When John Negroponte was Mullah Omar:
New U.S. ambassador to Iraq once provided an Afghan-style sanctuary for terrorists every bit as nasty as Osama and al
Qaeda
By Dennis Hans
Remember Mullah Omar, leader of the Taliban, the Islamist movement that mis-governed the failed state of Afghanistan
from 1996 to 2001? He and the Taliban played host to Osama bin Laden, providing him and his al Qaeda organization a safe
haven from where they could plot terror attacks and train recruits who came to Afghanistan from every corner of the
globe.
Well, it turns out that Mullah Omar has much in common with — may even have patterned his career after — John
Negroponte, the veteran U.S. diplomat who’s about to be confirmed as our Ambassador to Iraq, where he’ll oversee the
largest embassy and CIA station in the world.
You see, the most important chapter in Negroponte’s career took place in the failed state of Honduras. From 1981 to 1985
he was the most powerful figure in that banana republic, just as Mullah Omar was The Man 15 years later in Afghanistan.
And while Omar welcomed and protected bin Laden and al Qaeda, Negroponte arranged for Honduras to provide sanctuary for
the nastiest terrorist group in the entire Western Hemisphere: the contras.
Yes, the contras. You may remember them as the outfit hailed by President Ronald Reagan as “the moral equivalent of the
Founding Fathers.” But the voluminous reports of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International show that my
characterization, not Reagan’s, is the correct one.
Precise body counts are hard to come by, but the contras may well have killed more defensiveless civilians in the 1980s
than al Qaeda has killed in its decade of terror — albeit one slit throat at a time rather than 3,000 blown up one day
in New York and 2,000 another day in Africa, among other al Qaeda atrocities.
Negroponte was dispatched to Honduras in 1981 to replace U.S. ambassador Jack Binns, who had provoked the wrath of the
Reagan administration. Binns was concerned over escalating torture and killings by Honduran security forces at a time
when U.S. policy was to hush up such crimes.
From the Reaganites’ perspective, Binns just didn’t have the right stuff to supervise what was about to become the
largest U.S. embassy in Central America and the transformation of large chunks of Honduras into a sanctuary and training
facility for cold-blooded killers.
The Reagan team in 1981 had an unstated policy of “regime change” in Nicaragua, although it pretended to Congress and
the media (yep, both were lapdogs then, just like now!) that its actual goal was to stop the alleged flow of Weapons of
Minimal Destruction (small arms and the like) from Nicaragua, overland through Honduras, and on to El Salvador, where
Marxist guerrillas had the audacity to resist a 50-year-old U.S.-backed military dictatorship that, in 1980-81 alone,
had killed 20,000 or so civilians.
But the arms flow was largely illusory (another parallel to the present), particularly by the time Negroponte arrived in
Honduras. The Reaganites’ pretense that the contras’ mission was to interdict the alleged arms flow was a necessary lie
to get a spineless and gullible Congress to fund the project. In fact, the Reaganites were all about regime change, and
their chosen instrument would be led by former officers of the Nicaraguan National Guard — itself a U.S.-trained outfit
that killed 30-40,000 Nicaraguan civilians from 1977-79 in a vain attempt to keep in power the long-time U.S.-backed
dictator Anastasio Somoza.
The new outfit came to be known as “contras” — short for counter-revolutionaries, for the regime the Reaganites wanted
to change was the Marxist-oriented Sandinista government. Whether called Guardsmen or contras, these guys were darn good
at killing nurses and teachers, and absolutely fearless in executing captured and disarmed enemy combatants — executions
that were standard operating procedure. But the Guardia pedigree and cutthroat tactics prevented the contras from
functioning as a true guerrilla force, where you live among the people you’re ostensibly liberating and rely on them for
food, shelter and information. Hence the need for a sanctuary in a neighboring failed state run by corrupt,
authoritarian army officers and an imperious U.S. ambassador, John Negroponte.
Without that sanctuary, the contras wouldn’t have lasted a month. With it, they terrorized for a decade. Relying on the
U.S. for food, intelligence, arms and assassination manuals, they’d maraud through the Nicaraguan countryside for a
spell, then retreat to their safe haven when they needed a break from raping, torturing and killing. Actually, they also
committed such crimes in their Honduran camps, albeit at a more leisurely pace.
