The Central Intelligence Agency(CIA) has confirmed the worst fears of
its creator President Harry Truman that it might degenerate into “an
American Gestapo.” It has been just that for so long it is beyond
redemption. It represents 60 years of failure and fascism utterly at
odds with the spirit of a democracy and needs to be closed, permanently.
Over the years “the Agency” as it is known, has given U.S. presidents
so much wrong information on so many critical issues, broken so many
laws, subverted so many elections, overthrown so many governments,
funded so many dictators, and killed and tortured so many innocent human
beings that the pages of its official history could be written in
blood, not ink. People the world over regard it as infamous, and that
evaluation, sadly for the reputation of America, is largely accurate.
Besides, since President Obama has half a dozen other major intelligence
agencies to rely on for guidance, why does he need the CIA? In one
swoop he could lop an estimated 27,000 employees off the Federal
payroll, save taxpayers umpteen billions, and wipe the CIA stain from
the American flag.
If you think this is a “radical” idea, think again.
What is “radical”
is to empower a mob of covert operatives to roam the planet, wreaking
havoc as they go with not a care for morality or, for that matter, the
tenets of mercy implicit in any of the great faiths. The idea of not
prosecuting CIA interrogators (i.e., torturers), as President Obama has
said, is chilling. These crimes have to be stopped somewhere, sometime,
or they will occur again.
“The CIA had run secret interrogation centers before—beginning in
1950, in Germany, Japan, and Panama,” writes New York Times reporter Tim
Weiner in his book “Legacy of Ashes, The History of The CIA”(Random
House). Weiner has won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the
intelligence community. “It had participated in the torture of captured
enemy combatants before—beginning in 1967, under the Phoenix program in
Vietnam. It had kidnapped suspected terrorists and assassins before…”
In Iran in 1953, for example, a CIA-directed coup restored the Shah
(king) to absolute power, initiating what journalist William Blum in
“Rogue State” (Common Courage Press) called “a period of 25 years of
repression and torture; while the oil industry was restored to foreign
ownership, with the US and Britain each getting 40 percent.” About the
same time in Guatemala, Blum adds, a CIA-organized coup “overthrew the
democratically-elected and progressive government of Jacobo Arbenz,
initiating 40 years of military government death squads, torture,
disappearances, mass executions, and unimaginable cruelty, totaling more
than 200,000 victims—indisputably one of the most inhuman chapters of
the 20th century.” The massive slaughter compares, at least in terms of
sheer numbers, with Hitler’s massacre of Romanian and Ukranian Jews
during the holocaust. Yet few Americans know of it.
Blum provides yet other examples of CIA criminality. In Indonesia, it
attempted in 1957-58 to overthrow neutralist president Sukarno. It
plotted Sukarno’s assassination, tried to blackmail him with a phony sex
film, and joined forces with dissident military officers to wage a
full-scale war against the government, including bombing runs by
American pilots, Blum reported This particular attempt, like one in
Costa Rica about the same time, failed. So did the CIA attempt in Iraq
in 1960 to assassinate President Abdul Kassem. Other ventures proved
more “successful”.
In Laos, the CIA was involved in coup attempts in 1958, 1959, and
1960, creating a clandestine army of 30,000 to overthrow the government.
In Ecuador, the CIA ousted President Jose Velasco for recognizing the
new Cuban government of Fidel Castro. The CIA also arranged the murder
of elected Congo Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba in 1961 and installation
of Mobutu Seko who ruled “with a level of corruption and cruelty that
shocked even his CIA handlers,” Blum recalls.
In Ghana, in 1966, the CIA sponsored a military coup against leader
Kwame Nkrumah in 1966; in Chile, it financed the overthrow of elected
President Salvador Allende in 1973 and brought to power the murderous
regime of General Augusto Pinochet who executed 3,000 political
opponents and tortured thousands more. In Greece in 1967, the CIA
helped subvert the elections and backed a military coup that killed
8,000 Greeks in its first month of operation. “Torture, inflicted in the
most gruesome of ways, often with equipment supplied by the United
States, became routine,” Blum writes.
In South Africa, the CIA gave the apartheid government information
that led to the arrest of African National Congress leader Nelson
Mandela, who subsequently spent years in prison. In Bolivia, in 1964,
the CIA overthrew President Victor Paz; in Australia from 1972-75, the
CIA slipped millions of dollars to political opponents of the Labor
Party; ditto, Brazil in 1962; in Laos in 1960, the CIA stuffed ballot
boxes to help a strongman into power; in Portugal in the Seventies the
candidates it financed triumphed over a pro-labor government; in the
Philippines, the CIA backed governments in the 1970-90 period that
employed torture and summary execution against its own people; in El
Salvador, the CIA in the Nineties backed the wealthy in a civil war in
which 75,000 civilians were killed; and the list goes on and on.
