http://truth-out.org/news/item/9685-the-school-of-the-americas-the-cia-and-the-us-condoned-cancer-of-torture-continues-to-spread-in-latin-america-including-mexico

*The School of the Americas, the CIA and the US-Condoned Cancer of
Torture Continue to Spread in Latin America, Including Mexico*

*
*Sunday, 10 June 2012 07:46
By Mark Karlin, Truthout | Report

This is the seventh article in Truthout's series looking at US
immigration and Mexican border policies through a social justice lens.
Mark Karlin, editor of BuzzFlash at Truthout, visited the border
region recently to file these reports.

Jennifer Harbury Married an Armed Populist Leader, Who Was Tortured
and Executed in Guatemala With CIA Involvement

By academic pedigree and personal background, Jennifer Harbury should
be among the ruling elite in the US. She is a graduate of Cornell and
Harvard Law School, in fact receiving her law degree from Harvard just
a few years before Barack Obama. Instead of following the path of most
of her classmates to money and power, she became a legal aid attorney
in Texas.

As part of her interest in human rights, she traveled to Guatemala in
the early '90s to write a book, "Bridge to Courage: Life Stories of
Guatemalan Compañeros & Compañeras." It was at that time she met, fell
in love with and married Everardo (Efraín Bámaca Velásquez), who was a
commandante in the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity Front. He
was fighting against the US-backed military and government, which was
committing genocide against the indigenous population and the poor
(ending in more than 200,000 dead - and countless more tortured, but
released).

In 1992, Everardo was captured by the Guatemalan military. Harbury
demanded to know the whereabouts of her husband and held a hunger
strike in front of the Clinton White House, which was covered by the
media and made into a national story by "60 Minutes." Harbury's
request was simple: she wanted the State Department or CIA to tell her
what had happened to her husband. But both agencies didn't acknowledge
they knew of his whereabouts.
In an interview with Truthout, Harbury recounted:

After a year of trying to find out what had really happened to him, a
young prisoner escaped from the army torture program and reported that
Everardo was alive and being severely tortured. After my third hunger
strike to save his life, in March 1995, then New Jersey Senator
Toricelli disclosed that official US documents indicated that he had
been killed by Guatemalan officers on the CIA payroll.

After receiving many files at last through the FOIA [Freedom of
Information Act], it became clear that the State Department and the
CIA had known where Everardo was and that he was in the hands of our
own CIA liaisons or assets, since the week of his capture. They also
knew approximately 300 other secret prisoners of war were suffering
the same fate. The files show that all these prisoners were tortured
to death, thrown down wells, out of helicopters, etc., yet the truth
was only revealed to us in 1995. By then all were dead. We could have
saved them.

Harbury's Husband Was Kept in a Body Cast to Make His Torture Easier

In fact, Everardo, Harbury discovered, was kept in a body cast to keep
him constrained while he was tortured for more than two years before
being executed, all the time with the full knowledge and likely
operational involvement of the CIA.

And then there is, of course, the legacy of the infamous School of the
Americas (now renamed the euphemistic Western Hemisphere Institute for
Security Cooperation: WHINSEC). It has been accused of teaching
torture, which was confirmed in a US government admission during the
Clinton administration. Although now, under its new WHINSEC name, it
claims to no longer offer such instruction.

Of the School of the Americas, Harbury told BuzzFlash in a 2005 interview:

Very simply, the School of the Americas is a US military institution
that has given training and education to high-level military officials
from across Latin America for 40 years now. The students who they have
trained and educated, in huge numbers, turned out to have been the
worst human rights violators in the Western Hemisphere, bar none.
We're talking about high-level people under Pinochet. We're talking
about eight to twelve of my husband's torturers. We're talking about
people involved in massacre upon massacre within El Salvador,
including people that were highly implicated in the murder of
Monsignor Romero and the Maryknoll church women, etc.
The Current President of Guatemala Was Trained at the School of the Americas

The current president of Guatemala, Otto Fernando Pérez Molina, was
trained at the School of the Americas and is accused of helping to
oversee the Guatemalan military genocide and torture. Pérez was head
of the Guatemalan military intelligence at the time of Everardo's
capture, and Harbury has sought to have him charged with human rights'
violations. There is also the allegation that Pérez participated in
1998 in the planning of the assassination of a Guatemalan bishop, who
campaigned for human rights accountability.

