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How the US Turned Three Pacifists Into Violent Terrorists |
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Thursday, 16 May 2013 07:59 |
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Quigley writes: "In ten months, an 82 year old nun and two pacifists had been successfully transformed by the U.S. government from non-violent anti-nuclear peace protestors accused of misdemeanor trespassing into felons convicted of violent crimes of terrorism."
From left, Greg Boertje-Obed, Sister Megan Rice and Michael Walli. (photo: Saul Young/News Sentinel)

How the US Turned Three Pacifists Into Violent Terrorists
By Fran Quigley, Common Dreams
16 May 13
n just ten months, the United States managed to transform an 82 year-old Catholic nun and two pacifists from non-violent anti-nuclear peace protestors accused of misdemeanor trespassing into federal felons convicted of violent crimes of terrorism. Now in jail awaiting sentencing for their acts at an Oak Ridge, TN nuclear weapons production facility, their story should chill every person concerned about dissent in the US.
Here is how it happened.
In the early morning hours of Saturday June 28, 2012, long-time peace activists Sr. Megan Rice, 82, Greg Boertje-Obed, 57, and Michael Walli, 63, cut through the chain link fence surrounding the Oak Ridge Y-12 nuclear weapons production facility and trespassed onto the property. Y-12, called the Fort Knox of the nuclear weapons industry, stores hundreds of metric tons of highly enriched uranium and works on every single one of the thousands of nuclear weapons maintained by the U.S.
Describing themselves as the Transform Now Plowshares, the three came as non-violent protestors to symbolically disarm the weapons. They carried bibles, written statements, peace banners, spray paint, flower, candles, small baby bottles of blood, bread, hammers with biblical verses on them and wire cutters. Their intent was to follow the words of Isaiah 2:4: "They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."
Sr. Megan Rice has been a Catholic sister of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus for over sixty years. Greg Boertje-Obed, a married carpenter who has a college age daughter, is an Army veteran and lives at a Catholic Worker house in Duluth Minnesota. Michael Walli, a two-term Vietnam veteran turned peacemaker, lives at the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker house in Washington DC.
In the dark, the three activists cut through a boundary fence which had signs stating "No Trespassing." The signs indicate that unauthorized entry, a misdemeanor, is punishable by up to 1 year in prison and a $100,000 fine.
No security arrived to confront them.
So the three climbed up a hill through heavy brush, crossed a road, and kept going until they saw the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility (HEUMF) surrounded by three fences, lit up by blazing lights.
Still no security.
So they cut through the three fences, hung up their peace banners, and spray-painted peace slogans on the HEUMF. Still no security arrived. They began praying and sang songs like "Down by the Riverside" and "Peace is Flowing Like a River."
When security finally arrived at about 4:30 am, the three surrendered peacefully, were arrested, and jailed.
The next Monday July 30, Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli were arraigned and charged with federal trespassing, a misdemeanor charge which carries a penalty of up to one year in jail. Frank Munger, an award-winning journalist with the Knoxville News Sentinel, was the first to publicly wonder, "If unarmed protesters dressed in dark clothing could reach the plant's core during the cover of dark, it raised questions about the plant's security against more menacing intruders."
On Wednesday August 1, all nuclear operations at Y-12 were ordered to be put on hold in order for the plant to focus on security. The "security stand-down" was ordered by security contractor in charge of Y-12, B&W Y-12 (a joint venture of the Babcock and Wilcox Company and Bechtel National Inc.) and supported by the National Nuclear Security Administration.
On Thursday August 2, Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli appeared in court for a pretrial bail hearing. The government asked that all three be detained. One prosecutor called them a potential "danger to the community" and asked that all three be kept in jail until their trial. The US Magistrate allowed them to be released.
Sr. Megan Rice walked out of the jail and promptly admitted to gathered media that the three had indeed gone onto the property and taken action in protest of nuclear weapons. "But we had to - we were doing it because we had to reveal the truth of the criminality which is there, that's our obligation," Rice said. She also challenged the entire nuclear weapons industry: "We have the power, and the love, and the strength and the courage to end it and transform the whole project, for which has been expended more than 7.2 trillion dollars," she said. "The truth will heal us and heal our planet, heal our diseases, which result from the disharmony of our planet caused by the worst weapons in the history of mankind, which should not exist. For this we give our lives - for the truth about the terrible existence of these weapons."
Then the government began increasing the charges against the anti-nuclear peace protestors.
