Impunity
“Successive imperialist powers have shown that the bottom line
in combating the hopes and dreams of ordinary people is to
resort to spreading terror through the application of extreme
violence.” Max Fuller; “For Iraq, the ‘El Salvador Option’
becomes Reality”
By Mike Whitney
06/09/06 "
Information
Clearing House" -- -- George Bush is right; Iraq is “the central battlefield in the
global war on terror”. Regrettably, it is United States that is
the main sponsor and supporter of that terror in the form of
American-trained death squads. Death squad activity in Iraq now
accounts for more than 1,000 casualties per month. The Baghdad
morgue has become a conveyor-belt for American-generated
carnage.
Up to now, the US involvement in the killing has been
effectively concealed by the mainstream media. Apart from
infrequent reports on the internet, there is little information
connecting the burgeoning death toll to America’s
counterinsurgency operations.
That changed on May 4, 2006 when Congressman Dennis Kucinich
gave a speech on the floor of the House which linked the Bush
administration to the death squad’s in Iraq. Reading from a long
list of newspaper articles he had compiled, Kucinich provided a
detailed account of America’s disturbing undercover war.
Naturally, his speech was shunned by the major media and
consigned to the memory hole. It outlines the extent of
America’s complicity in the ongoing slaughter and asks us to
question whether any additional involvement can be morally
justified.
Kucinich’s speech was framed in the context of 2 letters which
he delivered to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and
President George Bush. His comments are entered below:
April 5, 2006
Dear Secretary Rumsfeld:
I am writing to request a copy of all records pertaining to
Pentagon plans to use U.S. Special Forces to advise, support and
train Iraqi assassination and kidnapping teams.
On January 8, 2005, Newsweek magazine first published a report
that the Pentagon had a proposal to train elite Iraqi squads to
quell the growing Sunni insurgency. The proposal has been called
the "Salvador Option," which references the U.S. military
assistance program, initiated under the Carter Administration
and subsequently pursued by the Reagan Administration, that
funded and supported "nationalist" paramilitary forces who
hunted down and assassinated rebel leaders and their supporters
in El Salvador. This program in El Salvador was highly
controversial and received much public backlash in the U.S., as
tens of thousands of innocent civilians were assassinated and
"disappeared," including notable members of the Catholic Church,
Archbishop Oscar Romero and the four American churchwomen.
According to the Newsweek report, Pentagon conservatives wanted
to resurrect the Salvadoran program in Iraq because they
believed that despite the incredible cost in human lives and
human rights, it was successful in eradicating guerrillas.
Mr. Secretary, at a news conference on January 11, 2005, you
publicly stated that the idea of a Salvador option was
"nonsense." Yet mounting evidence suggests that the U.S. has in
fact funded and trained Iraqi assassination and kidnapping teams
and these teams are now operating with horrific success across
Iraq.
We know that the Pentagon received funding for training Iraqi
paramilitaries. About one year before the Newsweek report on the
"Salvador Option," it was reported in the American Prospect
magazine on January 1, 2004 that part of $3 billion of the $87
billion Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill to fund
operations in Iraq, signed into law on November 6, 2003, was
designated for the creation of a paramilitary unit manned by
militiamen associated with former Iraqi exile groups. According
to the Prospect article, experts predicted that creation of this
paramilitary unit would "lead to a wave of extrajudicial
killings, not only of armed rebels but of nationalists, other
opponents of the U.S. occupation and thousands of civilian
Baathists." The article further described how the bulk of the $3
billion program, disguised as an Air Force classified program,
would be used to "support U.S. efforts to create a lethal, and
revenge-minded Iraqi security force." According to one of the
article's sources, John Pike, an expert of classified military
budgets at www.globalsecurity.org. "the big money would be for
standing up an Iraqi secret police to liquidate the resistance."
