On the Torturable and the Untorturable
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Greg Grandin
by Tom Engelhardt
and Greg Grandin
DIGG THIS
In Wednesday's
Wall Street Journal, reporter Siobhan Gorman offered a striking
little portrait of Jose A. Rodriguez, who, in 2005, as chief
of the CIA's National Clandestine Service, ordered the destruction
of those "hundreds
of hours" of CIA videotapes of the…
Now, what
do we want to call it? Gorman refers to "extreme techniques"
of interrogation (putting the two words in quotes), then repeats
the phrase a second time later in the piece without the quotes:
"… [Rodriguez] took a careful approach to controversial practices
such as renditions sending detainees to countries that use
more extreme interrogation methods…"). In this mini-portrait of
Rodriguez, as painted
by his colleagues, and of the disappeared videos, the word "torture"
is never used, but don't blame Gorman. As Greg Mitchell of Editor
& Publisher pointed
out recently, she's hardly alone.
"One
Associated Press article referred simply to 'interrogation' on the
tapes, at one point putting 'enhanced interrogation' in quotes.
Another AP article called it 'harsh interrogation.' Mark Mazzeti
in The New York Times used 'severe interrogation methods.'
Eric Lichtblau in the same paper chose the same phrase. David Johnston,
in a Saturday article for [the] paper's Web site, referred to 'aggressive
interrogations' and 'coercive techniques.' Reuters, in its lead,
relied on 'severe interrogation techniques.' Dan Eggen and Joby
Warrick in The Washington Post on Saturday opted for 'harsh
interrogation tactics.'"
Whatever is
on those tapes, we've come a long way, baby, since, in Medieval
Times in Europe, waterboarding was crudely known as "the water torture."
In any case,
Rodriguez, according to his colleagues, turns out to be for the
little guy or the little torturer, anyway. He supposedly
destroyed those videos so that "lower-level officers would[n't]
take the fall" for the high-level ones who dished out the orders.
But there's a slight catch in the text. What if some higher-level
ones might have been in danger of taking the fall as well?
Here's Gorman's
money passage, just dropped into the middle of the piece without
further explanation or discussion: "One former official said interrogators'
faces were visible on at least one video, as were those of more
senior officers who happened to be visiting." Happened? Visiting?
Keep in mind that we're talking about CIA officials in a torture
chamber, not tourists at a local landmark.
Then again,
for background, Gorman offers this on Rodriguez: He is, she writes,
"a product of what one former agency colleague called ‘the rough-and-tumble'
Latin American division" of the CIA from the 1980s. "Rough and tumble"?
You won't find out what that means from her column, but just keep
reading this post. In our period, men like Rodriguez, under the
leadership of George W. Bush, have essentially globalized those
"rough and tumble" methods of the CIA's Latin American division.
As Greg Grandin whose superb book, Empire's
Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the
New Imperialism, nails those "rough-and-tumble" years
points out, they have turned the "unholy trinity" that the U.S.
developed in Latin America into a global operation. ~ Tom
The Unholy
Trinity: Death Squads, Disappearances, and Torture from Latin
America to Iraq
By Greg
Grandin
The world
is made up, as Captain Segura in Graham Greene's 1958 novel Our
Man in Havana put it, of two classes: the torturable and
the untorturable. "There are people," Segura explained, "who expect
to be tortured and others who would be outraged by the idea."
Then
so Greene thought Catholics, particularly Latin American
Catholics, were more torturable than Protestants. Now, of course,
Muslims hold that distinction, victims of a globalized network of
offshore and outsourced imprisonment coordinated by Washington and
knitted together by secret flights, concentration camps, and black-site
detention centers. The CIA's deployment of Orwellian "Special Removal
Units" to kidnap terror suspects in Europe, Canada, the Middle East,
and elsewhere and the whisking of these "ghost prisoners" off to
Third World countries to be tortured goes, today, by the term "extraordinary
rendition," a hauntingly apt phrase. "To render" means not just
to hand over, but to extract the essence of a thing, as well as
to hand out a verdict and "give in return or retribution"
good descriptions of what happens during torture sessions.
In the decades
after Greene wrote Our Man in Havana, Latin Americans coined
an equally resonant word to describe the terror that had come to
reign over most of the continent. Throughout the second half of
the Cold War, Washington's anti-communist allies killed more than
300,000 civilians, many of whom were simply desaparecido
"disappeared." The expression was already well known in Latin
America when, on accepting his 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature in
Sweden, Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez reported that
the region's "disappeared number nearly one hundred and twenty thousand,
which is as if suddenly no one could account for all the inhabitants
of Uppsala."
