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ENGLISH
VERSION OF "CHIAPAS AL DIA" BULLETIN No. 181, CIEPAC
CHIAPAS, MEXICO
(November 5, 1999)
THE
SCHOOL OF THE AMERICAS
On
the 20th and 21st of November, 1999, conscientious men and
women from the United States will once again - as they have
year after year - be protesting in front of the School of
the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia. It is now expected
that thousands will be arriving in order to demand the closing
of the "School for Assassins."
The
SOA was founded in Panama in 1946 by the United States Army
in order to help Latin American governments promote "stability"
and "democracy." It soon lost its credibility, however,
when its graduates established at least 10 military dictatorships,
and others participated in the most brutal assassinations
and massacres, spilling the blood of thousands of persons
in different countries in Latin America.
In
1984, the SOA was moved to Fort Benning as part of the Torrijos-Carter
Treaties for the devolution of the Panama Canal. Panamanian
President Jorge Illueca called this school "the largest
base for destabilization in Latin America." The Panamanian
newspaper "La Prensa" called it "The School
for Assassins." According to the US Department of Defense,
however, the SOA should "contribute directly to the carrying
out of US foreign policy objectives in Latin America,"
and "the countries represented in the School typically
represent current US interests in the region." Over the
last few years, Mexico has represented those interests, since
our country now has the greatest number of soldiers at the
SOA.
Instruction
has been given at the SOA in counter-guerrilla manuals, extortion,
physical and psychological torture and military intelligence,
among other subjects. There have been courses in commando
and sniper operations, interrogation techniques, terrorism,
urban guerrilla warfare, counterinsurgency, Low Intensity
Warfare, irregular warfare, jungle operations, counterintelligence,
training, domestic defense, psychological operations and anti-drug
operations, among others.
THE
BLOODY HISTORY
The SOA has an annual budget of 20 million dollars. US Congressional
Representative, Joseph Kennedy, stated that this institution
"costs millions of dollars a year, and it identifies
our country with tyranny and oppression." Soldiers from
the following countries have graduated from the School of
the Americas: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia,
Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras,
Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela and Nicaragua,
among others. Let us look at some examples:
In
El Salvador, SOA graduates carried out the assassination
of Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero. Others, in 1984, raped,
and later assassinated Maryknoll sisters Maura Clark and Ita
Ford, Ursuline sister Dorothy Kazel and lay missionary Jean
Donovan. Later, in 1989, other El Salvador military personnel
assassinated 6 Jesuit priests and two women at the Central
American University (UCA). Nor should we forget the killing
of El Mozote, where more than 900 persons, including women
and children, were massacred by indiscriminate machine gun
fire. Others participated in the massacre at El Junquillo,
Las Hojas, San Sebastian and in the deaths of other social
leaders.
The
Truth Commission, which came about after the Peace Accords
in El Salvador, has confirmed that two-thirds of the soldiers
involved in the most brutal war crimes had graduated from
the SOA. Fifty years from its founding, 6776 El Salvador military
personnel are calculated to have been trained in this school,
second, after Colombia, with the
largest number of graduates. In Nicaragua, under the Somoza
dictatorship and others, 4963 soldiers were trained at the
SOA. These personnel, known as the "contras," were
responsible for thousands of assassinations.
In
Guatemala, Colonel Julio Roberto Alpirez was implicated
in the assassination of US citizen Michael Devine and Efrain
Bamaca. Some 1676 soldiers trained there through 1995
were involved in many deaths, tortures and massacres.
From
Honduras, General Luis Alonso Discua and other officers
attended the SOA.
In
Panama, the picture of General Manuel Noriega, former
President and dictator - and
currently imprisoned in the US on drug charges - hangs proudly
in a room at the School of the Americas. Fifty years after
the founding of the SOA, Omar Torrijos and another 4235 military
personnel also attended.
From
Argentina, Leopoldo Galtieri and Roberto Viola were graduated,
as well as more than a thousand other military personnel.
