A Thoroughly Un-American Institution
A Thoroughly Un-American Institution
Today, June 24, 2009, Congress will
vote on an amendment to the Defense Authorization Act which
would require the School of the Americas/WHINSEC to release
to the public the names, ranks, countries of origin, courses
taken and dates of attendance of all the students and
instructors at the institute.
The School of the America’s, renamed WHINSEC, is an organization founded with the explicit purpose of teaching its students the science of torture and interrogation techniques. Its records have been concealed, and for the most part its dealings shrouded in mystery.
Opened in 1946 at Fort
Gulick in the former U.S. Panama Canal Zone, the School of
the Americas (SOA) has, over its lifetime, trained more than
64,000 Latin American and Caribbean members of the uniformed
armed forces in an extensive program of military operations.
Its graduates have included ten different Latin American
military officers who would later become some of the most
notorious strongmen and dictators in the hemisphere, as well
as hundreds of senior and mid-level officers who would later
be revealed as gross human rights abusers, serial torturers,
drug traffickers and confederates of organized crime.
Questionable practices
Torture has been
considered a logical and necessary component in the
expansive arsenal of dirty practices which comprise the
field of special operations (commando tactics, sophisticated
counterinsurgency techniques, military intelligence, covert
intelligence activities, psychological warfare,
psychological operations or “PSYOPS”, and other covert
procedures), all initially honed by the British in Malaya
and by the U.S. in the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos, and more
recently, in Iraq and Afghanistan. Likewise, the 1963 CIA
‘KUBARK’ interrogation and torture documents and the
early 1980s torture manuals authored by the U.S. Army for
use at the SOA both document torture practices which have
been central to the school’s curricula. These were being
taught to thousands of officers from eighteen Latin American
countries for several decades. These materials specifically
instructed their students on how to coerce prisoners into
being cooperative through the use of fear, extortion,
kidnapping, the administration of truth serums, beatings,
rape, false imprisonment, torture of children in front of
their parents and vice versa, beheadings, live burials,
public execution and acts of massacre.
A 1,169 page U.S. Army “Foreign Intelligence Training Program” called “PROJECT X” was designed “to develop an exportable foreign intelligence training package” to provide counterinsurgency techniques learned in Vietnam to Latin American countries. Much of the material for “X” came from Army Field Manual FM 30-18, a classified intelligence operations manual. After being translated from English to Spanish, it was distributed to the military establishments of Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Peru. Its contents were also transmitted in one form or another to SOA students from Bolivia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Examining the
school’s record
The U.S. Army School of the
Americas used training materials that condoned “executions
of guerrillas, extortion, physical abuse, coercion, and
false imprisonment,” asserted an Intelligence Oversight
Board (IOB) Report issued June 28, 1996, in Washington, DC.
The IOB, a four-person, independent board created by
President Clinton, was assigned the task of investigating
excesses and abuses by the U.S. intelligence community.
In Latin America, the SOA was popularly dubbed the “School of Assassins” after a 1993 United Nations Truth Commission revealed there were 19 SOA graduates among the 26 Salvadoran officers implicated in the 1989 “execution style” massacre of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper, and her daughter in San Salvador. The U.N. Commission went on to report that three-quarters of the Salvadoran officers known to be responsible for seven other massacres during El Salvador’s bloody civil war were trained by the SOA. Yet, “The school has never taught torture and never will,” the SOA commandant at the time, Col. Glenn R. Weidner, told a November 1998 news conference. Meanwhile, Weidner referred to the at least 500 SOA graduates found to be directly implicated in the worst documented human rights abuses recorded throughout Latin America as “a few bad apples.”
Further examination
While that was the official
line, others who were directly involved with the accused
officers, revealed a quite different story. “When I was at
the school, we routinely had Latin American students who
were known human rights abusers, and it didn’t make any
difference to us,” one former SOA instructor related.
Another, with close personal knowledge of the inner workings
of the school, tells a story that is even more revealing:
“The school was always a front for other special operations, covert operations. They would bring people from the streets into the base and the experts would train us on how to obtain information using torture. We were trained to torture human beings. They had a medical physician, a U.S. medical physician which I remember very well, who was dressed in green fatigues, who would teach the students … [about] the nerve endings of the body. He would show them where to torture, where and where not, where you wouldn’t kill the individual.”
Such training has been provided to Latin American militaries with the assumption that they would use these acquired skills to get the job done — to use repressive tactics to neutralize ideologies found to threaten the status quo throughout the region. In certain instances this meant the direct physical presence of American trainers alongside their Latin American ‘students,’ while the torture was in progress. Circumstantial evidence pointed to accounts given by blindfolded torture survivors who recall hearing men speaking English or broken Spanish with an American accent.