Harbury points out that US agents are often reported, by survivors, of
being in the torture chambers, outed by their American accents in
Spanish or by their speaking in English. This was the case of Sister
Dianna Ortiz, who was abducted in Guatemala in 1989 for speaking out
on behalf of the poor. She was gang raped, forced to kill another
prisoner with a knife, used as a human ash tray and was the subject of
further barbaric acts of torture. Ortiz also recalls an American
serving as a consultant while she was being tortured.

Torture, Killing and Disappearance in the Southern Cone Countries in the
'80s

During the period of military dictatorships in the Southern Cone
nations of South America, the US - particularly under Reagan -
supported regimes such as Argentina and Chile, which had the two
highest numbers of disappeared individuals, tortured dissenters and
those killed. More than 30,000 were disappeared in Argentina by the
military, tortured and presumed killed (some of them dropped alive -
while drugged - from planes and helicopters into the Rio De La Plata
between Argentina and Uruguay, bound with weights on their legs).

In Chile where a minimum of 3,000 disappeared (los desaparecidos), the
"National Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture Report," in
2004, confirmed a minimum of 35,000 tortured in Chile after the
Allende overthrow, which some critics of the commission argue is a
low-ball estimate.

During the period of the US-backed Operation Condor, figures
conforming to the UN definition of torture put the number as high as
300,000 or more tortured in the Southern Cone nations overall, under
the brutal military regimes of Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay,
among other nations that carried out gestapo-like torture and
elimination of persons deemed a threat to the state.

In a recent commentary in Truthout, Noam Chomsky wrote:

Thus in the "Cambridge History of the Cold War," John Coatsworth
recalls that from 1960 to "the Soviet collapse in 1990, the numbers of
political prisoners, torture victims and executions of nonviolent
political dissenters in Latin America vastly exceeded those in the
Soviet Union and its East European satellites."... These crimes,
substantially traceable to U.S. intervention, didn't inspire a
human-rights crusade [from the US government].

How Does This Background on US-Backed Torture and Murder in Latin
America Fit in With Mexico?

Perhaps, part of understanding torture going on now in Mexico is what
Sister Ortiz wrote about her horrific ordeal in Guatemala: "So often
it is assumed that torture is conducted for the purpose of gaining
information. It is much more often intended to threaten populations
into silence and submission. What I was to endure was a message, a
warning to others - not to oppose, to remain silent and to yield to
power without question."

Only in Mexico, the issue is rather more complex because torture is
used by the cartels, the police, the military and death squads. That
is not wild speculation. The US State Department confirmed it in its
2011 "Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor: Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices for 2011" for Mexico:
Security forces reportedly engaged in unlawful killings, forced
disappearances and instances of physical abuse and torture.

The following problems also were reported during the year by the
country's National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) and other sources:
kidnappings; physical abuse; poor, overcrowded prison conditions;
arbitrary arrest and detention; corruption and lack of transparency
that engendered impunity within the judicial system; and confessions
coerced through torture. Societal problems included: killings of
women; domestic violence; threats and violence against journalists and
social media users, leading to self-censorship in some cases;
trafficking in persons; social and economic discrimination against
some members of the indigenous population; and child labor.

Despite some arrests for corruption, widespread impunity for human
rights abuses by officials remained a problem in both civilian and
military jurisdictions....
There were multiple reports of forced disappearances by the army, navy
and police....

