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Honduran Coup Shines Spotlight On Controversial U.S. Military Traini

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  • Honduran Coup Shines Spotlight On Controversial U.S. Military Traini

    HONDURAN COUP SHINES SPOTLIGHT ON CONTROVERSIAL U.S. MILITARY TRAINING SCHOOL
    by Chris Kromm

    Facing South
    July 1, 2009

    Before the torture debates about Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib,
    there was the School of Americas -- a U.S. military training school
    in Fort Benning, Georgia, which has trained some of the worst human
    rights abusers in Latin America.

    A soldier stands guard in a desolated street in the surroundings of
    the presidential palace in Tegucigalpa. An increasingly isolated
    Honduras braced for more protests with authorities threatening to
    immediately arrest ousted President Manuel Zelaya if he dares to
    return. (AFP/Jose Cabezas)As Facing South reported yesterday, two of
    the leaders of the Honduran coup -- General Romeo Vasquez Velasquez,
    leader of the armed forces, and Gen. Luis Javier Prince Suazo, head
    of the Air Force which transported the president to Costa Rica -- were
    trained at the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation,
    formerly known as the School of the Americas.

    The Honduran coup leaders are just two of over 60,000 Latin American
    graduates of the school, which since 1984 has been headquartered at
    Fort Benning, Georgia. The SOA Watch database lists 3,566 graduates
    of the school from Honduras alone.

    As watchdog groups like School of Americas Watch have documented,
    many of the school's trainees have been directly linked to death
    squads, killings of clergy and other aid workers, kidnappings and
    other gross violations of human rights.

    The School of Americas/WHISC has also been linked to torture. In
    1996, Dana Priest of The Washington Post broke the story about
    use of training manuals at the school that taught students many
    controversial techniques: U.S. Army intelligence manuals used to train
    Latin American military officers at an Army school from 1982 to 1991
    advocated executions, torture, blackmail and other forms of coercion
    against insurgents, Pentagon documents released yesterday show.

    Used in courses at the U.S. Army's School of the Americas, the and
    control informants, counterintelligence agents could use "fear,
    payment of bounties for enemy dead, beatings, false imprisonment,
    executions and the use of truth serum," according to a secret Defense
    Department summary of the manuals compiled during a 1992 investigation
    of the instructional material and also released yesterday. General
    Romeo Vasquez Velasquez, widely credited with spearheading this week's
    military coup, appears to have been trained at SOA when torture was
    part of the curriculum.

    Torture techniques were introduced at SOA after Vietnam, when the
    U.S. used lessons from the counterinsurgency experience in that war to
    create course materials for the school. The practice was halted under
    the Carter administration in 1976 due to human rights concerns --
    the same year that General Vasquez first attended SOA.

    The second time General Vasquez was trained at SOA in 1986, the torture
    techniques had been re-introduced into the school's lesson plans
    and training manuals under the Reagan administration. An in internal
    investigation, the DoD later concluded that the inclusion of torture
    techniques in violation of international law was a mistake. An internal
    memo dated March 10, 1992 stated [pdf]: It is incredible that the use
    of the lesson plans since 1982, and the manuals since 1987, evade
    the system of doctrinal controls. And who was Secretary of Defense
    when these warning signs about U.S. involvement in torture practices
    in Latin America came to a head? Dick Cheney, whose leadership in
    national security policy as Vice President would bring torture back
    into the media spotlight.

    We're not aware of any evidence that General Vasquez was directly
    involved in torture, and the Obama administration has strongly
    condemned the military coup. But such history is an important backdrop
    to current events, which are vividly remembered in Honduras.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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