When Latin
Americans used the word as a verb, they usually did so in a way
considered grammatically incorrect in the transitive form
and often in the passive voice, as in "she was disappeared." The
implied (but absent) actor/subject signaled that everybody knew
the government was responsible, even while investing that government
with unspeakable, omnipotent power. The disappeared left behind
families and friends who spent their energies dealing with labyrinthine
bureaucracies, only to be met with silence or told that their missing
relative probably went to Cuba, joined the guerrillas, or ran away
with a lover. The victims were often not the most politically active,
but the most popular, and were generally chosen to ensure that their
sudden absence would generate a chilling ripple-effect.
An Unholy
Trinity
Like rendition,
disappearances can't be carried out without a synchronized, sophisticated,
and increasingly transnational infrastructure, which, back in the
1960s and 1970s, the United States was instrumental in creating.
In fact, it was in Latin America that the CIA and U.S. military
intelligence agents, working closely with local allies, first helped
put into place the unholy trinity of government-sponsored terrorism
now on display in Iraq and elsewhere: death squads, disappearances,
and torture.
Death Squads:
Clandestine paramilitary units, nominally independent from established
security agencies yet able to draw on the intelligence and logistical
capabilities of those agencies, are the building blocks for any
effective system of state terror. In Latin America, Washington supported
the assassination of suspected Leftists at least as early as 1954,
when the CIA successfully carried out a coup in Guatemala, which
ousted a democratically elected president. But its first sustained
sponsorship of death squads started in 1962 in Colombia, a country
which then vied with Vietnam for Washington's attention.
Having just
ended a brutal 10-year civil war, its newly consolidated political
leadership, facing a still unruly peasantry, turned to the U.S.
for help. In 1962, the Kennedy White House sent General William
Yarborough, later
better known for being the "Father of the Green Berets" (as
well as for directing domestic military surveillance of prominent
civil-rights activists, including Martin Luther King Jr.). Yarborough
advised the Colombian government to set up an irregular unit to
"execute paramilitary, sabotage and/or terrorist activities against
known communist proponents" as good a description of a death
squad as any.
As historian
Michael McClintock puts
it in his indispensable book Instruments
of Statecraft, Yarborough left behind a "virtual blueprint"
for creating military-directed death squads. This was, thanks to
U.S. aid and training, immediately implemented. The use of such
death squads would become part of what the counterinsurgency theorists
of the era liked to call "counter-terror" a concept hard
to define since it so closely mirrored the practices it sought to
contest.
Throughout
the 1960s, Latin America and Southeast Asia functioned as the two
primary laboratories for U.S. counterinsurgents, who moved back
and forth between the regions, applying insights and fine-tuning
tactics. By the early 1960s, death-squad executions were a standard
feature of U.S. counterinsurgency strategy in Vietnam, soon to be
consolidated into the infamous Phoenix Program, which between 1968
and 1972 "neutralized" more than 80,000 Vietnamese 26,369
of whom were "permanently eliminated."
As in Latin
America, so too in Vietnam, the point of death squads was not just
to eliminate those thought to be working with the enemy, but to
keep potential rebel sympathizers in a state of fear and anxiety.
To do so, the U.S. Information Service in Saigon provided thousands
of copies of a flyer printed with a ghostly looking eye. The "terror
squads" then deposited that eye on the corpses of those they murdered
or pinned it "on the doors of houses suspected of occasionally harboring
Viet Cong agents." The technique was called "phrasing the threat"
a way to generate a word-of-mouth terror buzz.
In Guatemala,
such a tactic started up at roughly the same time. There, a "white
hand" was left on the body of a victim or the door of a potential
one.
Disappearances:
Next up on the counterinsurgency curriculum was Central America,
where, in the 1960s, U.S. advisors helped put into place the infrastructure
needed not just to murder but "disappear" large numbers of civilians.
In the wake of the Cuban Revolution, Washington had set out to "professionalize"
Latin America's security agencies much in the way the Bush
administration now works to "modernize" the intelligence systems
of its allies in the President's "Global War on Terror."