Unfortunately, the Nicaraguan government didn’t have the firepower to blow up the contra camps. Probably just as well,
for if the Sandinistas had wiped out the camps, the Reaganites would have destroyed Nicaragua and the U.S. media would
have cheered the destruction. That’s because only the U.S. has the right to attack a state that harbors terrorists
who’ve killed thousands of its citizens.
Negroponte’s pretend job in Honduras was to implement the pretend U.S. policy of democracy promotion. (Sound familiar?)
His real job was to prevent any meaningful democracy, and to ensure that key foreign-policy decisions were made not by
the democratic façade — the irrelevant Honduran president and legislature — but by two hard-nosed, hard-line SOBs:
Negroponte and the head of the armed forces, General Gustavo Alvarez.
Thus, in the name of “democracy,” Negroponte and the Reaganites not only supported military rule, they even prevented
the military itself from ruling democratically! Alvarez’s extremist views and repressive policies didn’t reflect a
consensus within the army. Many officers believed Alvarez had prostituted the nation, sold it body-and-soul to Uncle
Sam. And there were rumblings over the escalating torture and killings perpetrated by a CIA-backed army unit, Battalion
316.
So in 1984, right under Negroponte’s nose, a group of officers overthrew Alvarez! This was treated in the U.S. as a
“change of government,” and rightly so. But democracies don’t “change government” when army officers oust their boss,
because in a democracy the army chief is not “the government.” If Negroponte and the Reaganites had believed their own
rhetoric about Honduran democracy, Alvarez’s ouster would not have been a big deal, because Honduras still had the same
president and legislature. But it was a big deal. Really big.
Negroponte and the CIA swung into action, confident they could marginalize the reformist army officers intent on
reducing repression and re-claiming Honduran sovereignty. Using such time-honored democracy-enhancing and
sovereignty-respecting tactics as bribery and arm-twisting, the U.S. team averted the crisis, cutting out the reformists
and ensuring a smooth transfer of real power from Alvarez to a clique of corrupt senior officers who had long been on
the CIA dole, according to a New York Times report by James LeMoyne.
Negroponte and the Reaganites breathed a sigh of relief: Honduras would continue its role as hospitable host to the
contra terrorists. The rape, torture and murder of Nicaraguans could continue.
My guess is that when Negroponte long ago decided to pursue a career in diplomacy, he didn’t anticipate an assignment
where he would be required to subvert an impoverished country’s institutions to ensure rule by a corrupt, brutal
military that would rent out its country to U.S.-trained terrorists. But the assignment came, and Negroponte carried it
out. He’s obviously very bright and capable, but also amoral if not immoral.
What will his real duties be in Iraq? Will he be promoting a transition to genuine Iraqi sovereignty and democracy, or
merely the appearance? He’ll be supervising a huge staff of diplomats and intelligence officers. Will they respect
Iraqis, or will they engage in massive bribery and other dirty tricks to manipulate and subvert Iraqi institutions and
individuals? Is the real goal to purchase influence over so wide a range of Iraqis that even a freely elected government
in 2005 will end up serving U.S. strategic and economic interests at the expense of Iraq’s own legitimate interests?
Negroponte is capable of promoting either real or fake democracy, and history shows that if asked to do the latter he’ll
nevertheless tell Congress and the media he’s doing the former. And that leads to our closing parallel: The current U.S.
president, just like the one we had when Negroponte was in Honduras, has a great appreciation for underlings who make
false or misleading statements to keep the U.S. Congress and citizenry in the dark. Iraq is not the only nation in need
of a transparent and genuine democracy.
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© 2004 by Dennis Hans
Bio: Dennis Hans is a freelance writer who has taught courses in mass communications and American foreign policy at the
University of South Florida-St. Petersburg. Prior to the Iraq war he wrote “Lying Us Into War: Exposing Bush and His
‘Techniques of Deceit’” ( http://www.democraticunderground.com/articles/03/02/12_lying.html) and “The Disinformation Age” ( http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0303/S00011.htm). He can be reached at HANS_D@popmail.firn.edu