It is not difficult to guess that, of the 98 Argentine soldiers
accused on November 2 by Baltasar Garzon of having committed
genocide and torture during the time of the dictatorship -
between 1976 and 1983 - many of them were graduates of the
School for Assassins.
From
Peru, three imprisoned officers graduated, who have been
accused of the assassination of 9 university students and
a professor, as well as Velasco Alvarado and another 3997,
on the school's fiftieth anniversary.
In
Colombia, Colonel Victor Bernal Castano, an SOA graduate,
was accused of the massacre of a campesino family. More than
100 of the 246 officers involved in war crimes cited by an
international human rights tribunal in 1993 were graduated
from there. Fifty years from the founding of the school, the
majority of its graduates have been from Colombia, approximately
9679.
In
Bolivia, dictator Hugo Banzer was at the SOA. About 4349
soldiers from here have been trained there. There have been
455 from Brazil, and 2805 from Chile. From Ecuador, military
dictator Guillermo Rodriguez; from Haiti, SOA graduates participated
in the coup d'etat against constitutional president Jean Bertrand
Aristide.
AND
MEXICO?
Mexico sent its first military personnel in 1953, and, by
1960, it had already graduated 96 soldiers. During the sixties,
Mexican soldiers took 75 courses; in the seventies, the number
was 197 (262% more than the previous decade); in the eighties,
the total was 533 (270% more than in the 70's); and, in just
the first 7 years of the 90's, there have been a total of
623 courses, already more than the total from the previous
10 years.
In
1959, Lieutenant Juan Lopez Ortiz left the SOA after having
taken courses in "Infantry Weapons" and "Infantry
Tactics." Later, having become a General, he commanded
troops in 1994 against EZLN indigenous in the municipality
of Ocosingo, where the executions of zapatistas took place
in the city market. In 1996, General Rodolfo Reta Trigos completed
courses in "Military Intelligence" and "Counterinsurgency,"
and he was noted in 1998
as a possible successor to general Jaime Contreras as Under
Secretary of National Defense (La Jornada, February 20, 1998).
During
the 70's, Mexico had more officers taking courses than it
had during the previous 20 years. Commander Gaston Menchaca,
who completed courses in 1971 in "Irregular War Operations,"
would be the Commander of the 31st Military Region in Rancho
Nuevo, San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas. Also graduating
that year was Miguel Leyva Garcia, in courses in "Command
and General Staff." He then took command of the 83rd
Infantry Battalion of the 31st Military Region, and, according
to the Miguel Agustin Pro Human Rights Center, human rights
violations have been attributed to him in the state of Guerrero.
In 1972, Harold H. Rabling graduated from courses in "Irregular
War Operations," and Carmelo Teheran Montero, from "Military
Intelligence." They have both been present in Chiapas
during the 90's. Graduating in the 70's were: Jose Luis Lopez
Ruvalcaba from "Jungle Operations," who was Commander
of the Mixed Operations Base of the 7th Military Region in
Chiapas; Edmundo Leyva Galindo, from the "Joint Operations
Course," who
was also Commander of the 33rd Military Region in Guerrero;
Adrian Maldonado Ramirez, from the same course, and who commanded
the 33rd Military Region in Guerrero and who was dismissed
one month after the massacre of campesinos at Aguas Blancas;
Gerardo R. Serrano Herrera, who was sent to Guerrero and charged
with human rights violations; Manuel Garcia Ruiz, Enrique
Alonso Garrido and Jose Ruben Rivas Pena, who were also in
Chiapas, with the latter in the 31st Military Region in 1994
and later Commander of the 28th Military Region in the state
of Oaxaca; Gilberto R. Garcia Gonzalez was Commander of the
27th Military Region in Guerrero and died in a helicopter
accident in 1996.
