U.S. has a 45-year history of torture
The
difference between American involvement in South American atrocities in
1964 and 'enhanced interrogation' now is that some modern-day officials
appear proud of themselves.
By A.J. Langguth
May 3, 2009
As President Obama grapples with accusations of torture by U.S. agents,
I suggest he consult the former Senate majority leader, Tom Daschle.
I
first contacted Daschle in 1975, when he was an aide to Sen. James
Abourezk of South Dakota, who was leading a somewhat lonely campaign
against CIA abuses.
At the time, I was researching a book on the
United States' role in the spread of military dictatorships throughout
Latin America. Daschle arranged for me to inspect the senator's files,
and I spent an evening reading accounts of U.S. complicity in torture.
The stories came from Iran, Taiwan, Greece and, for the preceding 10
years, from Brazil and the rest of the continent's Southern Cone.
Despite
my past reporting from South Vietnam, I had been naive enough to be at
first surprised and then appalled by the degree to which our country
had helped to overthrow elected governments in Latin America.
Our
interference, which went on for decades, was not limited to one
political party. The meddling in Brazil began in earnest during the
early 1960s under a Democratic administration. At that time,
Washington's alarm over Cuba was much like the more recent panic after
9/11. The Kennedy White House was determined to prevent another
communist regime in the hemisphere, and Robert Kennedy, as attorney
general, was taking a strong interest in several anti-communist
approaches, including the Office of Public Safety.
When OPS was
launched under President Eisenhower, its mission sounded benign enough
-- to increase the professionalism of the police of Asia, Africa and,
particularly, Latin America. But its genial director, Byron Engle, was
a CIA agent, and his program was part of a wider effort to identify
receptive recruits among local populations.
Although Engle
wanted to avoid having his unit exposed as a CIA front, in the public
mind the separation was quickly blurred. Dan Mitrione, for example, a
police advisor murdered by Uruguay's left-wing Tupamaros for his role
in torture in that country, was widely assumed to be a CIA agent.
When
Brazil seemed to tilt leftward after President Joao Goulart assumed
power in 1961, the Kennedy administration grew increasingly troubled.
Robert Kennedy traveled to Brazil to tell Goulart he should dismiss two
of his Cabinet members, and the office of Lincoln Gordon, John
Kennedy's ambassador to Brazil, became the hub for CIA efforts to
destabilize Goulart's government.
On March 31, 1964, encouraged
by U.S. military attache Vernon Walters, Brazilian Gen. Humberto
Castelo Branco rose up against Goulart. Rather than set off a civil
war, Goulart chose exile in Montevideo.
Ambassador Gordon
returned to a jubilant Washington, where he ran into Robert Kennedy,
who was still grieving for his brother, assassinated the previous
November. "Well, he got what was coming to him," Kennedy said of
Goulart. "Too bad he didn't follow the advice we gave him when we were
down there."
The Brazilian people did not deserve what they got.
The military cracked down harshly on labor unions, newspapers and
student associations. The newly efficient police, drawing on training
provided by the U.S., began routinely torturing political prisoners and
even opened a torture school on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro to
teach police sergeants how to inflict the maximum pain without killing
their victims.
One torture victim was Fernando Gabeira, a
young reporter for Jornal do Brasil who was recruited by a resistance
movement and later arrested for his role in the 1969 kidnapping of
Charles Burke Elbrick, the U.S. ambassador. (Elbrick was released after
four days.) In custody, Gabeira later told me, he was tortured with
electric shocks to his testicles; a fellow prisoner had his testicles
nailed to a table. Still others were beaten bloody or waterboarded.
When Gabeira's captors said anything at all, they sometimes boasted
about having been trained in the United States.
During the
first seven years after Castelo Branco's coup, the OPS trained 100,000
Brazilian police, including 600 who were brought to the United States.
Their instruction varied. Some OPS lecturers denounced torture as
inhumane and ineffectual. Others conveyed a different message. Le Van
An, a student from the South Vietnamese police, later described what
his instructors told him: "Despite the fact that brutal interrogation
is strongly criticized by moralists," they said, "its importance must
not be denied if we want to have order and security in daily life."
Brazil's
political prisoners never doubted that Americans were involved in the
torture that proliferated in their country. On their release, they
reported that they frequently had heard English-speaking men around
them, foreigners who left the room while the actual torture took place.
As the years passed, those torture victims say, the men with American
accents became less careful and sometimes stayed on during
interrogations.
One student dissident, Angela Camargo Seixas,
described to me how she was beaten and had electric wires inserted into
her vagina after her arrest. During her interrogations, she found that
her hatred was directed less toward her countrymen than toward the
North Americans. She vowed never to forgive the United States for
training and equipping the Brazilian police.
Flavio Tavares
Freitas, a journalist and Christian nationalist, shared that sense of
outrage. When he had wires jammed in his ears, between his teeth and
into his anus, he saw that the small gray generator producing the
shocks had on its side the red, white and blue shield of the USAID.
Still
another student leader, Jean Marc Von der Weid, told of having his
penis wrapped in wires and connected to a battery-operated field
telephone. Von der Weid, who had been in Brazil's marine reserve, said
he recognized the telephone as one supplied by the United States
through its military assistance program.
Victims often said that
their one moment of hope came when a medical doctor appeared in their
cell. Now surely the torment would end. Then they found that he was
only there to guarantee that they could survive another round of shocks.
CIA
Director Richard Helms once tried to rebut accusations against his
agency by asserting that the nation must take it on faith that the CIA
was made up of "honorable men." That was before Sen. Frank Church's
1975 Senate hearings brought to light CIA behavior that was deeply
dishonorable.
Before Brazil restored civilian government in
1985, Abourezk had managed to shut down a Texas training base notorious
for teaching subversive techniques, including the making of bombs. When
OPS came under attack during another flurry of bad publicity, the CIA
did not fight to save it, and its funding was cut off.
Looking
back, what has changed since 1975? A Brazilian truth and reconciliation
commission was convened, and it documented 339 cases of
government-sanctioned political assassinations. In 2002, a former labor
leader and political prisoner, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, was elected
president of Brazil. He's serving his second term.
Fernando
Gabeira went home to publish a book about kidnapping the American
ambassador and his ordeal in prison. The book became a bestseller
throughout Brazil, and Gabeira was elected to the national legislature.
In an election last October, he came within 1.4 percentage points of
becoming the mayor of Rio de Janeiro.
But in our country,
there's been a disheartening development: In 1975, U.S. officials still
felt they had to deny condoning torture. Now many of them seem to be
defending torture, even boasting about it.
A.J. Langguth is the author of "Hidden Terrors: The Truth About U.S.
Police Operations in Latin America."
Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times