The day after the Magistrate ordered the release of Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli, a Department of Energy (DOE) agent swore out a federal criminal complaint against the three for damage to federal property, a felony punishable by zero to five years in prison, under 18 US Code Section 1363.
The DOE agent admitted the three carried a letter which stated, "We come to the Y-12 facility because our very humanity rejects the designs of nuclearism, empire and war. Our faith in love and nonviolence encourages us to believe that our activity here is necessary; that we come to invite transformation, undo the past and present work of Y-12; disarm and end any further efforts to increase the Y-12 capacity for an economy and social structure based on war-making and empire-building."
Now, Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli were facing one misdemeanor and one felony and up to six years in prison.
But the government did not stop there. The next week, the charges were enlarged yet again.
On Tuesday August 7, the U.S. expanded the charges against the peace activists to three counts. The first was the original charge of damage to Y-12 in violation of 18 US Code 1363, punishable by up to five years in prison. The second was an additional damage to federal property in excess of $1000 in violation of 18 US Code 1361, punishable by up to ten years in prison. The third was a trespassing charge, a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in prison under 42 US Code 2278.
Now they faced up to sixteen years in prison. And the actions of the protestors started to receive national and international attention.
On August 10, 2012, the New York Times ran a picture of Sr. Megan Rice on page one under the headline "The Nun Who Broke into the Nuclear Sanctum." Citing nuclear experts, the paper of record called their actions "the biggest security breach in the history of the nation's atomic complex."
At the end of August 2012, the Inspector General of the Department of Energy issued at comprehensive report on the security breakdown at Y-12. Calling the peace activists trespassers, the report indicated that the three were able to get as far as they did because of "multiple system failures on several levels." The cited failures included cameras broken for six months, ineptitude in responding to alarms, communication problems, and many other failures of the contractors and the federal monitors. The report concluded that "Ironically, the Y-12 breach may have been an important "wake-up" call regarding the need to correct security issues at the site."
On October 4, 2012, the defendants announced that they had been advised that, unless they pled guilty to at least one felony and the misdemeanor trespass charge, the U.S. would also charge them with sabotage against the U.S. government, a much more serious charge. Over 3000 people signed a petition to U.S. Attorney General Holder asking him not to charge them with sabotage.
But on December 4, 2012, the U.S. filed a new indictment of the protestors. Count one was the promised new charge of sabotage. Defendants were charged with intending to injure, interfere with, or obstruct the national defense of the United States and willful damage of national security premises in violation of 18 US Code 2155, punishable with up to 20 years in prison. Counts two and three were the previous felony property damage charges, with potential prison terms of up to fifteen more years in prison.
Gone entirely was the original misdemeanor charge of trespass. Now Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli faced up to thirty-five years in prison.
In a mere five months, government charges transformed them from misdemeanor trespassers to multiple felony saboteurs.
The government also successfully moved to strip the three from presenting any defenses or testimony about the harmful effects of nuclear weapons. The U.S. Attorney's office filed a document they called "Motion to Preclude Defendants from Introducing Evidence in Support of Certain Justification Defenses." In this motion, the U.S. asked the court to bar the peace protestors from being allowed to put on any evidence regarding the illegality of nuclear weapons, the immorality of nuclear weapons, international law, or religious, moral or political beliefs regarding nuclear weapons, the Nuremberg principles developed after WWII, First Amendment protections, necessity or US policy regarding nuclear weapons.
Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli argued against the motion. But, despite powerful testimony by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark, a declaration from an internationally renowned physician and others, the Court ruled against defendants.
Meanwhile, Congress was looking into the security breach, and media attention to the trial grew with a remarkable story in the Washington Post, with CNN coverage and AP and Reuters joining in.
The trial was held in Knoxville in early May 2013. The three peace activists were convicted on all counts. Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli all took the stand, admitted what they had done, and explained why they did it. The federal manager of Y-12 said the protestors had damaged the credibility of the site in the U.S. and globally and even claimed that their acts had an impact on nuclear deterrence.
As soon as the jury was dismissed, the government moved to jail the protestors because they had been convicted of "crimes of violence." The government argued that cutting the fences and spray-painting slogans was property damage such as to constitute crimes of violence so the law obligated their incarceration pending sentencing.
The defense pointed out that Rice, Boertje-Obed, and Walli had remained free since their arrest without incident. The government attorneys argued that two of the protestors had violated their bail by going to a congressional hearing about the Y-12 security problems, an act that had been approved by their parole officers.