During
the 80's, the first three Mexicans were graduated from the
"Psychological Operations" course; 210 courses were
given in "Training" (there had been 60 in the previous
decade), for training the trainers. General Staff Brigadier
General Guillermo Llandera Cazares and Jorge Garcia graduated
from the SOA in the 80's with a course in "Latin American
Joint Operations 0-16," and the latter is mentioned as
having been one of those
who participated in the February 1995 military maneuvers against
the EZLN. In 1997 he commanded the 24th Regiment which occupied
the Nuevo Momon ejido in Chiapas. Division General Juan Lopez
Ortiz, Director General of National Military Service commanded
the 12th RM. On December 1, 1995, he was replaced in the 3rd
RM. His specialization at the SOA was in Infantry Tactics.
He participated in military actions in Chiapas.
During
the 90s, another stage began in the SOA. In 1991, they began
giving courses in "The Church in Latin America,"
in order to better "understand" the dangers of Liberation
Theology. The majority of Latin Americans trained at the "School
for Assassins" are now Mexicans. Since the emergence
of the EZLN, the Mexican government and the US army have intensified
their relationship. In addition, there is the Program for
Personnel Exchange, which involves one country sending two
instructors to the SOA, and the SOA in turn sending two US
military personnel to the Latin American country, as in Mexico,
for example. However, foreign priests and human rights observers,
among others, have been expelled in order to prevent the presence
of witnesses to the consequences of the military
process in Chiapas.
By
the first year of the conflict, around 766 military personnel
had
already been trained. In 1996, the "School for Assassins"
inaugurated the Special Mexican Training Course and the Teachers
Administration Course for the Mexican Army, from which 59
Mexican officers graduated ion 1996.
The
Department of National Defense (SEDENA) stated that, over
a 20 year time period (1978 to 1998), 4173 military personnel
had received training abroad, of which 61% (2675) had taken
several courses since 1994. In addition to sending the military
to the US, they have also been trained in Germany, Argentina,
Belgium, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, China, Spain, El
Salvador, France, Guatemala, England, Italy, Israel, Japan,
Panama, Peru, Russia, the Ukraine and Venezuela.
But
they have also trained with the Kaibils of Guatemala, the
most brutal and murderous military force known by any Army
in Latin America. General Otto Perez Molina, the former chief
of the Guatemalan General Staff and government commissioner
for the peace negotiations, confirmed that officials from
the Mexican armed forces had attended the annual course given
at the Kaibil school, the counterinsurgency elite of the Guatemalan
army (La Jornada, September 20, 1996). Later, in June 1997,
three other Mexicans graduated from the XLVIII International
Kaibil Course (Prensa Libre, June 16, 1997).
Nonetheless,
Jose Antonio Valdivia, a senator from the official party,
the PRI, on January 21, 1998, denied accusations by PRD Senator
Mario Saucedo that Mexican military personnel had received
training abroad! Given that the 15 courses taken by the Mexican
military in 1994 increased to 24 in 1995, to 148 in 1996 and
to 333 in 1997, including those in Military Intelligence and
Psychological Operations. And given that it is now the country
with the most students at the SOA, since the war against the
Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) - and against
the ERPI and other groups in the country - are in the US'
strategic interests.
Between 1996 and 1999, around 3200 personnel, members of the
Special Forces Air Transportation Group (GAFE) graduated from
a counterinsurgency course with the United States Seventh
Group of the Special Forces, the "Green Berets,"
who participated in the war in El Salvador during the 80s.
Similarly, between 1996 and 1997, 49 Mexican military personnel
took anti-drug courses, while 167 were taking courses in counterinsurgency.
We
may remember that GAFE arrived in Acteal in January of 1998,
a few days after the massacre of the 45 indigenous.
Another
source confirmed that, in a Pentagon document during the first
months of 1997, the Mexican government sent 1500 military
personnel for training in the US, a number similar to the
total that had been trained over a 14 year time period. It
adds that military technology transfer from the US to Mexico
increased by 400% in 1997, and the Department of Defense
budget increased by 800% for the training of Mexican military
personnel (Proceso 1106, January 11, 1998).
