September 11th From Chile to Washington: Bush
Follows in Pinochet's Footsteps
By Cyril Mychalejko
ccun.org, September 22, 2008
Torture. Murder. Kidnappings. Secret Prisons. Concentration
Camps. War. Impunity.
This is the legacy of human rights abuses September 11th sadly leaves
us--a legacy first executed by former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet,
and, more recently renewed by an equally culpable President George W.
Bush.
The 35th anniversary of the September 11th, 1973 Washington-backed coup
which saw Pinochet overthrow the democratically elected administration
of Salvador Allende, and the General's subsequent "War on Terrorism"
targeting so-called communists (which included anyone who opposed his
bloody regime), offers a standard to measure President Bush's "War on
Terrorism," the U.S. Commander-in-Chief's legacy of human rights abuses,
as well as how he might one day face justice.
The parallels between the two regime's crimes are frighteningly similar,
though it shouldn't be lost that Pinochet carried out many of his crimes
with financial, intellectual and political support from Washington.
The Washington Post wrote in 2004 that, "The news that serving U.S.
officials have officially endorsed principles once advanced by Augusto
Pinochet brings shame on American democracy." Two years later
Amnesty International echoed The Post's observation when it accused
President Bush of taking pages out of Pinochet's playbook in his
"acceptance of torture and disregard of legal restraints."
Flight of the Condor and the Eagle
"The first September 11 was a day in which everything changed in Latin
America...It was the beginning of a total war justified as a 'war on
terrorism'," wrote
John Dinges,
a former Latin American correspondent for The Washington Post and Time,
in his book The
Condor Years: How Pinochet and His Allies Brought Terrorism to Three
Continents.
Dinges's book unearths the horrors behind Pinochet's primary weapon in
his
"Long War", a secretive security network created with the region's
military dictatorships formed to capture, murder, torture and disappear
perceived "enemies", wherever they may be. What came to be called
"Operation Condor", unleashed an era "when mass arrests, secret
prisons, concentration camps, even the use of extermination methods and
crematoriums are comparable only with the worst practices of the Nazi
era."
While Washington's
aiding and abetting of Pinochet's crimes emerged from a
"deluded belief that the Cold War left Washington no other choice,"
the Bush Administration's similar delusions regarding the "War on
Terror" has allowed it to justify the use of identical criminal and
inhumane methods.
In Iraq, which President Bush
repeatedly has
described as "the central front on the war on terror", even though
the
9/11 Commission concluded that there is
"no evidence connecting Iraq" to Al Qaeda or the September 11th
attacks, the death toll may be upwards of 20o times what Pinochet is
responsible for. In addition, mass arrests of so-called "terror
suspects" in Iraq has led to
overcrowding of prisons with innocent people. According to the
International Committee of the Red Cross, between "70% and 90% of
the persons deprived of their liberty in Iraq have been arrested by
mistake." The Red Cross also alleged that the
torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib was not as
President Bush suggested "the wrongdoing of a few," but rather
policy.
Guantanamo Bay, another prison
where the Bush Administration
sanctioned torture in its "total war," has been described by
Marjorie Cohn, president of the National Lawyers Guild, as
"concentration camp". This might explain why President Bush blocked
UN human rights experts from visiting the prison in 2005, just as
Pinochet's government canceled a similar UN investigation 30 years
ago. And like Pinochet, the CIA under Bush's direction have used
secret prisons, also referred to as
"black sites", which
The Washington Post has described as a "hidden global internment
network [that] is a central element in the CIA's unconventional war on
terrorism." And as for torture, one method both
Bush and Pinochet
legally justified and used is
waterboarding.
Then there is the case
Maher Arar,
a Canadian Citizen who found himself the victim of President Bush's
extraordinary rendition program. Mahar, innocent
of any ties to terrorists, was kidnapped and renditioned to Syria where
he was kept for eight months. He
testified before Congress in October 2007 that he was kept in a
3-foot by 6-foot cell, strip-searched, chained, shackled and was
repeatedly beaten with a shredded electrical cable.
"The physical and mental torture that I experienced during this time
continues to haunt me daily," said Arar, a
recipient of the
The Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award, named after former Chilean
diplomat and outspoken critic of Pinochet Orlando Letelier, and
Institute for Policy Studies development associate Ronni Karpen Moffitt,
who were assassinated by Pinochet agents who bombed their car in the
streets of Washington D.C. in September 1976.
No Justice, No Peace
According to International Law Expert
Francis A. Boyle:
"the Bush administration's foreign policies constitute ongoing criminal
activity under well-recognized principles of both international law and
U.S. domestic law, and in particular the Nuremberg Charter, the
Nuremberg Judgment, and the Nuremberg Principles, as well as the
Pentagon's own U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 on The Law of Land
Warfare (1956)...[and Bush's] criminal responsibility also concerns the
Nuremberg crimes against humanity and war crimes as well as grave
breaches of the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and of the 1907 Hague
Regulations on land warfare: For example, torture at Guantanamo,
Bhagram, Abu Ghraib, and elsewhere; enforced disappearances,
assassinations, murders, kidnappings, extraordinary renditions, "shock
and awe," depleted uranium, white phosphorous, cluster bombs, Fallujah,
and the Gitmo kangaroo courts."
But like his predecessor Pinochet, who created
an amnesty law to protect himself and his cohorts, Bush, with the
help of Congress, was able to achieve the same feat through the Military
Commissions Act. But the fact that Pinochet was arrested in London
as a result of an extradition request from a Spanish judge for a list of
crimes including torture should give President Bush and his
co-conspirators such as Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, John Yoo and David
Addington pause
before vacationing outside of the country. William Schulz, head of the
U.S. chapter of Amnesty International,
has said that foreign governments should investigate and prosecute
any Bush Administration official responsible for Washington's violation
of the Geneva Conventions and UN Convention Against Torture.
"I would be very surprised,"
said William Aceves, professor of international law at California
Western School of Law, "if the government officials that were involved
in drafting the torture memos, that played a role in the policies in Abu
Ghraib and elsewhere, were not very cautious about their foreign
travel."
But there is a reason why the Bush Administration refuses to ratify the
International Criminal Court, and why Bush, with Congress, would
pass the
"Hague Invasion Act", which allows the use of military force to
"liberate" any U.S. citizen brought before the court on charges. While
Pinochet's arrest and trials in Chile offered a glimmer of hope for
some, the fact that he died before facing justice for his crimes should
be a sober reminder that impunity is the law that rules the globe for
the powerful. At this point in history it would be naive to think that
Washington would allow someone like President Bush to be arrested and
tried for crimes against humanity, no matter how guilty he is--the Hague
Act attests to this.
Michael Mandel, a law professor and author of
How America Gets away with Murder: Illegal Wars, Collateral Damage and
Crimes Against Humanity put it best when he wrote that, "The real
Pinochet Precedent is that international criminal law, for all its
dramatic pronouncements and precedents, will always know how to
distinguish between useful and troublesome prosecutions, between friend
and foe, between 'our' war criminals and theirs."
This is unacceptable. On this anniversary of September 11th, to honor
the innocent people killed and tortured, Americans, as citizens of the
country that largely perpetuates the unjust aspects of the global
justice system, should shout out in their words and actions 'Enough!'
Only when human rights and justice triumph over impunity will there ever
be peace. And when this happens it may just be called the Bush
Precedent.
***
Cyril Mychalejko is an editor at UpsideDownWorld.org, a
website covering activism and politics in Latin America.
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/1470/1/
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