What we're up against (lessons from Guatemala)
by Mickey Z.
There are many battles being fought in the name of social justice...some
more pitched than others. In general, however, these struggles do not result
in victory thanks to a petition, a candlelight vigil, or a ballot pull. In
other words, those seeking peace, justice, and solidarity should never
underestimate the relentless and brutal power of what they are up against. I
am reminded of this every time I re-read "Bridge of Courage: Life Stories of
the Guatemalan Compañeros and Compañeras," (Common Courage Press, 1995) an
amazing book by Jennifer Harbury.
Guatemala (a nation perched on the border of Chiapas, Mexico) is an easy
place to overlook. Therefore, if we were to trust the corporate media, our
knowledge would be limited to ill-informed, racist diatribes like this from
Clifford Krauss of The New York Times (April 9, 1995): "Guatemala required
neither Karl Marx nor the Central Intelligence Agency to be consumed by
class and ethnic war, and ... The Guatemalan army, currently in the news
because some of its officers received secret CIA payments, is essentially
finishing the job that the conquistadors started. The cross and the sword
may have been replaced by modern counterinsurgency tactics, but the
essential driving forces of Guatemalan history remain the same ... the fact
remains that Guatemalans do not need prompting to kill one another."
Krauss went on to tell of chickens "sacrificed...to...pre-Columbian gods"
and "bizarre" religious cults (Krauss' tactics are indeed for those seeking
to absolve the U.S. from any culpability in the wanton destruction of a
people). While admitting CIA complicity in the 1954 coup that saw the end of
Jacobo Arbenz, Krauss is quick to remind us "modern Guatemalan political
history began not with the coup of 1954."
He has a point. It was at a February 1945 conference that State Department
Political Advisor Laurence Duggan called for "An Economic Charter of the
Americas," complaining that "Latin Americans are convinced that the first
beneficiaries of the development of a country's resources should be the
people of that country." From this unacceptable premise, the seeds of the
1954 coup were sown, and the U.S.-sponsored results include possibly
irreversible environmental devastation and upwards of 200,000 civilians
killed or "disappeared."
In a landslide victory, Jacobo Arbenz was freely and fairly elected
president of Guatemala in 1951. Wishing to transform his country, Arbenz'
modest reforms and his legalizing of the Communist Party were frowned upon
in American business circles. The Arbenz government became the target of a
U.S. public relations campaign. Two years after Arbenz became president,
Life magazine featured a piece on his "Red" land reforms, claiming that a
nation just "two hours bombing time from the Panama Canal" was "openly and
diligently toiling to create a Communist state." It matters little that the
USSR didn't even maintain diplomatic relations with Guatemala; the Cold War
was in full effect. Ever on the lookout for that invaluable pretext, the
U.S. business class scored a public relations coup when Arbenz expropriated
some unused land controlled by United Fruit Company. His payment offer was
predictably deemed inappropriate. "If they gave a gold piece for every
banana," Secretary of State John Foster Dulles clarified, "the problem would
still be Communist infiltration."
The CIA put Operation Success into action. "A legally elected government was
overthrown by an invasion force of mercenaries trained by the CIA at
military bases in Honduras and Nicaragua and supported by four American
fighter planes flown by American pilots," explains Howard Zinn. Operation
Success ushered in 40 years of repression, more than 200,000 deaths, and
what William Blum calls "indisputably one of the most inhumane chapters of
the 20th century." These chapters could never have been written without
permission from the United States and its proxies, e.g. Israel.
"The Israelis may be seen as American proxies in Honduras and Guatemala,"
stated Israeli journalist, Yoav Karni in Yediot Ahronot. Also, Ha'aretz
correspondent Gidon Samet has explained that the most important features of
the U.S.-Israeli strategic cooperation in the 1980s were not in the Middle
East, but with Central America. "The U.S. needs Israel in Africa and Latin
America, among other reasons, because of the government's difficulties in
obtaining congressional authorization for its ambitious aid programs and
naturally, for military actions," Gamet wrote on November 6, 1983, adding
that America has "long been interested in using Israel as a pipeline for
military and other aid" to Central America. Earlier that same year, Yosef
Priel reported in Davar that Latin America "has become the leading market
for Israeli arms exports."