SEDENA [which oversees the Army and the Air Force] was the government
entity with the greatest number of human rights complaints (1,695)
filed against it during the year.
In Mexico, killings, torture and disappearances are not fully
reflected in statistics provided by the government for a variety of
reasons, including a poor reporting system; but, moreover, the lack of
trust many Mexican citizens have in the police and the military, which
are often seen as equally threatening - particularly to the poor, the
indigenous population, Central Americans passing through Mexico and
the so-called "undesirable" class.

Not detailed in the State Department report are daily examples of the
common use of torture by the police to coerce false confessions,
obtain extra money for stopping the torture, being paid off to arrest
and torture someone by a person with a vendetta, torturing someone at
the behest of a drug lord who pays for the service etc.

Occasionally an American Gets Caught in the Torture Trap in Mexico

Occasionally, an American gets caught in the torture trap. The El Paso
Times just recently reported:

El Pasoan Kevin Huckabee, whose son Shohn Huckabee, was tortured by
Mexican authorities after his arrest in 2009 in Juárez on suspicion of
drug-trafficking, said the [State Department] report reinforced some
of his suspicions about why no U.S. or Mexican official has addressed
his son's torture complaint.
"I am concerned that the State Department is capable of reporting on
the issues of government involvement, yet continue pursuing a
relationship with the security forces that are known to be involved in
human rights abuses of the highest order," Huckabee said. "I do not
believe that the economic value in Mexico to the United States is
worth looking past the awful array of human rights violations."

But look away, the US government does.

Segments of the Mexican Military, Police and Government Are Involved
With Torture and Killing

What the US State Department doesn't report is that segments of the
Mexican military and police, as well as the government, have a
longstanding, shifting relationship with the drug cartels, sometimes
fighting them, but often working with one or another of the cartels in
exchange for payoffs. This would be difficult for the US to admit due
to domestic political considerations, but the national government, the
CIA and the US military have a longstanding tolerance (despite the
deadly alleged anti-drug war) of tolerating drug corruption in Latin
American governments as long as those in power don't interfere with US
trade relations, military dominance or become too populist.

Land reform, for instance, is a trigger that gets the US State
Department, CIA and many elected officials in DC very unnerved. Land
reform efforts led to the CIA overthrow of a democratically elected
government in Guatemala in 1954, and more recently, to supporting the
Honduran coup against a democratically elected president who supported
modest land reform.

The Mexican Government's War of Social Cleansing

That may be why the US has done little to stop what appears to be
"social cleansing" (limpieza social) carried out by the Mexican
military, police and government-sanctioned death squads at times. A
2010 article in El Universal explained (in translation):

In the early 1990s, the lawyer Miguel Angel García Leyva and other
citizens formed the Sinaloa Front Against Impunity. For 10 years, they
gathered evidence on the activities of "death squads, causing
thousands of kidnappings and killings in the state." These groups were
made up of police or military personnel.

"The participation of these squads is known publicly not only in
Sinaloa, but throughout the country," he says. "They operate dressed
in official uniforms, driving patrol cars and with weapons, badges and
keys just like the forces of the state."...

To confirm this, he cites an investigation conducted between May 2008
and May 2010 along the highways in northwestern Mexico. They produced
video, photographs and written reports on police and military
checkpoints in Nayarit, Sinaloa, Sonora and Baja California. "The
results astounded us, most of the checkpoints are not only points of
extortion, but places to identify and locate people to disappear,
assassinate or commit other acts against them," says Garcia.

The El Universal article argued that much of the killing in Mexico is
not just due to the complicated and shifting alliances in the
so-called war on drugs, but rather also to the "elimination" of
"undesirables" by the government.

Javier Sicilia, whose peace campaign in Mexico was the subject of the
fifth Truthout on the Mexican border installment recently reinforced
the notion that the killing of innocents is being carried out by both
the military and the drug cartels, not to mention the police:

Question: Do you consider the people coming to the US, from Mexico or
from other parts of Latin America, refugees because they are fleeing
this violence?
Javier Sicilia: ...Central American people who have to cross Mexican
territory to come to the US are being disappeared by the army or the
organized crime. Either way, it looks like social cleansing. In every
sense, in every way, this war against drugs is inhuman.

