The Upside of Genocide
The reputations of Reagan-era officials who enabled the Guatemalan genocide have not been tarnished.
Eric Alterman
June 19, 2013
This article appeared in the July 8-15, 2013 edition of The Nation.
... When Ríos Montt executed his coup in March 1982, US Ambassador Frederic Chapinperhaps naïvely, perhaps cynicallywelcomed the event with the words The Guatemalan government has come out of the darkness and into the light. Even after the killings increased in intensity, this remained the official US line. Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights Elliott Abrams credited Ríos Montt with having brought considerable progress on human rights issues and insisted that the amount of killing of innocent civilians is being reduced step by step. As if living in an Orwell novel, Abrams demanded that Congress provide the regime with advanced arms ...
... Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Thomas Enders wrote to Amnesty International disputing its reporting on the killings in Guatemala and insisted that the government was making significant progress on human rights while the genocide was taking place. Whats more, declassified documents reveal that just ten days before Reagan sang the dictators praises upon meeting him, the State Department had received reports of a well-founded allegation of a large-scale killing of Indian men, women and children in a remote area ...
Thomas Enders was rewarded with an ambassadorship to Spain. Elliott Abrams was raked over the coals a bit during Iran-Contra for lying to Congress, but not for his role in helping to ensure that the Guatemalan militarys mass murder continued unimpeded. Following a high-level Middle East policy job in the second Bush administration, Abrams was welcomed by the Council on Foreign Relations ...
http://www.thenation.com/article/174885/upside-genocide#axzz2WnAqPNwH