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Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
Fri Oct 19, 2012, 06:46 AM Oct 2012

Panetta Down South: The Pentagon’s New Plan to Confront Latin America’s Pink Tide

October 19-21, 2012

Panetta Down South

The Pentagon’s New Plan to Confront Latin America’s Pink Tide
by NICK ALEXANDROV

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was in Uruguay recently, where he spoke of the need to strengthen the southern hemisphere’s police forces. This proposed policy has a precedent, almost unknown in this country, but potentially indicative of what awaits Latin American governments willing to cooperate with their northern neighbor’s defense establishment. In the 1960s, Washington initiated a decade-long training program for Uruguay’s police, helping transform them from a weak, underfunded force into an efficient instrument of repression. The metamorphosis coincided with Uruguay’s descent from democracy to dictatorship, as “the Switzerland of Latin America” became, by the time the U.S. had finished its work, the world’s leader in political prisoners per capita.

Panetta delivered his remarks at Punta del Este, where the Alliance for Progress was launched in 1961. Aimed at raising income levels and promoting land reform in Latin America, President Kennedy’s program reflected his agenda accurately—to about the same extent Obama’s handshake with Chávez heralded a “friendly turn” in U.S.-Latin American relations. Down here on Earth, Obama ensured the current Honduran regime stole the last election successfully. In the fraud’s aftermath, death squads roam the country, murdering human rights lawyers and activists. The Kennedy administration, for its part, oversaw the write-up of a development plan for Uruguay within the Alliance framework, which was effectively discarded upon completion. None of its recommendations were ever carried out, since other matters took priority. In 1962, Kennedy created the Office of Public Safety (OPS), supervised loosely by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and responsible for Uruguay’s Public Safety Program (PSP) from 1964-1974.

The PSP was a training program for Uruguay’s police, who received instruction both in the U.S. and their home country, part of the general effort to combat rising urban terrorism and crime. Or at least that was the authorized rationale. U.S. government documents, meanwhile, tell a different story. Half a year after the program began, for example, USAID officials in Montevideo explained that “Uruguay has enjoyed a relatively peaceful state of security for many years,” and that “[n]o active threat of insurgency exists.” In the 2012 version of this story, Panetta offers drug traffickers and insurgents as the twin dangers necessitating revamped police squads. But if the past is any guide, these claims should be met with extreme skepticism.

The Tupamaros, a left-wing political group, are often considered the main target of the PSP. They spent their first few years organizing, and raiding banks and weapons caches for funds and guns. They next started kidnapping top officials, beginning with the head of the state telephone company—who was also President Jorge Pacheco Areco’s close friend and adviser—in August 1968. But the guerrillas took their hostage only after Pacheco cracked down on left-wing periodicals and political parties, declaring a state of emergency that allowed the government to make use of its “special powers” at will. The fact that Uruguay’s democracy was unraveling had been pointed out by a number of observers several years before. One of these noted in 1965 that, while a pair of “political parties have dominated the Uruguayan scene for over 100 years,” they were effectively identical, characterized by “little difference of policy.” These parties’ shared aims did not include taking action to remedy the “continuing industrial recession, rising unemployment…and a spiraling cost of living” underway at the time. The radical implications of this analysis—which was the CIA’s—are obvious: to improve Uruguayan lives, actions had to be taken outside the established political channels, given that the two major parties were doing nothing, and in fact promoting, the deepening austerity. The Tupamaros, of course, agreed with the CIA on this point, but these groups diverged in their visions for the future. While the rebels wished to see conditions improve within the context of a better social order, Washington wanted to prevent Uruguayans from even protesting the “continuing industrial recession” through which they suffered.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/10/19/the-pentagons-new-plan-to-confront-latin-americas-pink-tide/

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Panetta Down South: The Pentagon’s New Plan to Confront Latin America’s Pink Tide (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2012 OP
Cross-posted this article in "Good Reads", discovered the author responded to someone's post. Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #1
Writes well. nt bemildred Oct 2012 #2
"Panetta emphasized the ongoing role the School of the Americas (currently WHINSEC) would play." !!! Agony Oct 2012 #3
It looks as if they're still as determined as ever, regardless of decades of U.S. protest Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #4

Agony

(2,605 posts)
3. "Panetta emphasized the ongoing role the School of the Americas (currently WHINSEC) would play." !!!
Fri Oct 19, 2012, 07:33 PM
Oct 2012

What is it going to take to kill this tool of empire?

Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
4. It looks as if they're still as determined as ever, regardless of decades of U.S. protest
Fri Oct 19, 2012, 08:41 PM
Oct 2012

annually against their actions, and regardless of all the U.S. American people they've thrown in prison for expressing their opposition to their deadly impact upon the people of the Americas.

Even when their infamous torture manual was exposed, it never slowed them down, not for a second.

Can only hope more countries will join the first ones in withdrawing from sending their people to Ft. Benning for SOA courses.

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