The three were immediately jailed. In its decision affirming their incarceration pending their sentencing, the court ruled that both the sabotage and the damage to property convictions were defined by Congress as federal crimes of terrorism. Since the charges carry potential sentences of ten years or more, the Court ruled there was a strong presumption in favor of incarceration which was not outweighed by any unique circumstances that warranted their release pending sentencing.
These non-violent peace activists now sit in jail as federal prisoners, awaiting their sentencing on September 23, 2013.
In ten months, an 82 year old nun and two pacifists had been successfully transformed by the U.S. government from non-violent anti-nuclear peace protestors accused of misdemeanor trespassing into felons convicted of violent crimes of terrorism.

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FOCUS | The Real I.R.S. Scandal |
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Wednesday, 15 May 2013 10:50 |
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Toobin writes: "More hearings, with more outrage, are planned. In light of this, it might be useful to ask: Did the I.R.S. actually do anything wrong?"
Jim Griffin (C) listens as James Manship reads from the U.S. Constitution during a Tea Party Patriots rally on the west lawn of the U.S. Capitol. (photo: Ron Lamkey/Getty Images North America)

The Real I.R.S. Scandal
By Jeffrey Toobin, The New Yorker
15 May 13
ashington's scandal machinery, rusty from recent disuse, is cranking back up to speed due to the alleged targeting of conservative groups by the Internal Revenue Service. Darrell Issa, the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said, "It's the kind of thing that scares the American people to their core. When Americans are being targeted for audits based on their political beliefs, that needs to change." Senator Susan Collins, of Maine, called on the President to apologize. George Will said President Obama could be impeached. Obama himself is taking the path of contrition. At a news conference Monday, the President said, "If in fact I.R.S. personnel engaged in the kind of practices that have been reported on and were intentionally targeting conservative groups, then that's outrageous. And there's no place for it." More hearings, with more outrage, are planned.
In light of this, it might be useful to ask: Did the I.R.S. actually do anything wrong?
The stories began to come to light on Friday, when the Associated Press reported that a draft report by a Treasury Department inspector general had found that the I.R.S. subjected certain Tea Party-affiliated groups to undue scrutiny. Lois Lerner, head of the I.R.S. tax-exempt-organizations division, said the agency was "apologetic" for what she termed "absolutely inappropriate" actions by lower-level workers.
It's important to review why the Tea Party groups were petitioning the I.R.S. anyway. They were seeking approval to operate under section 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code. This would require them to be "social welfare," not political, operations. There are significant advantages to being a 501(c)(4). These groups don't pay taxes; they don't have to disclose their donors - unlike traditional political organizations, such as political-action committees. In return for the tax advantage and the secrecy, the 501(c)(4) organizations must refrain from traditional partisan political activity, like endorsing candidates.
If that definition sounds murky - that is, if it's unclear what 501(c)(4) organizations are allowed to do - that's because it is murky. Particularly leading up to the 2012 elections, many conservative organizations, nominally 501(c)(4)s, were all but explicitly political in their work. For example, Americans for Prosperity, which was funded in part by the Koch Brothers, was an instrumental force in helping the Republicans hold the House of Representatives. In every meaningful sense, groups like Americans for Prosperity were operating as units of the Republican Party. Democrats organized similar operations, but on a much smaller scale. (They undoubtedly would have done more, but they lacked the Republican base for funding such efforts.)
So the scandal - the real scandal - is that 501(c)(4) groups have been engaged in political activity in such a sustained and open way. As Fred Wertheimer, the President of Democracy 21, a government-ethics watchdog group, put it, "it is clear that a number of groups have improperly claimed tax-exempt status as section 501(c)(4) 'social welfare' organizations in order to hide the donors who financed their campaign activities in the 2010 and 2012 federal elections."
Some people in the I.R.S. field office in Cincinnati took the names of certain groups - names that included the terms "Tea Party" and "patriot," among others, which tend to signal conservatism - as signals that they might not be engaged in "social welfare" operations. Rather, the I.R.S. employees thought that these groups might be doing explicit politics - which would disqualify them for 501(c)(4) status, and set them aside for closer examination. This appears to have been a pretty reasonable assumption on the part of the I.R.S. employees: having "Tea Party" in your name is at least a slight clue about partisanship. When the inspector-general report becomes public, we'll surely learn the identity of these organizations. How many will look like "social welfare" organizations - and how many will look like political activists looking for anonymity and tax breaks? My guess is a lot more of the latter than the former.