Torture in Mexico Is an Epidemic

Torture pervades Mexican governmental and criminal forces and, for
civilians, the lines between law enforcement and criminals is too
murky to navigate. If harmed, it is most often better just to be
quiet. After all, who wants to be tortured for knowing something he or
she shouldn't know and all the time not knowing if the police officer
or soldier to whom you are reporting torture or threats is working on
behalf of the person who tortured you? Or perhaps it was the military
or police who did the torturing.

As Jennifer Harbury noted in 2005 when BuzzFlash interviewed her,
torture "spirals out of control hugely. And because someone under
torture will say anything to stop the pain, very often completely
innocent bystanders are picked up because they're incorrectly named by
persons who are in excruciating pain. Also, you cannot stop a
government force or army force. Once it starts torturing, that also
spirals out of control."

Such is the case in Mexico.

A CIA Latin America Section Chief Makes His Argument for "Ugly"
Collateral Damage

Given that the CIA and countless US intelligence agencies, not to
mention the Drug Enforcement Agency, are entrenched in Mexico, it
might be appropriate to reflect that our real government/corporate
interest in the nation is as a marketplace and a non-populist pro-US
government.

In a 2007 documentary, "The War on Democracy," by British, leftist,
political commentator John Pilger, he explores the exploitative and
deadly anti-democracy efforts to ensure that Latin America stays in
the hands of the ruling classes and open to American business and the
extraction of natural resources south of our border.

Toward the end of a recounting of the US backing of juntas and keeping
tin horn dictators on a short leash, Pilger interviewed Duane
Claridge, CIA chief for Latin America from 1981 to 1984 - during a
high point of the Central American and Southern Cone nations' reign of
terror and death. In a remarkably pugnacious and blunt series of
responses, Claridge vociferously asserted that he didn't give a hoot
about whether a country was a democracy. All that mattered was whether
or not the Latin American nation was an obstacle to the "national
security interest" of the US, although he didn't define that term.

Here are some excerpts:
Pilger: Is it then okay to overthrow a democratically-elected government?
Claridge: It depends upon what your national security interests are.
Pilger: What right does the CIA and the US government have to do what
you do in other countries?
Claridge: National security. We are going in to protect ourselves. We
will intervene whenever we decide it is in our national interest to
intervene and if you don't like it, lump it. Get used to it world!

It is important to understand that our national interest is perhaps
often perceived by the US government as preserving our economic status
through the guarantee of open markets, cheap labor and natural
resources. To do that, the US condones torture and murder when a
democracy that represents a populist majority - or an attempt to
correct an economic imbalance among classes - gets in the way in Latin
America.

"Sometimes things have to be changed in an ugly way," CIA Latin
American Chief Claridge matter-of-factly asserted, citing the war
crime reign of Pinochet as an example of a man who, Claridge claims,
saved his country. "Chile wouldn't exist today if it weren't for
Pinochet," Claridge asserted with conviction.

A country as scarred as Mexico by torture and barbaric killings from
all directions may take generations to recover. But the healing
process is not yet possible.
The torture, killing and fear hasn't stopped. It's still spiraling out
of control.

For now, with government-protected torture and killing - existing both
separately and intertwined with the narco wars - sections of Mexico
look more like a Hieronymus Bosch painting of hell than a civilized
democracy that we claim to be promoting.

There may be internal cultural and political foundations for torture
and gruesome murders in each country in turmoil south of the border,
but the US is also responsible, since torture is a major export of
this nation to Latin America.

*The next installment of Truthout on the Border will appear on June 17.

With credit to Molly Molloy's Frontera web site for providing
invaluable resources for this installment.

MARK KARLIN
Mark Karlin is the editor of BuzzFlash at Truthout.  He served as
editor and publisher of BuzzFlash for ten years before joining
Truthout in 2010.  BuzzFlash has won four Project
*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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