According
to the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London,
Mexico increased its army budget by 15% this year, from 20
billion pesos in 1998 to 23.4 billion for this year, and the
EZLN and the EPR are priorities.
STRUGGLE AND RESISTANCE
In April 1994, a Maryknoll Catholic priest and Vietnam war
veteran, and 10 other religious persons (among them a Jesuit)
began a 40-day hunger strike on the steps of the Capitol,
demanding that Congress close down the SOA. It had already
been confirmed then that the School of the Americas had graduated
more than 56,000 Latin American military personnel, trained
in combat and counterinsurgency tactics. Representative Kennedy's
amendment
in Congress to close the SOA was defeated by 174 votes in
favor and 256 against. In a later congressional session, however,
the votes in favor have increased, but they have not yet secured
a majority.
On
November 16, 1997, on the eighth anniversary of the assassination
of 6 Jesuits and two women in El Salvador, 601 persons entered
Fort Benning, crossing the prohibited line in a solemn, funeral-like
procession, two by two, carrying coffins and white crosses
with the names of hundreds of persons who have been assassinated
in Guatemala, El Salvador and in other countries. Everyone
was arrested. Only 25 of them, however, were confined in United
States federal jails for 6 months, in addition to $3000 fines:
Doris Sage, a 68 year old teacher; Daniel Sage, Professor
Emeritus of Syracuse University, 70; Roy Burgueois, Maryknoll
priest, 59; Carol Richardson, mother of 2 children, Methodist
pastor, 53; Nicholas Cardel, World war II veteran, 72; Mary
Earley, retired special education teacher, 67; Rita Steinhagen,
a religious with San Jose de Carondelet, 70, who served in
the Center for Victims of Torture; Kenneth Kennon, pastor,
72; Margaret Eilerman, Franciscan religious, 60; Anne Herman,
mother of 6 children, 64; William Bichsel, Jesuit priest,
69; Mary Catherine Flanigan, Franciscan religious, 65, of
the Justice Center in Chicago;
Patrick Inman, retired teacher, 52; Christopher Jones, 23,
a graduate in Latin American Studies; Edward Kinane, anthropology
professor, 53; Randall Serraglio, graduate in Latin American
Studies, 34; William McNulty, 62; Ann Tiffany, mental health
nurse, retired, 62; Megan Rice, missionary and teacher, 67;
Ruth Woodring, student, 24; Dwight Lawton,
war veteran, 67; Mary trotochaud, 47; Rita Lacey, 63; and
Richard Streb, Witness for Peace activist and World war II
veteran, 72.
THE
CONTEXT
In Mexico, we are experiencing a process of militarization
by the State, which involves not only a greater number of
military, positions, camps, weapons, military regions and
budget, among other quantitative measures, but also the militarization
of state structures. Military persons are present in the three
branches of government: in the Executive, Legislative
and Judicial branches. We have had military personnel as senators,
deputies, governors, officials in various bodies, as police
- part of the forces or directing and training them. We now
have a new force: the Federal Preventive Police which, by
the year 2000, is expected to have 10,000 members, and 5000
of them will be military. We are also experiencing militarization
in terms of their influence in the political, economic and
social life at the three levels of government: municipal,
state and federal.
Today,
November 5, marks the second anniversary of the attack against
the bishops [of the Diocese of San Cristobal de Las Casas],
carried out by alleged paramilitary members from Peace and
Justice in the Northern region, who were allegedly supported
and trained by the military. This December 22, it will be
2 years since the Kaibil-style Acteal massacre perpetrated
by paramilitaries, trained by at least one soldier who is
currently imprisoned. And the Diocese of San Cristobal is
guilty of having raised the consciousness of the indigenous
(Proceso 1105, January 3, 1998). Bishop Samuel Ruiz' reaching
his 75th birthday - and subsequent resignation on November
3 - was, thus, an apparent victory for the federal government
and the Mexican army, a victory that could apparently only
be won by the
years.