It is certainly true that the I.R.S., and every other part of the government, should be evenhanded in how it applies the law, regarding liberal and conservative groups alike. If left-leaning organizations were disguising their true purposes to obtain 501(c)(4) status, the I.R.S. should have turned them down, too. And there will also be questions about how the Service, which is an independent agency, answered questions from Congress.
But let's be clear on the real scandal here. The columnist Michael Kinsley has often observed that the scandal isn't what's illegal - it's what's legal. It's what society chooses not to punish that tells us most about the prevailing ethical standards of the time. Campaign finance operates by shaky, or even nonexistent, rules, and powerful players game the system with impunity. A handful of I.R.S. employees saw this and tried, in a small way, to impose some small sense of order. For that, they'll likely be ushered into bureaucratic oblivion.

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Benghazi Isn't Watergate It's Whitewater |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6853"><span class="small">Frank Rich, New York Magazine</span></a>
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Wednesday, 15 May 2013 07:57 |
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Rich writes: "The Hillary-haters have not found another Watergate but another Whitewater. It should keep them very busy through 2016 even if the public continues to turn a deaf ear."
House Oversight And Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa is striking out on Benghazi (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Benghazi Isn't Watergate It's Whitewater
By Frank Rich, New York Magazine
15 May 13
he House's Inspector Javert, Congressman Darrell Issa, held a hearing on the Benghazi attack yesterday at which a State Department official, Gregory Hicks, charged the administration with incompetence and worse. Mike Huckabee said that Obama will be impeached for Benghazi. Others suggest it'll badly damage Hillary Clinton's presidential prospects. Is anybody, Fox News included, going to be talking about this story six months from now?
It's not entirely clear that anyone is talking about it even now once you get beyond the Beltway and the GOP's Fox News base. Even Hicks's emotional testimony yesterday was overshadowed on television by a different kind of horror story emerging from Cleveland. Why are the Republicans getting so little traction with this story? After all, they have been pounding it for eight months. They believed that Benghazi was figuratively as well as literally the 9/11 of 2012, and that its fallout would usher Romney into the presidency. In fact, it barely registered as a concern in any polls. Now they believe (in Lindsey Graham's characteristically understated judgment) that Benghazi is "every bit as damaging as Watergate," a gateway both to the president's impeachment and to a GOP victory over Hillary in 2016. Yet no one else does. There are several reasons: Clinton has taken responsibility for the systemic failures that occurred on her watch; Republicans in Congress have not been able to deflect their own share of the blame, the budget cutbacks that shortchanged embassy and consulate security; Susan Rice's endlessly parsed talking points notwithstanding, no one to the left of Sean Hannity seriously believes that the Obama White House was trying to cover up a terrorist attack. But the main explanation for Benghazi's inability to catch fire with the public has to do with the American intelligence failure that led to the original 9/11 in which 3,000, not four, Americans were killed: Bush and Cheney's inability to heed such warning signs as the President's Daily Brief of August 6, 2001, "Bin Laden determined to strike in US." Many of the same voices who are pounding Obama and Clinton on Benghazi - Graham, for instance - are the same ones who defended that lapse and then cheered on an Iraq War that drained resources from the battle against Al Qaeda and the search for Bin Laden. They have no credibility. And they are overselling the failures of Benghazi much as they oversold Saddam Hussein's nonexistent WMD. If you read the intricate conservative briefs vilifying Hillary in the aftermath of yesterday's testimony - check out this one - you can see that the Hillary-haters have not found another Watergate but another Whitewater. It should keep them very busy through 2016 even if the public continues to turn a deaf ear.
Former South Carolina governor Mark Sanford won back his old Congressional seat on Tuesday. Sanford's chances looked poor last month after news leaked that his ex-wife had filed a trespassing charge against him and the National Republican Congressional Committee pulled its support. Was this simply a reliable conservative winning a reliably conservative district, warts and all? Or should we read anything into Sanford's victory about the declining importance of a candidate's personal values to the U.S. electorate?
Yes, and yes. Even if Sanford's Democratic opponent, Elizabeth Colbert Busch, had eked out a victory in this special election, she likely would have lost the seat to a Republican, whoever it was, in this conservative Dixie district's next regular election. And Sanford's victory does demonstrate once again that the religious right is spent as a force in the 21st-century GOP. A Republican can mock "family values" and "traditional marriage" as much as he wants and still win even in what used to be Christian Coalition country as long as his conservative ideology hits every secular benchmark.
