This American Life on Guatemalan Genocide
This American Life on Guatemalan Genocide
Washington's role is a story not worth telling
By Keane Bhatt
Jul 31 2013
On the evening of December 4, 1982, President Ronald Reagan informed reporters assembled at an Air Force base in Honduras that he had just engaged in a useful exchange of ideas with Efraín Rios Montt. The Guatemalan military general was the most recent in a succession of U.S.-backed dictators who had been governing the country since the CIA first toppled its democratically elected president, Jacobo Arbenz, in 1954.
I know that President Rios Montt is a man of great personal integrity and commitment, Reagan continued. I know he wants to improve the quality of life for all Guatemalans and to promote social justice. My administration will do all it can to support his progressive efforts. In a question-and-answer period, Reagan also shrugged off accusations of human rights violations committed by Rios Montt and his military: Frankly Im inclined to believe theyve been getting a bum rap, he declared.
Just two days later, on the evening of December 6, a 20-member team of Kaibil forceselite Guatemalan commandosinitiated a military operation that decimated the inhabitants of the remote village of Dos Erres in the Petén region. The murder count of over 250 only hints at the savagery: In a matter of hours, the Kaibiles raped children (ProPublica, 3/25/12), forced miscarriages by jumping on pregnant womens abdomens (Inter-American Court of Human Rights Judgment, 11/24/09) and flung at least 67 children down a well to their deaths (Seattle Times, 8/10/11), among other atrocities.
Dos Erres was just one of over 600 towns to be ravaged by the military in a scorched-earth campaign by Rios Montt during his brief 17-month tenure. Like his predecessor Gen. Lucas García, he presided over a strategy to defeat the countrys leftist insurgency while also destroying its civilian support mechanisms, according to national-security documents unearthed by investigative journalist Robert Parry at the Reagan Library (Consortium News, 5/11/13).
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http://fair.org/extra-online-articles/this-american-life-on-guatemalan-genocide/