A name change does not transform reality
The
notoriety which the School of the Americas earned came, in
part, as a result of the bloody fruits of its academic
record in Panama from 1946 through 1984. This is when the
terms of the Panama Canal treaty were being implemented and
it was necessary for the facility to relocate to Fort
Benning in Columbus, Georgia. In December 2000, the SOA was
allegedly closed in the wake of flaring negative publicity
resulting from the disclosure of the torture manuals being
used in the SOA curriculum, and massive protests and
demonstrations outside the base’s gates. This was just as
the phalange of the institution’s opponents, which now
included outspoken members of Congress who were on the cusp
of representing a legislative majority ready to dismantle
the SOA.
In a surprise move, the Pentagon submitted a Defense Authorization Bill for the 2001 fiscal year that put forth a name change for the SOA. The facility was then reopened on January 17, 2001 with a new name – “The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation” (WHINSEC). It was housed in the very same building at Fort Benning where the SOA was formerly headquartered. The late Georgia senator, Paul Coverdell, a fervent backer of the institution, told the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer that the Pentagon name change proposal was “cosmetic.” Further evidence of these cosmetic changes were evident in a statement issued on December 12, 2000 by Major Thomas Collins, a U.S. Army spokesman: “The new school is going to continue the same vital functions the School of the Americas did. We see a great need to continue the same military-to-military, country-to-country contact.”
Responding to injustice
As a result of the
controversial role played by the SOA and its sibling,
WHINSEC, five countries – Argentina, Bolivia Costa Rica,
Uruguay, and Venezuela – have decided to completely
withdraw their personnel from future training at WHINSEC.
The sentiments of these nations felt toward the SOA/WHINSEC
were summed up by former Uruguayan Defense Minister, Azuceni
Berrutti, who observed, “we have absolutely no need for
training at this kind of school.” Several more nations,
which have for years sent their military officers to the
SOA/WHINSEC for advanced training, are now actively
considering the termination of their involvement with the
organization. In addition to the growing discontent with the
SOA that has been brewing for years in Latin America, last
year, a vote in the U.S. Congress to cut off funding for
SOA/WHINSEC, lost by just six votes, demonstrating that
support for the controversial institution is also waning in
the U.S.
Regarding torture
President Obama has
come out strongly against torture: “I have said repeatedly
that America doesn’t torture. And I’m going to make sure
that we don’t torture. Those are part and parcel of an
effort to regain America’s moral stature in the world.”
Obama added: “[w]e’ll reject torture - without exception
or equivocation.” It remains to be seen whether the new
president’s commitment will actually halt the practice of
torture by the U.S. military and intelligence operators.
Will this also mean that the U.S. will cease encouraging
others to torture their citizens in order to safeguard and
advance its own national interests? If concrete changes are
the objective, then Washington must start its reforms with
this repeatedly incriminated United States military
institution, the SOA.
Thousands of innocent men, women, and children have been defiled, tortured, massacred, disappeared, and executed at the hands of graduates of this now nefarious institution. The values and principles which the United States is supposed to uphold and represent should not be permitted to be tarnished any longer by the shameful debauchery of this institution. Moreover, it is morally - as well as legally - unacceptable to argue that the national security of this country can either be justified or advanced by the repressive and anti-democratic activities which this institution has promoted through much of its history.
Self-determination, land reform, improved living wages, and better and more accessible health care availabilities were the simple, yet essential and popular aspirations of those who opposed the Washington-backed military juntas that held power in Latin America during the 1970’s-1990’s. This was often with the direct, or at least covert, encouragement of U.S. policymakers. During that period – at the height of the Cold War - the local militaries, in partnership with U.S. diplomatic, military and intelligence agencies, routinely painted their socially-minded opponents as subversives and Communists, while depicting their own forces as patriots, despite their use of repressive military and intelligence apparatus that the Pentagon systematically implemented throughout Latin America. Washington’s arrogant doctrine of exceptionalism and its blind faith in the supremacy of U.S. interests have reigned in the region for decades. But this is a new era, and hopefully the brutal practices of the past will be laid to rest in the dustbin of history.
Consistent with the Cold War mentality and the simple-minded anti-communist policies of the post-World War II political landscape, the SOA and its successor, WHINSEC, today operate on the premise of George W. Bush’s credo: “If you’re not with us, you’re against us.” But today there is hope for change as a conscious, organic resistance has been prompted by the notion that the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean yearn for self-determination, and better living conditions. Last year, a bill in Congress completely terminating the near-$20 million in annual funding of the SOA/WHINSEC nearly passed, being defeated by just six votes. This year, with a new level of public awareness about the practices of torture that we now know have been sanctioned by U.S. authorities, there is a distinct possibility that this time the bill might pass, inaugurating what could turn out to be a different Latin America.
Click Here for the Original Transcript
of Lou Wolf’s Testimony
This analysis was
prepared by Louis Wolf
June 24th, 2009
Word Count:
1900
ENDS