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Related: About this forumGuatemala’s skeletons re-surface with questions over a dirty war
Guatemalas skeletons re-surface with questions over a dirty war
Guy Rundle | Oct 15, 2013 1:02PM
Prosecution and convictions in the wake of Guatemalas decades-long dirty war continue. They are raising questions about the Cold War that the Right will have to answer.
Ah, the 1980s, the decade that taste forgot (which used to be the 70s, until that became chic). It was an era of leg warmers, neon pink and dirty wars in Latin America. For decades, the US had run the region as its own fiefdom, crushing any attempt by locals to gain even moderate representation in trade unions or popular political parties. The juntas and the dictators were largely defunded after the end of the Cold War, at which point they collapsed, after which the era was forgotten, in a world consumed in globalisation, and then the war on terror.
But not in the place itself, which now elects the leftist governments they always would have, had they been allowed. And in Guatemala, one of the most obscure yet significant places in the region, memory is clawing its way out of the shallow earth, and walking around. And its not stopping at the border.
Thus, in a California court recently, a would-be US citizen Jorge Vinico Sosa Orantes has been convicted of falsifying information while trying to gain citizenship. Orantes is now facing 15 years imprisonment for this otherwise minor crime, because the lie concerns his membership of the Guatemalan army in 1982, and his participation of a massacre in Dos Erres, where up to 200 villagers were killed after the army raided the village looking for stolen weapons. Killed doesnt really cover it Guatemalan Kaibile special forces raped and murdered the villagers over two days, separating the children and killing them with hammers, cutting open pregnant women, and keeping teenage girls alive for days of rape before strangling them.
The event has suddenly become known in the US media as the Dos Erres massacre as if it were as singular and famous as My Lai. It is simply one of the better documented, with four soldiers and officers involved sentenced in 2012 to die in jail serving their terms of thousands of years. In fact it was simply one of hundreds of exceptionally brutal massacres conducted by the Guatemalan military in their repression of guerilla campaigns referred to as a civil war, it was more one-sided than that over a period from 1960 to a final truce in 1996.
More:
http://www.crikey.com.au/2013/10/15/guatemalas-skeletons-re-surface-with-questions-over-a-dirty-war/
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Guatemala’s skeletons re-surface with questions over a dirty war (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Oct 2013
OP
Judi Lynn
(160,545 posts)1. Material you won't see in US corporate media any time soon:
From the original article:
... By the 1960s, conditions in the eastern bloc countries that the anti-communist focused on substantially, were no picnic but nor were they anything like the charnel house that a place like Guatemala had become. The same goes for other slaughters such as the wholesale evisceration of Vietnam, neutral Cambodia, and the 1965 massacres in Indonesia. Indeed, the killings had much in common with the genuinely atrocious communist killings of the time. In Guatemala, the CIA-trained death squads sought out teachers, graduates, anyone capable of organizing literacy, union representation or similar. Eventually, they arrived at the simple expedience of killing anyone wearing glasses (when they were not massacring villages tout court). Sound familiar?
Yet such events gained either no criticism, or actual approval, from the anti-communist movement. Comparison of life in, say, Poland in the 1970s and Guatemala, shows that many of the moral priorities of anti-communists were simply grotesque. Yet a movement founded overwhelmingly by European exiles could not free its moral focus from a personal and historical focus, which saw the sufferings of white Europe as meaningful, in a way that the mere killings of brown people elsewhere could not be. Nor do they have much defense in the claim that they did not really know what was going on. Simply, they should have looked harder. The documentation was plentiful, far in excess of that available on Stalins USSR in the 1930s.
The Latin American front touches every aspect of the Cold War and anti-communism. In 2004, with the revelations of US torture at Abu Ghraib prison, the world became aware of what anyone paying attention to Latin America knew that torture has been intrinsic to US operations for a long time. Who was the US ambassador to Iraq in 2004? John Negroponte. And what was his previous experience? US ambassador to Honduras, 1981-1985, enthusiastically directing dirty wars in Central America. Suddenly, Abu Ghraib, a product of indiscriminate arrests, indefinite detention and brutal, racist US soldiers. Quelle surprise.
~snip~
Rather more has been forgotten than mere taste, especially in the US. But someday there will be a reckoning and a full moral assessment of the era, devoid of propaganda. It is beginning in Guatemala, where teams of forensic archaeologists work over the dusty hills, disinterring and distinguishing skulls and bones centuries old, from those only decades old.