 seconds of uninterrupted gunfire.

Four students lay dead. Nine others, wounded, went to the hospital.
Ironically, some of those shot were either observing or strolling nearby.
Collateral damage?

Canfora, 21-years-old, took a bullet in the wrist. Because the tape he
acquired reveals a command structure in the shooting, he has demanded a
new investigation.

“There has been a 37-year cover-up at Kent State. The commanding officers
have long denied there was a verbal command to fire. They put the blame on
the triggermen,” said Canfora. “They stopped, turned, raised the weapons,
began to shoot and continued to shoot for 13 seconds,” he said. “It was
like a firing squad.” (Guardian, May 2, 2007)

On the audio tape, the cold, hard words emerge. The shooters received
direct orders to kill students and they carried out their orders, contrary
to “the official cover story that they were responding in panic to a
random shot fired at them, or that they were defending themselves from
some kind of student attack.” (Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman, “The
Lethal Media Silence on Kent State's Smoking Guns,” May 7, 2007,
CommonDreams.org)

Observers noted no armed students; no shots were fired at Guardsmen. The
uniformed soldiers positioned themselves some 300 yards from the
protesters, making the claim of “the threat of serious attack” by unarmed
students totally preposterous.

The Guard claimed at the time that one reservist panicked. Others then
lost their discipline and fired multiple rounds. The Guard denied that a
commander had issued orders to fire. The tape shows the Guard lied.

Ohio subsequently indicted eight guardsmen; none were prosecuted. The
families of the dead and wounded filed civil suits against Ohio, its
governor and the National Guard -- all settled out of court.

President Nixon’s illegal invasion of Cambodia had provoked a new round of
demonstrations at Kent State and other campuses. The event has acquired
“historical memory.” One famous photo shows a distressed young woman, near
the corpse of a student. She is crying in rage and anguish -- or for help.
Neil Young wrote his song “Ohio” about the incident.



Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.



But until the revelation of the “fire” order on the tape, few dared think
of Kent State as a U.S. dress rehearsal for the Chinese government to copy
later on a larger scale. Ironically, even with the tape as evidence of
government ordered killing, human rights groups that routinely denounce
China and Cuba, for examples, have remained silent about official U.S.
complicity in the Kent State horrors.

Yale University archives acquired the tape as part of a collection of
materials gleaned from the civil suit. That’s where Canfora rediscovered
the recording made by Terry Strubbe, a Kent State student who placed his
tape recorder on the window sill of his room, located near the fatal
events. He had delivered a copy of the tape to the FBI.

Documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act show that then
Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes worked with the FBI to intimidate anti-war
demonstrators. Such tactics were, and are, common for the Bureau,
especially to use against “subversives.” In 1970, students played the lead
role in opposing the Vietnam War and the FBI saw them as a criminal enemy
when they exercised First Amendment rights.

University life in the 1960s and early 1970s went beyond going to class,
smoking pot and dropping acid. Students and professors staged Vietnam War
teach-ins, strikes and walkouts. For hundreds of thousands of students
campus life also consisted of organizing the next rally, including ones
that resulted in violence.

Students, however, did not initiate all the violence. FBI records stolen
in 1971 from the FBI Field Office in Media, Pennsylvania, showed that an
FBI “informant,” acting as agent provocateur, had burned down a dormitory
at the University of Alabama; another had placed explosives at a bridge in
Seattle; a third tried to blow up a post office. (Taken from a censored
segment of PBS’ “The Great American Dream Machine” 1971, produced by Saul
Landau and Paul Jacobs)

In line with such provocative acts, on May 2, 1970, just before the big
demonstration, someone torched the ROTC building at Kent Sate. (A “biker”
supposedly doused the building with gasoline).

Was this an FBI agent’s act, or was it, like the destruction of the math
building at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and the burning of the
Bank of America in Santa Barbara, the act of students irate about Nixon’s
illegal war? In any case, the violence provided a pretext for Rhodes to
call in the Guard.

