-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Kissinger - Big-Time Embarrassment
Date: Mon, 22 Mar 1999 12:42:42 GMT
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I've been asleep on the job !!  This piece is almost 3 weeks old.


=======================

URL:
http://www.pacificnews.org/jinn/stories/5.05/990301-kissinger.html

CIVIL CONFLICTS

Big-Time Embarrassment-- Newly Opened Files Show Kissinger Privately
Promised Pinochet Support While Publicly Decrying Human Rights Abuses

By Lucy Komisar

Date: 03-01-99

Although he is usually considered to have played a major role in the
coup which brought General Augusto Pinochet to power in Chile, former
U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger always kept his distance from
Pinochet in public. A newly declassified memo about the only meeting
between the two suggests that if secret files on Chile are opened --
as they will be if Pinochet is tried in Spain -- they will be
extremely embarrassing to Kissinger. PNS correspondent Lucy Komisar, a
New York journalist, is working on a book about U.S. foreign policy
and human rights in several countries, including Chile, in the 1970s
and 1980s.

The secret U.S. files on Chile, which the Clinton administration
promises to open to the Spanish prosecutor of Augusto Pinochet, will
prove a major embarrassment for Henry Kissinger.

The files show Kissinger, then U.S. Secretary of State, seeking to
persuade Pinochet that the U.S. government did not consider his
behavior -- including mass arrests of political prisoners -- a major
problem.

Although Kissinger is the American most tied to the U.S.-assisted coup
overthrowing the elected government of Salvador Allende which put
Pinochet in power in 1973, the two only met once after those events. A
newly declassified memorandum about that meeting details how Kissinger
praised Pinochet and assured him that the U.S. would not punish him
for violating human rights.

The meeting took place on June 8, 1976, during a gathering of the
Organization of American States (OAS). Also present were Assistant
Secretary for Inter-American Affairs William Rogers, Chilean Foreign
Minister Patricio Carvajal and Ambassador to the U.S. Manuel Trucco.
(I have interviewed Rogers, Carvajal and Trucco about this meeting,
but not Kissinger, who has refused requests.)

Kissinger, dogged by charges he had promoted the military coup,
maintained a cool distance from Pinochet in public. But at this
confidential meeting, he promised warm support.

"In the United States, as you know, we are sympathetic with what you
are trying to do here," Kissinger said, according to the memorandum.
"I think that the previous government was headed toward Communism. We
wish your government well."

He dismissed American human rights campaigns against Chile's
government as "domestic problems."

The OAS Human Rights Commission had reported that mass arrests,
torture, and disappearances continued in Chile, and the U.S. media
were pressing Kissinger for a statement. Kissinger assured Pinochet
that his remarks should not be seen as a criticism of Chile. "I will
treat human rights in general terms and human rights in a world
context," he told the general.

Kissinger said his statements were in fact calibrated to avoid damage
to Chile. "I can do no less without producing a reaction in the U.S.
which would lead to legislative restrictions. The speech is not aimed
at Chile."

And he emphasized that he himself did not credit the charges against
Pinochet's regime. "My evaluation is that you are a victim of all
left-wing groups around the world, and that your greatest sin was that
you overthrew a government which was going Communist."

Kissinger promised to work against sanctions, in particular to defeat
the "Kennedy amendment," banning arms aid to governments that were
gross human rights violators. "I don't know if you listen in on my
phone," he joked, "but if you do, you have just heard me issue
instructions to Washington to make an all-out effort to do just that
-- if we defeat it, we will deliver the F-5E's (fighter planes) as we
agreed to do. We held up for a while in order to avoid providing
additional ammunition to our enemies."

In case Pinochet had any lingering doubts, Kissinger said, "We
welcomed the overthrow of the Communist-inclined government here." He
told him he had encouraged the OAS to meet in Santiago to give Chile
prestige.

Pinochet complained that Orlando Letelier, the country's former
foreign minister -- assassinated by Chilean agents a few months later
in Washington, DC -- had access to Congress. He said that Christian
Democrats -- the centrist party in Chile -- had a strong voice in
Washington. Kissinger assured him, "I have not seen a Christian
Democrat for years."

That must have pleased Pinochet, since Europeans had loudly condemned
his secret police attack against exiled Chilean Christian Democrat
congressman Bernardo Leighton in Rome.

True to his word, Kissinger's address to the assembly that afternoon
noted the reports of human rights abuses in Chile, but did not condemn
the government. He said human rights concerns had "impaired the
relationship with Chile," but expressed the hope that "obstacles
raised by conditions alleged in the report will soon be removed."

In an interview, Secretary Rogers said he thought those concerned
about Chile had "pushed Henry's envelope to the outer edge in terms of
emphasizing human rights." Foreign Minister Carvajal thought
Kissinger's speech was "balanced," and was pleased that it referred to
the exaggerations of the Chilean problem. Carvajal added that he took
Kissinger's private remarks to Pinochet to mean that he didn't really
believe his own public pronouncements.

* * *
_________________________________________________________________

Pacific News Service, 660 Market Street, Room 210, San Francisco, CA
94104, tel: (415) 438-4755.
Jinn Magazine: <http://www.pacificnews.org/jinn/>
Email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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