While
Chiapas and other states in the Republic have become more
filled with military camps, the populations affected by the
floods in Chiapas, Hidalgo, Oaxaca, Puebla, Tabasco and Veracruz
(where the poorest municipalities in the country are found)
- totaling more than 300,000 victims and more than 300 dead
- are waiting for help from military forces during this so
very difficult time. This new catastrophe caused the loss
of roads, bridges, educational and sanitary infrastructure,
thousands of homes, maize, coffee and other agricultural products.
This will, once again, be taken advantage of by the official
party, with the giving out of aid for votes, and by the large
transnational companies who have broken the limits of NAFTA,
and who will be introducing more basic grains into the country
during the next agricultural season.
The
desires for a new society are reflected by the barometer of
violence, which do not tolerate democracy, inclusion, participation.
It is the powers who are resisting change and who are falling
into a crisis of credibility and consensus over the purported
benefits of the neoliberal program's globalization, which
they are now trying to impose by force.
Human
rights groups have risen up in all corners of the country,
a barometer of the official and governmental violence against
society. It is now human rights defenders who, as in many
Latin American histories, are being persecuted, in order to
silence the voice of the denunciations. The "Miguel Agustin
Pro" Human Rights Center, in Mexico City, has now been
the victim of attacks, death threats, bombs in their offices,
of intimidation and kidnappings, of attempted homicides. And,
now, a lawyer, Digna Ochoa, has been subjected to kidnapping,
interrogation and torture.
In
June of the year 2000, elections will be carried out for the
presidency of the Republic, as well as for the governor of
the state of Chiapas. The continuity of the economic policies
imposed by the globalization of neoliberalism is at stake,
at a time when the official party is in the throes of its
greatest crisis of decline. These economic and political relationships
require the third link, the military, in order to guarantee
this continuity. If the PRI continues to govern for another
6 years, it will be more difficult for a democratic government
to counter the progress of the effects of globalization, the
effects of NAFTA and of the Commercial
Accord with the European Union.
We
must stop this escalation of violence now. The powers must
understand that we cannot move to democracy, nor erect a more
just and dignified society for everyone, if the state structure
is founded on, and contaminated by, violence and militarization.
Hopefully, we may some day see the military buildings in indigenous
regions turned into school buildings, and their large gardens
into recreation areas for boys and girls.
Let
this Bulletin serve to support the struggle for the closing
of the School of the Americas, and as appreciation for those
citizens who are demonstrating and who are willing to pay,
through imprisonment, what thousands of indigenous, campesinos
and members of civil society have paid through blood for decades
in Latin America.
Here,
in Chiapas, the women, children, old ones and men of the Amador
Hernandez community, of Moises Gandhi, and of many other campesino,
indigenous and zapatista communities, are resisting in the
rain, in the mud, in the cold, day and night, camped
on roads and paths, using their bodies to prevent the Army
from coming into their communities, while hoping that they
are able to achieve the closing of the School of the Americas.
When they do achieve it, Latin America will be grateful.
Note: For more information, you can consult the pages:
SOA Watch: www.soaw.org
SEDENA: www.sedena.gob.mx
Southern Command: www.ussouthcom.com
Information
has been extracted from:
SOA Watch, "Speaking Truth to Power," CNY/SOA Abolitionist,
Nuevo Amanecer Press, Darrin Wood, La Jornada, Prensa Libre,
Diario de Yucatan, Proceso, the video, "School of the
Americas: An Insider Speaks Out!" by Linda Panetta.
GUSTAVO
CASTRO SOTO
Center of Economic and Political Investigations of Community
Action, A.C.
CIEPAC
CIEPAC,
member of the "Convergence of Civil Organizations for
Democracy"
National Network (CONVERGENCIA), and member of RMALC (Mexico
Action Network
on Free Trade)
******************************************
Translated by irlandesa for CIEPAC, A.C.
******************************************
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_________________________________________________________________________
CIEPAC, A.C.
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