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Kissinger and Argentina: a case study in US support for state
terror
By Bill Vann
31 December 2003
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Only days before the US government and media launched their
propaganda campaign over the capture of Saddam Hussein, the US
State Department was obliged to release a set of 27-year-old,
previously classified documents. These documents provide a revealing
glimpse into the real attitude of successive US governments toward
dictatorships and terror.
The documents concern a closed-door meeting in October, 1976
between then-US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and the foreign
minister of the Argentine military dictatorship, Admiral Cesar
Augusto Guzzetti. The documents were brought to light December
4 by the National Security Archive [http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB104/index.htm],
a non-governmental research institute that specializes in obtaining
secret US government documents under the Freedom of Information
Act and making them available to the public.
The principal document is a memorandum of conversationreferred
to in State Department parlance as a menconthat
recorded the hitherto secret discussions held between Kissinger
and Guzzetti at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, where
the US secretary of state was participating in a United Nations
debate on the Middle East.
Guzzetti gave Kissinger a progress report on the dirty
war that the Argentine military regime was carrying out
against the countrys workers, students and intellectuals:
Our struggle has had very good results during the last
four months, he said. The terrorist organizations
have been dismantled. If this direction continues, by the end
of the year the danger will have been set aside.
In point of fact, the savage repression unleashed by the dictatorship
was only then reaching its apogee. The mass killings, disappearances
and torture would continue unabated for several more years, claiming
the lives of some 30,000 Argentines.
The US government was well aware of both the horrors being
perpetrated upon the Argentine people and the real nature of terrorism
in that country. An internal State Department report assessing
the first six months of the Argentine dictatorship was issued
just a week before the Kissinger-Guzzetti meeting. It included
the following:
The most spectacular aspect of the counterterrorist drive
has been the murderous exploits of the extra-legal, right-wing
goon squads. Operating with impunity and usually posing as security
officials, the rightwingers are responsible for abducting and/or
murdering hundreds of leftist security risks, including
political exiles from neighboring countries, foreign nationals,
politicians, students, journalists and priests. A few actual terrorists
probably have fallen prey to rightist vengeance, but the great
majority of the victims have not been guerrillas...There is no
doubt that most, if not all, of the right-wing terrorists are
police or military personnel who act with the knowledge and/or
direction of high-level security and administration officials.
Other reports that were passed on to Kissinger included testimony
of American citizens rounded up by the junta on political charges
and subjected to hideous torture. One such document cites the
case of Gwenda Loken Lopez, an American citizen who was dragged
off a bus by security forces in April 1976 after leaving leaflets
calling for the release of political prisoners on a park bench.
Once back in the US, she recounted her treatment at the hands
of her captors from the SIDE, the juntas secret police:
I was blindfolded, my hands were tied and I was put up
against the wall. An electric device touched my hands. Next I
was on the floor...I was being hit...My clothes were being ripped
off. Then I think I was on a table held down by four or five guys.
They started using the picana [an electric prod]. Then they tied
me down and threw water on me... They questioned me but it was
more just Give it to her. There. There. There. In
[the] genital area... They said theyd fix me so I couldnt
have children.
She testified that another girl held in the same facility was
hung upside down, naked and shocked repeatedly with the electric
prod. The torturers burned her body with cigarettes and pulled
out her pubic hairs. The girl was not a member of a political
organization, but happened to be found in a house that the police
raided.
Loken Lopezs case was unusual only from two standpoints:
she was a US citizen and she survived. During this same period,
the junta was rounding up thousands and torturing them in clandestine
detention centers before drugging them and dropping them into
the sea from military aircraft.
Kissinger gave an explicit green light for the
military regime to continue its reign of terror. The State Department
memcon records him telling the Argentine admiral:
Look, our basic attitude is that we would like you to
succeed. I have an old-fashioned view that friends ought to be
supported. What is not understood in the United States is that
you have a civil war. We read about human rights problems but
not the context. The quicker you succeed the better... The human
rights problem is a growing one. Your Ambassador can apprise you.
We want a stable situation. We wont cause you unnecessary
difficulties. If you can finish before Congress gets back, the
better. Whatever freedoms you could restore would help.
As Kissinger then made clear, one of the key concerns of the
administration was that Congress would enact sanctions against
Argentina for the dictatorships crimes against humanity,
thereby closing the door on extending fresh US financial credits
to the regime.
He urged that the junta move ahead quickly with a request for
loans from the US Export-Import Bank, assuring the Argentine officer
that, We would like your economic program to succeed and
will do our best to help you.
The loans indeed flowed, despite limited sanctions imposed
by the Carter administration and then rescinded under Ronald Reagan.
The end result was a six-fold increase in Argentine foreign debt
during the seven years of dictatorship and the bankrupting of
the country.
Only a day before the meeting at the Waldorf, Guzzetti had
received the same message from Under Secretary
of State Charles Robinson in Washington. A memo recording that
conversation has Robinson stating the following:
Argentina is now facing a kind of subversive civil war.