We know that some of the Pentagon's Iraq experts were involved
in the Reagan Administration's paramilitary program in El
Salvador. Colonel James Steele, Counselor to the U.S. Ambassador
for Iraqi Security Forces, formerly led the U.S. Military
Advisory Group in El Salvador from 1984-1986, where he developed
special operating forces at brigade level during the height of
the conflict. The role of these forces in El Salvador was to
attack "insurgent" leadership, their supporters, sources of
supply, and base camps. Currently Colonel Steele has been
assigned to work with the new elite Iraqi counter-insurgency
unit known as the Special Police Commandos, operating under
Iraq's Interior Ministry. Director of National Intelligence,
John Negroponte, was U.S. Ambassador to Iraq from June 2004 to
April 2005. From 1981 to 1985, he was ambassador to Honduras
where he played a key role in coordinating U.S. covert aid to
the Contras, anti-Sandinista militias who targeted civilians in
Nicaragua. Additionally, he oversaw the U.S. backing of a
military death squad in Honduras, Battalion 3-16, which
specialized in torture and assassination. The U.S. had similar
programs of supporting paramilitary groups set up Nicaragua and
Honduras as its program in El Salvador. In a Democracy Now
interview on January 10, 2005, Allan Nairn, who broke the story
about U.S. support of death squads in El Salvador, suspected
that Ambassador Negroponte would most likely be involved in the
economic side of U.S. support to death squads in Iraq.
We know that a wave of abductions and executions, in the style
of the death squads of El Salvador, and with ties to an official
government sponsor, and to the U.S., has hit Iraq. News reports
over the past 10 months strongly suggest that the U.S. has
trained and supported highly organized Iraqi commando brigades,
and that some of those brigades have operated as death squads,
abducting and assassinating thousands of Iraqis. Some news
highlights: • May 1, 2005 -- Los Angeles Times reports that the
U.S. is providing technical and logistical support to the
Maghawir (Fearless Warrior) brigades, the Interior Ministry's
special commandos, according to Major General Rasheed Flayih
Mohammed. Iraqi authorities plan to increase deployment of the
12,000-strong Maghawir (Fearless Warrior) brigades, which are
composed of well-trained veterans who have worked closely with
U.S. forces in Najaf, Fallujah and Mosul and include the Wolf,
Scorpion, Tiger and Thunder brigades. • May 16-20, 2005 -- Los
Angeles Times and New York Times reveal discovery of 46 bodies,
all Iraqi men abducted and slain execution-style, in various
locations: floating in the Tigris, dumped in ditches and
garbage-strewn lots, and buried at a poultry farm. • June 15,
2005 -- Washington Post reports that U.S. forces had knowledge
of secret and illegal abductions of hundreds of minority Arabs
in Kirkuk. The abductions were by forces led by Kurdish
political parties and backed by the U.S. military. • June 20,
2005 -- Los Angeles Times reports that Saad Sultan, of Iraq
Human Rights Ministry said that police and security forces
attached to the Iraqi Interior Ministry, thousands of whom have
been trained by American instructors, are responsible for
abusing up to 60% of estimated 12,000 detainees in prison and
military compounds. He says the units have used tactics
reminiscent of Saddam's secret intelligence squads. • July 3,
2005 -- Reuters News reports that the government of Iraq
publicly acknowledged that the new security forces were using
torture. Article further says that accounts are common of people
being seized by armed men in the uniforms of the police, army or
special units like Baghdad's Wolf Brigade police commandos, and
then disappearing without trace or being found dead. • July 28,
2005 -- Los Angeles Times reports that members of a California
Army National Guard company, the Alpha Company, who were
implicated in a detainee abuse scandal, trained and conducted
joint operations with the Wolf Brigade, a commando unit
criticized for human rights abuses. In an online Alpha Company
newsletter, Captain Haviland wrote, "We have assigned 2nd
Platoon to help them transition, and install some of our 'Killer
Company' aggressive tactical spirit in them." The article
further states that despite the Wolf Brigade's controversial
reputation for human rights violations, it is regarded as the
gold standard for Iraqi security forces by U.S. military
officials. • August 31, 2005 -- BBC reports that on the night of
August 24, a large force of the Volcano Brigade raided homes in
Al-Hurriyah city in the Baghdad, kidnapping and then executing
76 citizens. The victims were all shot in the head after their
hands and feet had been tied up. They suffered the harshest
forms of torture, deformation and burning. • November 16, 2005
-- Reuters News reports the discovery of 173 malnourished men,
some of whom were tortured, imprisoned in a secret jail run by
Shi'ite militias tied to the Interior Ministry. • November 17,
2005 -- Newsday reports that in the past year, the U.S. military
has helped build up Iraqi commandos under guidance from James
Steele, a former Army Special Forces officer who led U.S.