Who are these governments so willingly snapping up weapons manufactured in
the Holy Land? One illustrative example is, yes, Guatemala. In 1981, shortly
after Israel agreed to provide military aid to this oppressive regime, a
Guatemalan officer had a feature article published in the army's Staff
College review. In that article, the officer praised Adolf Hitler, National
Socialism, and the Final Solution-quoting extensively from "Mein Kampf" and
chalking up Hitler's anti-Semitism to the "discovery" that communism was
part of a "Jewish conspiracy." Despite such seemingly incompatible ideology,
Israel's estimated military assistance to Guatemala in 1982 was $90 million.
What type of policies did the Guatemalan government pursue with the help
they received from a nation populated with thousands of Holocaust survivors?
This question brings us back to Harbury's book...a book filled with the
"inhumane chapters" Blum mentions. One member of the Guatemalan resistance
Harbury interviewed was Lorena and her story provides a good example of what
happens in a U.S. client state (with Israeli help).
Lorena's lover, a compañero named Daniel, was out with a small unit to
engage Guatemalan soldiers when he was hit by enemy fire. Lorena tells what
happened next: "The other compañeros ran to where Daniel had fallen and
found him dying there, quiet but very clear-minded. He refused to let them
try and bandage him up, telling them to first go and find the others who had
a chance of surviving. The he gave away the things in his pack, the food,
the blanket, his small book. He writing a note, shaken but determined, when
they left him. The note was for me, but I never received it."
When Lorena learned of Daniel's injuries, she and a comrade named Roberto
ran to find him. "Roberto and I arrived, breathless, at the place where he
had left Daniel," Lorena said, "but at first we could see nothing." When
Roberto tried to shield her from looking in on particular direction, Lorena
broke away to see. "Daniel was not there," she said. "His body had vanished,
with his pack, his boots, his book, and the note for me. There on the ground
lay only his brain, bloody and intact." Lorena concluded: "The soldiers had
found Daniel first."
(Aside: Can anyone imagine Americans organizing under such onerous
conditions? We throw a hissy fit if someone brings 11 items to the
supermarket express lane.)
As another resistance fighter in "Bridge of Courage" explained: "Don't talk
to me about Gandhi; he wouldn't have survived a week here."
Similar stories can be culled from countries throughout the region, but
apparently have had little effect on the foreign policy of the U.S. or
Israel. For example, when Israel faced an international arms embargo after
the 1967 war, a plan to divert Belgian and Swiss arms to the Holy Land was
implemented. These weapons were supposedly destined for Bolivia where they
would be transported by a company managed by Klaus Barbie. As in "The
Butcher of Lyon."
Any moral reservations of such an arrangement are dismissed with a vague
"national security" excuse that should sound familiar to any American. "The
welfare of our people and the state supersedes all other considerations,"
pronounced Michael Schur, director of Ta'as, the Israeli state military
industry in the August 23, 1983 Ha'aretz. "If the state has decided in favor
of export, my conscience is clear."
One Jewish figure that might be expected to find fault with such policy is
Elie Wiesel. An episode from mid-1985, documented by Yoav Karni in Ha'aretz,
should put to rest any exalted expectations of the revered moralist. When
Wiesel received a letter from a Nobel Prize laureate documenting Israel's
contributions to the atrocities in Guatemala, suggesting that he use his
considerable influence to put a stop to Israel's practice of arming
neo-Nazis, Wiesel "sighed" and admitted to Karni that he did not reply to
that particular letter. "I usually answer at once," he explained, "but what
can I answer to him?"
One is left to only wonder how Wiesel's silent sigh might have been received
if it was in response to a letter not about Jewish complicity in the murder
of Guatemalans but instead about the function of Auschwitz during the 40s.
In 1951, Guatemalan president Juan José Arévalo (whose term gave that
country a ten-year respite from military rule during which he provoked U.S.
ire by modeling his government "in many ways after the Roosevelt New Deal")
stepped down to be replaced by his ill-fated successor and kindred spirit,
the aforementioned Arbenz. This to what Arévalo had to say about the
aftermath of a war known as "good": "The arms of the Third Reich were broken
and conquered ... but in the ideological dialogue ...the real winner was
Hitler."
Never forget: This is what we're up against.
Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.