The Senate Judiciary Committee takes up the immigration-reform bill today, after a week in which Jim DeMint's Heritage Foundation argued that the law would cost taxpayers trillions and Marco Rubio, the leader of pro-reform Republicans, returned the fire and questioned Heritage's analysis. Meanwhile, the Times reports that GOP opponents of the bill are planning to hijack it during the amendment process. Rubio has staked a lot of political capital on this bill. Is he going to get it passed?
I wouldn't bet on it. The battle between the former close allies DeMint and Rubio crystallizes the larger "rebranding" battle in the GOP since Election Day. And it's going to get ugly. Republicans with national ambitions like Rubio are desperately hoping to win back a fast-growing Latino electorate that in general regards his party as a haven for nativist bigots. But there are many in the base who still want an electrified fence, not "amnesty," for undocumented immigrants. DeMint is their champion (as is virtually every right-wing talk-show host), and now that he is at Heritage, he can concoct bogus pseudo-academic research to buttress the anti-reform argument. Indeed, it turns out that a co-author of the Heritage economic analysis that DeMint pushed this week is also the author of an earlier scholarly paper warning that "new Hispanic immigrants will have low-IQ children and grandchildren." That's further evidence, if any was needed, of what I wrote in my essay in New York this week: The modern GOP, for all its talk of new outreach to minorities, is still haunted by the ghost of one of DeMint's immediate predecessors as a South Carolina Senator: the white supremacist Strom Thurmond.
New Jersey governor Chris Christie revealed on Tuesday that he has undergone "Lap Band" surgery, which, of course, doesn't necessarily say anything about his political ambitions. After all, Christie is too liberal and too admiring of President Obama to win GOP primaries, and now Michelle Obama has called him "terrific." Still, polls show him cruising to reelection and the party has a thing for nominating Establishment candidates. Could he? And, maybe more important at this juncture, do you think he thinks he could?
Christie is very popular in New Jersey, a fantasy president to the dwindling ranks of moderate Republicans (many of whom are next door in New York, particularly its financial sector), and an egomaniac who certainly thinks he could be president. (His speech at last summer's Republican convention was widely regarded, and reviled, as an advertisement for himself, not Romney.) But I'd say his presidential prospects are about the same as that other centrist-Republican heartthrob of elites in the Northeast, Michael Bloomberg - nil. That said, once they've both graduated from local office, Christie and Bloomberg would make for a highly entertaining odd-couple pairing if any network wants to offer a fresh morning-television alternative to Kelly and Michael, Mika and Joe, and Hoda and Kathie-Lee.

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Indicting Reagan, Israel, and the God Squads in the Guatemalan Holocaust |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>
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Tuesday, 14 May 2013 14:14 |
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Weissman writes: "Rios Montt's conviction leaves untouched a host of never indicted foreign co-conspirators, from former US president Ronald Reagan to Evangelical and Pentecostal missionaries and shadowy Israelis with unspoken connections to their government."
President Ronald Reagan meeting with Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt. (photo: Corbis)

Indicting Reagan, Israel, and the God Squads in the Guatemalan Holocaust
By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News
14 May 13
hree Guatemalan judges last week convicted General Efraín Ríos Montt, the former military dictator, of genocide and crimes against humanity for leading the "scorched earth" Plan Victoria that killed 1,771 Mayan Ixils during his 17-month rule in 1982-1983. Never before has a national judicial process found a former head of state guilty of genocide, hopefully diminishing the existing impunity of war criminals from the Congo to Crawford, Texas.
More now needs to follow, if only in the court of world opinion. Beside many still unpunished Guatemalans, Rios Montt's conviction leaves untouched a host of never indicted foreign co-conspirators, from former U.S. president Ronald Reagan to Evangelical and Pentecostal missionaries and shadowy Israelis with unspoken connections to their government.
They all played a part in making possible the killing, rape, torture and disappearances of the Ixil people and - according to the United Nations Historical Clarification Commission - as many as 200,000 others, mostly Mayans and poor mestizos. Another 50,000 were disappeared and more than 1 million were displaced as the army razed their villages.
Legal appeals and injunctions from another court could still let the 86-year-old Rios Montt walk free from his 80-year sentence. The possibility is real, especially since the current Guatemalan president, Otto Perez Molino, a former military commander, continues to insist that there was no genocide, only a bloody civil war against leftist insurgents from 1962 to 1996.