counterinsurgency efforts in El Salvador in the 1980s. The
brigades built up over the past year include the Lion Brigade,
Scorpion Brigade and Volcano Brigade. • February 15, 2006 --
Associated Press reports that the Interior Ministry has launched
a probe into death squad allegations. • February 19, 2006 -- BBC
reveals that morgues in Baghdad receive dozens of bodies picked
up daily from rivers, sewage plants, waste burial sites, farms
and desert areas. Most of the bodies are handcuffed and
blindfolded civilians with a bullet or more in the forehead,
indicating that they were executed. The handcuffs used on the
victims are like those used by the Iraqi police. • February 26,
2006 -- The Independent reports that outgoing United Nations'
human rights chief in Iraq, John Pace, revealed that hundreds of
Iraqis are being tortured to death or summarily executed every
month in Baghdad alone by the death squads working from the
Ministry of Interior. He said that up to three-quarters of the
corpses stacked in the Baghdad mortuary show evidence of gunshot
wounds to the head or injuries caused by drill-bits or burning
cigarettes. • March 9, 2006 -- Los Angeles Times reports that
Iraqi police officers who worked at the Interior Ministry's
illegal prison had received American training, and that U.S.
trainers have also given extensive support to 27 brigades of
heavily armed commandos accused of a series of abuses, including
the death of 14 Sunni Arabs who were locked in an airtight van
last summer. • March 10, 2006 -- Sidney Morning Herald reports
that men wearing the uniforms of U.S.-trained security forces,
which are controlled by the Interior Ministry, abducted 50
people in a daylight raid on a security agency. Masked men who
are driving what appear to be new government-owned vehicles are
carrying out many of the raids. • March 27, 2006 -- The
Independent reports that while U.S. authorities have begun
criticizing the Iraqi government over the "death squads," many
of the paramilitary groups accused of the abuse, such as the
Wolf Brigade, the Scorpion Brigade and the Special Police
Commandos were set up with the help of the American military.
Furthermore, the militiamen were provided with U.S. advisers
some of whom were veterans of Latin American counter-insurgency
which also had led to allegations of death squads at the time.
Mr. Secretary, in light of this evidence of U.S. support for and
the existence of death squads in Iraq, what is the basis for
your January 11, 2005 statement, that the idea of a Salvador
option in Iraq is "nonsense"? I request a copy of all records
pertaining to Pentagon plans to use U.S. Special Forces to
advise, support and train Iraqi assassination and kidnapping
teams. I look forward to receiving your response.
Sincerely, Dennis J. Kucinich, Member of Congress
Kucinich’s speech gives us a much better idea of what is really
going on in Iraq. He exposes the US as the driving force behind
the paramilitary units that are currently torturing and killing
vast numbers of Iraqi civilians. The entire operation has been
set into motion by American intelligence agencies with the
intention of inciting sectarian violence and thrusting the
country towards partition.
The appearance of Colonel James Steele, as counselor for the
Iraqi Security Forces, should remove any doubt about the real
nature of America’s involvement. Steele’s ”stock and trade” is
the “spreading terror through the application of extreme
violence”; Max Fuller’s apt description of US counterinsurgency
campaigns in Latin America. Steele was clearly enlisted to train
others in the techniques of guerilla warfare and spread mayhem
throughout the country.
Kucinch’s claims are particularly illuminating in relation to
the recent killing of terror-mastermind Abu Musab al Zarqawi.
Zarqawi was the Pentagon’s “psy-ops invention" who was created
to rationalize the steady deterioration of Iraqi society. By
connecting the Bush administration to the death squads the
entire foundation for the war on terror begins to crumble. As
Kucinich points out, the main proponent of terrorist activity in
Iraq is the United States not Islamic extremists. American death
squads are getting away with murder, and they are doing so with
complete impunity.
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