Then, as now,
the goal was to turn lethargic, untrained intelligence units of
limited range into an international network capable of gathering,
analyzing, sharing, and acting on information in a quick and efficient
manner. American advisors helped coordinate the work of the competing
branches of a country's security forces, urging military men and
police officers to overcome differences and cooperate. Washington
supplied phones, teletype machines, radios, cars, guns, ammunition,
surveillance equipment, explosives, cattle prods, cameras, typewriters,
carbon paper, and filing cabinets, while instructing its apprentices
in the latest riot control, record keeping, surveillance, and mass-arrest
techniques.
In neither
El Salvador, nor Guatemala was there even a whiff of serious rural
insurrection when the Green Berets, the CIA, and the U.S. Agency
for International Development began organizing the first security
units that would metastasize into a dense, Central American-wide
network of death-squad paramilitaries.
Once created,
death squads operated under their own colorful names an Eye
for an Eye, the Secret Anticommunist Army, the White Hand
yet were essentially appendages of the very intelligence systems
that Washington either helped create or fortified. As in Vietnam,
care was taken to make sure that paramilitaries appeared to be unaffiliated
with regular forces. To allow for a plausible degree of deniability,
the "elimination of the [enemy] agents must be achieved quickly
and decisively" instructs a classic 1964 textbook Counter-Insurgency
Warfare "by an organization that must in no way be confused
with the counterinsurgent personnel working to win the support of
the population." But in Central America, by the end of the 1960s,
the bodies were piling so high that even State Department embassy
officials, often kept out of the loop on what their counterparts
in the CIA and the Pentagon were up to, had to admit
to the obvious links between US-backed intelligence services and
the death squads.
Washington,
of course, publicly denied its support for paramilitarism, but the
practice of political disappearances took a great leap forward in
Guatemala in 1966 with the birth of a death squad created,
and directly supervised, by U.S. security advisors. Throughout the
first two months of 1966, a combined black-ops unit
made up of police and military officers working under the name "Operation
Clean-Up" a term US counterinsurgents would recycle elsewhere
in Latin America carried out a number of extrajudicial executions.
Between March
3rd and 5th of that year, the unit netted its largest catch. More
than 30 Leftists were captured, interrogated, tortured, and executed.
Their bodies were then placed in sacks and dropped into the Pacific
Ocean from U.S.-supplied helicopters. Despite pleas from Guatemala's
archbishop and more than 500 petitions of habeas corpus filed
by relatives, the Guatemalan government and the American Embassy
remained silent on the fate of the executed.
Over the next
two and a half decades, U.S.-funded and trained Central American
security forces would disappear tens of thousands of citizens and
execute hundreds of thousands more. When supporters of the "War
on Terror" advocated the exercise of the "Salvador Option," it was
this slaughter they were talking about.
Following
U.S.-backed coups in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, and Argentina, death
squads not only became institutionalized in South America, they
became transnational. Throughout the late 1970s and 1980s, the CIA
supported Operation
Condor an intelligence consortium established by Chilean
dictator General Augusto Pinochet that synchronized the activities
of many of the continent's security agencies and orchestrated an
international campaign of terror and murder.
According
to Washington's ambassador to Paraguay, the heads of these agencies
kept "in touch with one another through a U.S. communications installation
in the Panama Canal Zone which covers all of Latin America." This
allowed them to "co-ordinate intelligence information among the
southern cone countries." Just this month, Pinochet's security chief
General Manuel Contreras, who is serving a 240-year prison term
in Chile for a wide-range of human rights violations, gave
a TV interview in which he confirmed that the CIA's then-Deputy
Director, General Vernon Walters (who served under director George
H.W. Bush), was fully informed of the "international activities"
of Condor.
Torture:
Torture is the animating spirit of this triad, the unholiest of
this unholy trinity. In Chile, Pinochet's henchmen killed or disappeared
thousands but they tortured tens of thousands. In Uruguay
and Brazil, the state only disappeared a few hundred, but fear of
torture and rape became a way of life, particularly for the politically
engaged. Torture, even more than the disappearances, was meant not
so much to get one person to talk as to get everybody else to shut
up.
At this point,
Washington can no longer deny that its agents in Latin America facilitated,
condoned, and practiced torture. Defectors from death squads have
described the instruction given by their U.S. tutors, and survivors
have testified
to the presence of Americans in their torture sessions. One Pentagon
"torture manual" distributed in at least five Latin American countries
described at length "coercive" procedures designed to "destroy [the]
capacity to resist."
