From: Consortium News
May 11, 2013
Exclusive:
More than any recent U.S. president, Ronald Reagan has been lavished
with honors, including his name attached to Washington’s National
Airport. But the conviction of Reagan’s old ally, ex-Guatemalan dictator
Rios Montt, for genocide means “Ronnie” must face history’s judgment as
an accessory to the crime, reports Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
The conviction of former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt on
charges of genocide against Mayan villagers in the 1980s has a special
meaning for Americans who idolize Ronald Reagan. It means that their
hero was an accessory to one of the most grievous crimes that can be
committed against humanity.
The courage of the Guatemalan people and the integrity of their legal
system to exact some accountability on a still-influential political
figure also put U.S. democracy to shame. For decades now, Americans have
tolerated human rights crimes by U.S. presidents who face little or no
accountability. Usually, the history isn’t even compiled honestly.
President Ronald Reagan. |
By contrast, a Guatemalan court on Friday found
Rios Montt guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity and
sentenced the 86-year-old ex-dictator to 80 years in prison. After the
ruling, when Rios Montt rose and tried to walk out of the courtroom,
Judge Yasmin Barrios shouted at him to stay put and then had security
officers take him into custody.
Yet, while Guatemalans demonstrate the strength to face a dark
chapter of their history, the American people remain mostly oblivious to
Reagan’s central role in tens of thousands of political murders across
Central America in the 1980s, including some 100,000 dead in Guatemala
slaughtered by Rios Montt and other military dictators.
Indeed, Ronald Reagan – by aiding, abetting, encouraging and covering
up widespread human rights crimes in El Salvador, Honduras and
Nicaragua as well as Guatemala – bears greater responsibility for
Central America’s horrors than does Rios Montt in his bloody 17-month
rule. Reagan supported Guatemala’s brutal repression both before and
after Rios Montt held power, as well as during.
Despite that history, more honors have been bestowed on Reagan than
any recent president. Americans have allowed the naming of scores of
government facilities in Reagan’s honor, including Washington National
Airport where Reagan’s name elbowed aside that of George Washington, who
led the War of Independence, oversaw the drafting of the U.S.
Constitution and served as the nation’s first president.
So, as America’s former reputation as a beacon for human rights
becomes a bad joke to the rest of the world, it is unthinkable within
the U.S. political/media structure that Reagan would get posthumously
criticized for the barbarity that he promoted. No one of importance
would dare suggest that his name be stripped from National Airport and
his statue removed from near the airport entrance.
But the evidence is overwhelming that the 40th president
of the United States was guilty as an accessory to genocide and a wide
range of other war crimes, including torture, rape, terrorism and
narcotics trafficking. [See Robert Parry's Lost History.]
Green Light to Genocide
Regarding Guatemala, the documentary evidence is clear that Reagan
and his top aides gave a green light to the extermination campaign
against the Mayan Ixil population in the highlands even before Rios
Montt came to power. Despite receiving U.S. intelligence reports
revealing these atrocities, the Reagan administration also pressed ahead
in an extraordinary effort to arrange military equipment, including
helicopters, to make the slaughter more efficient.
“In the tortured logic of military planning documents conceived under
Mr. Ríos Montt’s 17-month rule during 1982 and 1983, the entire Mayan
Ixil population was a military target, children included,” the New York
Times reported from Rios
Montt’s trial last month. “Officers wrote that the leftist guerrillas
fighting the government had succeeded in indoctrinating the impoverished
Ixils and reached ‘100 percent support.’”
So, everyone was targeted in these scorched-earth campaigns that
eradicated more than 600 Indian villages in the Guatemalan highlands.
But documents from this period indicate that these counterinsurgency
strategies predated Rios Montt. And, they received the blessing of the
Reagan administration shortly after Reagan took power in 1981. MORE
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