LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1   Report Post  
Jim,
 
Posts: n/a
Default Iran-Contra, the Sequel

Hey NOYB -- looks like you just might get your wish for a military
government

Eric Alterman -

The recent announcement that John Negroponte was the president’s nominee
to be the nation’s first national intelligence director (NID) was
treated as major news, but the current ambassador to Iraq’s past record
was visited upon by reporters with only the most cursory examination.
Although the duties of the NID have yet to be fully fleshed out, the one
thing we do know is that Negroponte will oversee a combustible mix of 15
agencies (including the CIA). What power the position actually entails
(or even where his office is) is yet to be discovered.

The Negroponte nomination comes equipped with a resume containing a few
bullet points that ought to give anyone, not just Democrats,
considerable pause. Before he was the American ambassador to the U.N.
from 2001 to 2004 and top official in Iraq for much of the past year, he
served as ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985. It was there that
Negroponte – if a wealth of well-corroborated and documented evidence is
to be believed – covered up a pattern of gross human rights abuses by
the country’s CIA-trained forces. Under Negroponte's direction, military
aid to Honduras rose dramatically, from less than $4 million to $77.4
million. To keep the aid flowing, the American embassy in Tegucigalpa
needed to reassure Congress annually that Honduras was not a gross human
rights violator. This he did. Negroponte’s 1983 report to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, for instance, argued that the "Honduran
government neither condones nor knowingly permits killings of a
political or nonpolitical nature" and that there were "no political
prisoners in Honduras."

The snow job worked, and under Negroponte’s watch "U.S. military aid
[for Honduras] jumped from $3.9 million in 1980 to $77.4 million by
1984. But in truth, as Sarah Wildman reported in The New Republic, the
Honduran army, especially the U.S.-trained Battalion 316, engaged in
widespread human rights abuses, including kidnapping, torture and
assassination. Negroponte worked closely with the perpetrators and
covered up their crimes, according to Ambassador Jack Binns, his
predecessor." Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting has noted that neither
the Washington Post nor the New York Times mentioned Negroponte’s
connection to Battalion 316 in the months between Negroponte’s being
nominated as U.N. ambassador and his confirmation in 2001.

Likewise, the story of Battalion 316 was conspicuously absent from press
coverage of Negroponte’s nomination last week, with only a few stories
casting a sufficiently critical eye on Negroponte’s past. Despite the
investigative firepower of major news outlets such as CNN, the New York
Times and the Washington Post, it was up to the AP to file the only
story to fully take into account the outrage expressed across Central
America over Negroponte’s nomination.

Mainstream media coverage also largely ignored Negroponte’s role in
helping to cover up a horrific massacre conducted by U.S.-supported
death squads in El Salvador in the town of El Mozote in the province of
Morazan. The massacre was reported in The New York Times and The
Washington Post on the eve of Congressional hearings on funding for the
Salvadoran military, whose elite forces had carried out the massacre.
Top Reagan officials, including most particularly Elliott Abrams, sought
to discredit the reports with McCarthyite accusations, and were
supported by their allies in the conservative punditocracy—which was
then just a fraction of its current size and scope. They succeeded and
the funding went through, in part due to the cooperation of
then-Ambassador to Honduras John Negroponte. The gruesome details of the
massacre were later excavated by a Salvadoran truth commission, and
reported on by the New Yorker’s Mark Danner, with the dead numbering
over 500 civilians. (Of the 143 human remains discovered in the sacristy
of the Mozote church, 136 were judged to be children or adolescents, of
whom the average age was six.)

During the controversy, State Department officials received a
confidential cable from

Negroponte reporting on a visit by a U.S. embassy official and a House
Foreign Affairs Committee staff member to a refugee camp, where many of
the survivors of Morazan had fled. The cable described the refugees’
account of "a military sweep in Morazan December 7 to 17 which they
claim resulted in large numbers of civilian casualties and physical
destruction, leading to their exodus." Negroponte himself noted that the
"names of villages cited coincide with New York Times article of January
28 same subject." He noted that the refugees’ "decision to flee at this
time when in the past they had remained during the sweeps ... lends
credibility to reportedly greater magnitude and intensity of ...
military operations in Northern Morazan." The State Department, however,
decided to keep this information secret. By the time of the second
certification report—which appeared six months later, in July 1982—the
massacre reports were ancient history. Enders now bragged of "many fewer
allegations of massacres during this reporting than last," a trend he
attributed to the fact that "many earlier reports proved to be
fabricated or exaggerated."

In reporting his nomination, however, much of the media played the old
"critics say" game when bringing up the charges against him. Media
Matters, as usual, has cataloged these half truths. Some journalists,
like Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, made short work of
Negroponte’s past, lauding him for avoiding prison. Speaking on FOX
News, Krauthammer said that "he didn't end up in jail, which is a pretty
good attribute for him. A lot of others practically did."

Leaving his Honduran experience aside, one cannot ignore – unless you’re
the mainstream media – the fact that Negroponte was point man at the
U.N. during the time the Bush administration peddled its falsified WMD
evidence in 2002 and 2003.

But it isn’t just Negroponte who has received the kid gloves treatment
from the press.

On the day of the president’s 2005 State of the Union address, the
administration quietly announced the appointment of Iran-Contra fellow
traveler and admitted perjurer Elliott Abrams to the post of deputy
national security adviser. His duties, according to the announcement,
will revolve around "global democracy strategy." Abrams, as assistant
secretary of state under Ronald Reagan, pled guilty in 1991 to two
counts of withholding evidence from Congress over his role in the
Iran-Contra affair. But the Bush family has undertaken his
rehabilitation, with Bush 41 officially pardoning his crimes, and his
son appointing him to a series of top jobs in the National Security
Council. He is now, I kid you not, director of its office for democracy,
human rights and international operations – a post free of any Senate
approval process.

As Michael Crowley recently wrote in Slate, "Surely the White House
grasps the ironies he A man accused of subverting the Constitution is
leading its charge for democratic government; a reputed defender of
dictators is working to depose them." (After being repeatedly misled by
Abrams during a Senate Intelligence Committee Hearing, Thomas Eagleton
(D-MO) noted for the record that Abrams’s testimony made him "want to puke."

If the White House didn’t grasp the irony, neither did most of the
media. What’s the line about those who forget the past?


Eric Alterman is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and
the author of six books
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
OT--Israeli intelligence says Iran less than 12 months away from nukes JohnH General 2 January 28th 05 08:36 PM
OT--Iran keeps playing with fire NOYB General 7 July 31st 04 03:29 AM
OT--9/11 Commission Finds Ties Between al-Qaeda and Iran NOYB General 26 July 20th 04 10:53 PM
OT--Hee-haw. Let's get Iran now! NOYB General 8 September 17th 03 12:48 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:03 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017