As Naomi
Klein and Alfred
McCoy have documented in their recent books, these field manuals
were compiled using information gathered from CIA-commissioned mind
control and electric-shock experiments conducted in the 1950s. Just
as the "torture memos" of today's war on terror parse the difference
between "pain" and "severe pain," "psychological harm" and "lasting
psychological harm," these manuals went to great lengths to regulate
the application of suffering. "The threat to inflict pain can trigger
fears more damaging than the immediate sensation of pain," one handbook
read.
"Before all
else, you must be efficient," said
U.S. police advisor Dan Mitrione, assassinated by Uruguay's revolutionary
Tupamaros in 1970 for training security forces in the finer points
of torture. "You must cause only the damage that is strictly necessary,
not a bit more." Mitrione taught by demonstration, reportedly torturing
to death a number of homeless people kidnapped off the streets of
Montevideo. "We must control our tempers in any case," he said.
"You have to act with the efficiency and cleanliness of a surgeon
and with the perfection of an artist."
Florencio
Caballero, having escaped from Honduras's notorious Battalion 316
into exile in Canada in 1986, testified that U.S. instructors urged
him to inflict psychological, not "physical," pain "to study the
fears and weakness of a prisoner." Force the victim to "stand up,"
the Americans taught Caballero, "don't let him sleep, keep him naked
and in isolation, put rats and cockroaches in his cell, give him
bad food, serve him dead animals, throw cold water on him, change
the temperature." Sound familiar?
Yet, as Abu
Ghraib demonstrated so clearly and the destroyed
CIA interrogation videos would undoubtedly have made no less clear,
maintaining a distinction between psychological and physical torture
is not always possible. As one manual conceded, if a suspect does
not respond, then the threat of direct pain "must be carried out."
One of Caballero's victims, Inés Murillo, testified that her captors,
including at least one CIA agent his involvement was confirmed
in Senate testimony by the CIA's deputy director hung her
from the ceiling naked, forced her to eat dead birds and rats raw,
made her stand for hours without sleep and without being allowed
to urinate, poured freezing water over her at regular intervals
for extended periods, beat her bloody, and applied electric shocks
to her body, including her genitals.
Anything
Goes
Inés Murillo
was definitely a member of Greene's torturable class. Yet Greene
was writing in a more genteel time, when to torture the wrong person
would be, as he put it, as cheeky as a "chauffeur" sleeping with
a "peeress." Today, when it comes to torture, anything goes.
Ideologues
in the war on terror, like Berkeley law professor John
Yoo, have worked
mightily to narrow the definition of what torture is, thereby
expanding possibilities for its application. They have worked no
less hard to increase the number of people throughout the world
who could be subjected to torture by defining anyone they
cared to choose as a stateless "enemy combatant," and therefore
not protected by national and international laws banning cruel and
inhumane treatment. Even former Attorney General John Ashcroft has
declared
himself potentially torturable, telling a University of Colorado
audience recently that he would be willing to submit to waterboarding
"if it were necessary."
Things are
so freewheeling that Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz
who, at his perch at Harvard would undoubtedly be outraged if he
were to be tortured thinks that the practice needs to be
regulated, as if it were a routine medical act. He has suggested
empowering judges to issue "warrants" that would allow interrogators
to insert "sterile needles" underneath finger nails to "to cause
excruciating pain without endangering life."
Pinochet,
who didn't shy away from justifying his actions in the name of Western
Civilization, would never have dreamed of defending
torture as brazenly as has Dick Cheney, backed up by legal theorists
like Yoo. At the same time, revisionist historians, like Max
Boot, and pundits, like the Atlantic Monthly's Robert
Kaplan, rewrite history, claiming that operations like the Phoenix
Program in Vietnam or the death squads in El Salvador were effective,
morally acceptable tactics and should be emulated in fighting today's
"War on Terror."
But
this kind of promiscuity has its risks. In Latin America, the word
"disappeared" came to denote not just victimization but moral repudiation,
as the mothers and children of the disappeared led a continental
movement to restore the rule of law. They provide hope that one
day the world-wide network of repression assembled by the Bush administration
will be as discredited as Operation Condor is today in Latin America.
As Greene wrote half a century ago, on the eve of the fall of another
famous torturer, Cuba's Fulgencio Batista, "it is a real danger
for everyone when what is shocking changes."
December
12, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His blog is The
Notion. Greg Grandin is the author of a number of books,
most recently Empire's
Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the
New Imperialism. He teaches history at NYU.
Copyright
© 2007 Greg Grandin
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