His act coincided with Vice President Spiro Agnew labeling student
protestors “Nazi brownshirts.” The self-righteous Agnew, who later
resigned before getting indicted for stealing, advised university
presidents and police to treat the students as if they were the equivalent
of Hitlerian goons.

Governor James Rhodes re-phrased Agnew’s hyperbole and on May 3, 1970, one
day before the Guardsmen fired the fatal shots, called anti-war students
“the worst type of people that we harbor in America…worse than the
brownshirts and the communist element and also the nightriders and the
vigilantes.” He added that “we’re up against the strongest, well-trained,
militant, revolutionary group that has ever assembled in America.”
(Wikipedia)

The staunch Republican Rhodes not only worked closely with the FBI. He
appeared to be controlled by the Bureau. Shortly after Rhodes assumed
office on January 14, 1963, a Cincinnati FBI agent wrote Director J. Edgar
Hoover: “We will have no problem with him [Rhodes] whatsoever. He is
completely controlled by an SAC [Special Agent in Charge] contact, and we
have full assurances that anything we need will be made available
promptly. Our experience proves this assertion.”

“FBI declassified material suggests that the Bureau’s extensive influence
over Governor Rhodes, perhaps due to their knowledge of his ties to the
numbers rackets, may have played a role in the Governor’s hard line law
and order tactics that led to the deaths of four students at Kent State in
1970.” (Bob Fitrakis, The Free Press, May 4, 2007)

After the Guard entered Kent’s campus, some students had shouted insults
at Guardsmen and even hurled a few rocks their way, hardly reasons to have
the Guardsmen load their weapons with live ammunition.

The Kent State scenario switched to Jackson State University in
Mississippi. On May 14, students protesting against the Vietnam War and
sympathizing with the fallen at Kent State heard “rumors that Fayette,
Mississippi, Mayor Charles Evers (brother of slain Civil Rights activist
Medgar Evers) and his wife had been shot and killed. Upon hearing this
rumor, a small group of students rioted.” They set fires “and overturned a
dump truck that had been left on campus overnight.” (The African Registry)

After the fires were extinguished, “police and state troopers marched
toward a campus women’s residence, weapons at the ready. At this point,
the crowd numbered 75 to 100 people. Several students allegedly shouted
‘obscene catcalls’ while others chanted and tossed bricks at the
officers.” The police opened fire on the crowd and the dormitory. Two
died. Twelve others were wounded by gunfire. The FBI estimated that almost
500 rounds struck the building.

U.S. Presidents invoke the word “democracy” as if it somehow both applied
across the board to all of U.S. society and simultaneously excused all
“mistakes.” Kent State, like Jackson State, were examples of officials
shooting citizens who disagreed with policies and exercised first
amendment rights. U.S. and state officials authorized the murder of
unarmed students as if they and not Governor Rhodes and President Nixon
were the “brown shirts.”

What words do Bush, Cheney and Rove use for anti-war activists? In the
early 1970s, Nixon ordered his “plumbers (dirty tricks squad) to raid The
Brookings Institution and Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist’s office to get
documents. Later, he perpetrated a cover-up of the 1972 Watergate break-in
and had to resign.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez’s “firing” of U.S. Attorneys, the lies
perpetrated by Bush and Cheney to justify attacking Iraq, and even the
latest “hookergate” scandal news in which the powerful and pious availed
themselves of sinners needing money, show the criminal mind much alive in
the White House. By starting a dubious process -- phony pretext for war --
it’s a short step to ordering the Guard to shoot citizens. The Los Angeles
police shot rubber bullets at the May Day immigrant rights demonstration!
Wait till next time!


Landau's new book is A BUSH AND BOTOX WORLD. His new film is on DVD: WE
DON'T PLAY GOLF HERE (through [EMAIL PROTECTED],com)
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