During their initial period the situation may seem to call for
measures that are not acceptable in the long term... it is possible
to understand the requirement to be tough at first but it is important
to move toward a more moderate posture which we would hope would
be permanent...The problem is that the United States is an idealistic
and moral country and its citizens have great difficulty in comprehending
the kinds of problems faced by Argentina today.
Robinson then gave what amounted to an explicit statement of
support for Argentinas right-wing death squads. The memo
continues:
Robinson remarked that in 1850, when the state of California
was struggling to become established, the official forces of law
and order were inadequate. Consequently, the people organized
vigilante groups, but the US has forgotten this bit of history
and forgets that comparable conditions exist elsewhere today.
Robinsons attitude toward the death squads echoed that
of Guzzetti himself, who put it somewhat more chillingly in a
public statement just two months before his trip to the US. My
conception of subversion refers to terrorist organizations of
the left, said the Argentine foreign minister. The
subversion and terrorism of the right is not the same thing. When
the social body of the country is contaminated by a disease which
devours its innards, it forms antibodies. These antibodies cannot
be considered in the same way as the microbes.
Another State Department official present for the meeting with
Robinson offered the helpful suggestion that in the case of priests
and nuns caught up in the dictatorships repression, [I]t
is essential that they not simply disappear,
but rather be arrested and tried.
The implicit message was that the thousands of disappearances
of militant workers, students and others were perfectly acceptable.
Some apologists for Washingtons policies will no doubt
dismiss this irrefutable evidence of US sponsorship of mass murder
and state terror by one of the worlds most brutal dictatorships
as ancient historythe long forgotten actions of a bygone
administration.
Such an alibi wont wash, however, given the remarkable
continuity in personnel between 1976 and the current administration.
Kissinger, it should be recalled, was George W. Bushs first
choice to head the independent panel investigating the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001. He remains a senior adviser within
the US ruling establishment. He was also the political mentor
to Vice President Richard Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld. Both of these leading figures in the current Bush administration
servedat different timesas White House chief of staff
during the period when the US government was promoting the slaughter
in Argentina, Chile and elsewhere in Latin America.
Bushs father was the director of the CIA at the time
of the Kissinger-Guzzetti meetings and presumably had even more
intimate knowledge of the Argentine militarys killing machine.
Aside from the intrinsic significance of a text proving that
Kissinger and the US government explicitly supported the murder
of tens of thousands of Argentine civilians, the documents unearthed
by the National Security Archive shed light on another historical
controversyone that threatens to turn the capture of Saddam
Hussein into a serious crisis for the Bush administration.
In late 1983 and early 1984, Donald Rumsfeld flew twice to
Baghdad, meeting with Saddam Hussein and his foreign minister,
Tariq Aziz, in order to seek closer ties. This was the period
when Iraq was using poison gas in its war against Iran, provoking
international protests. In March 1984, Washington publicly condemned
the use of chemical weapons, while maintaining its strategic support
for the Saddam Hussein regime and blaming Iran for the conflict.
When Rumsfeld returned to Baghdad that month, he was warned
in State Department briefing notes that bilateral relations
were sharply set back by our...condemnation of Iraq for CW use.
He was urged nonetheless to pursue US financial interests by pushing
a contract for Westinghouse and trying to convince the Iraqi regime
to accept US loansfrom the Export-Import Bankto build
a new oil pipeline.
Detailed notes of Rumsfelds first meetings with Saddam
Hussein in December 1983 have been released, indicating that no
mention was made of Iraqi chemical weapons attacks. As yet, the
type of memo of conversation that was released on
the Kissinger-Guzzetti meeting has yet to surface in regard to
Rumsfelds second round of talks with the Iraqi leadership,
after Washingtons formal condemnation of Iraqi gas warfare.
It is undoubtedly the case, however, that Rumsfeld in Iraq
employed a similar modus operandi to that of Kissinger in relation
to the Argentine dictatorship. That is, he told the Iraqi regime
that US condemnations were strictly for public consumption and
that Baghdad could count on Washingtons support.
Both in Argentina and in Iraq, Washingtons feigned concerns
about human rights, dictatorship and terror masked strategic interests
and mercenary ends. In both countries, US policy has produced
tragedy for masses of working people.
As discussions continue over a possible trial of Saddam Hussein
for crimes against humanity, it is apparent that there is more
than enough evidence to place alongside him in the dock prominent
former and current US officials, including Henry Kissinger, Donald
Rumsfeld, Richard Cheney and both the senior George Bush and his
son, the current president.
See Also:
US media, government scramble to obscure
criminal dealings with Hussein
[24 December 2003]
Bush picks Kissinger
to head official probe: new stage in the September 11 coverup
[28 November 2002]
US documents implicate
Kissinger in Argentine atrocities
[6 September 2002]
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