Of course, the hatred that the CIA engenders for the American people
and American business interests is enormous. Because the Agency operates
largely in secret, most Americans are unaware of the crimes it
perpetrates in their names. As Chalmers Johnson writes in
“Blowback”(Henry Holt), former long-time CIA director Robert Gates, now
Obama’s defense secretary, admitted U.S. intelligence services began to
aid the mujahideen guerrillas in Afghanistan six months before the
Soviet invasion in December, 1979.
As has often been the case, the CIA responded to a criminal order
from one of the succession of imperial presidents that have occupied the
White House, in this instance one dated July 3, 1979, from President
Jimmy Carter. The Agency was ordered to aid the opponents of the
pro-Soviet regime in Kabul—aid that might sucker the Kremlin into
invading. “The CIA supported Osama bin Laden, like so many other extreme
fundamentalists among the mujahideen in Afghanistan, from at least 1984
on,” Johnson writes, helping bin Laden train many of the 35,000 Arab
Afghans.
Thus Carter, like his successors in the George H.W. Bush government —
Gates, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, Paul Wolfowitz,
and Colin Powell, “all bear some responsibility for the 1.8 million
Afghan casualties, 2.6 million refugees, and 10 million unexploded land
mines that followed from their decisions, as well as the ‘collateral
damage’ that befell New York City in September 2001 from an organization
they helped create during the years of anti-Soviet Afghan resistance,”
Johnson added. Worse, the Bush-Cheney regime after 9/11 “set no limits
on what the agency could do. It was the foundation for a system of
secret prisons where CIA officer and contractors used techniques that
included torture,” Weiner has written. By some estimates, the CIA in
2006 held 14,000 souls in 11 secret prisons, a vast crime against
humanity.
That the CIA has zero interest in justice and engages in gratuitous
cruelty may be seen from the indiscriminate dragnet arrests it has
perpetrated: “CIA officers snatched and grabbed more than three thousand
people in more than one hundred countries in the year after 9/11,”
Weiner writes, adding that only 14 men of all those seized “were
high-ranking authority figures within al Qaeda and its affiliates. Along
with them, the agency jailed hundreds of nobodies…(who) became ghost
prisoners in the war on terror.”
As for providing the White House with accurate intelligence, the
record of the CIA has been a fiasco. The Agency was telling President
Carter the Shah of Iran was beloved by his people and was firmly
entrenched in power in 1979 when any reader of Harper’s magazine,
available on newsstands for a buck, could read that his overthrow was
imminent—and it was. Over the years, the Agency has been wrong far more
often than it has been right.
According to an Associated Press report, when confirmed by the Senate
as the new CIA director, Leon Panetta said the Obama administration
would not prosecute CIA officers that “participated in harsh
interrogations even if they constituted torture as long as they did not
go beyond their instructions.” This will allow interrogators to evade
prosecution for following the clearly criminal orders they would have
been justified to disobey.
“Panetta also said that the Obama administration would continue to
transfer foreign detainees to other countries for questioning but only
if U.S. officials are confident that the prisoners will not be
tortured,” the AP story continued. If past is prologue, how confident
can Panetta be the CIA’s fellow goons in Egypt and Morocco will stop
torturing prisoners? Why did the CIA kidnap men off the streets of Milan
and New York and fly them to those countries in the first place if not
for torture? They certainly weren’t treating them to a Mediterranean
vacation. By its long and nearly perfect record of reckless disregard
for international law, the CIA has deprived itself of the right to
exist.
It will be worse than unfortunate if President Obama continues the
inhumane (and illegal) CIA renditions that President Bill Clinton began
and President Bush vastly expanded. If the White House thinks its
operatives can roam the world and arrest and torture any person it
chooses without a court order, without due process, and without
answering for their crimes, this signifies Americans believe themselves
to be a Master Race better than others and above international law.
That’s not much different from the philosophy that motivated Adolph
Hitler’s Third Reich. It would be the supreme irony if the American
electorate that repudiated racism last November has voted into its
highest office a constitutional lawyer who reaffirms his predecessor’s
illegal views on this activity. Renditions must be stopped. The CIA must
be abolished.
(Sherwood Ross is a Miami-based public relations consultant and
columnist who formerly reported for the Chicago Daily News, the New York
Herald-Tribune, and wire services. Reach him at sherwoodr1@yahoo.com)