Official documents and the blood-chilling testimony of survivors tell a more truthful story. In brief, successive Guatemalan governments have systematically used genocide to fight the civil war and continue violence against the indigenous Mayans reaching back 500 years to the time of the European Conquest.
Paraphrasing Mao Tse-Tung, Rios Montt explained it this way in 1982: "The guerrilla is the fish. The people are the sea. If you cannot catch the fish, you have to drain the sea."
A career military officer, Rios Montt began learning his craft in 1951 at the U.S. Army's School of the Americas. He then served in the CIA's 1954 coup against the reformist government of President Jacobo Arbenz and in support of United Fruit, a formative episode for Guatemala, Washington, and military dictatorships throughout Latin America.
Growing increasingly political, Rios Montt ran for president in 1974 and most observers feel that he was robbed of victory. Two years later, after Guatemala suffered a devastating earthquake, he met Pentecostal "God Squads" from a Northern California group called Global Outreach, which had grown out of the Jesus People of the 1960s. The missionaries converted the formerly Catholic Rios Montt, who soon became an impassioned pastor in their Iglesia del Verbo, the Church of the Word.
In this new role, the born-again general became a huge favorite of the Christian Broadcasting Network's Pat Robertson, the Moral Majority's Jerry Falwell, and the evangelists Billy Graham, Jimmy Swaggart, and Loren Cunningham. Their backing opened the White House door when Ronald Reagan became president in 1981.
Eager to fight what he saw as a growing Communist threat in Central America, Reagan quickly sent his personal envoy General Vernon Walters, a former aide to Henry Kissinger and deputy director of the CIA, to meet with the Guatemalan president, Romeo Lucas Garcia. The goal was to strengthen relations, which had soured under Jimmy Carter in the face of growing human rights abuses. Carter had never completely cut off military support, while declassified cables show that the CIA continued to supply money and other assistance. But Reagan set out to do far more.
The following year, as U.S. support for Guatemala grew, a military coup made Rios Montt head of state. Reagan quickly supported him, while America's right-wing Christian leaders fell all over themselves praising the beginning of what we now know as genocide. As Sara Diamond wrote in her book "Spiritual Warfare" in 1989, "Rios Montt's ascension to power was celebrated by the U.S. Christian Right as a sign of divine intervention in Central America."
As if to prove them right, Rios Montt brought in American and Guatemalan advisers from Global Outreach to administer so-called model villages, which were much like the strategic hamlets that the Americans used with far less success in Vietnam. Other American Evangelicals and Pentecostals also flew in to hand out the beans while the Guatemalan Army fired the bullets.
Rios Montt described Plan Victoria's rural pacification in very simple terms: "If you are with us, we'll feed you. If not, we'll kill you." Or, as Catholic blogger Hank Zyp, a Canadian, noted with horror, "God squads and death squads worked hand in hand to introduce the Mayan people to the American Dream."
"In the first two months of his reign, some 1,800 preachers arrived from the U.S. to win the hearts and minds of the peasants with gifts of food and clothing," wrote Zyp. "The number of converts increased among the hungry internal refugees. Model villages, somewhat like reservations, were built to control the uprooted people. Civil guards were appointed to rat on their own relatives."
Though hardly unbiased, Zyp's colorfully expressed views square with other available evidence, and describe better than most the reality of Plan Victoria, which American counter-insurgency advisers were abetting. Reagan added to the effort, stepping up military arms shipments to Guatemala and accusing human rights organizations of giving the general "a bum rap."
The Israelis served as silent partners. According to an exhaustively documented article by political scientist Jane Hunter, Israel began as early as 1974 to sell Guatemala weapons. These came to include Arava aircraft, armored personnel carriers, Dabur class patrol boats armed with Gabriel missiles, light cannons, machine guns, Uzis, and Galil assault rifles, which became standard in the Guatemalan Army.
With Carter's effort to keep Washington looking uninvolved, the Israelis increased their sales and built Guatemala an airbase and munitions factory. Reagan then gave the Israelis the go-ahead to become Guatemala's largest suppliers of weapons.
Israeli advisers also worked with Lucas Gomez's police and intelligence services to hunt down underground rebel groups, especially in urban areas. According to Hunter, the Israelis based much of their work on intelligence networks, computers, and other technology tried and tested on the West Bank and Gaza. Big land-owners appear to have hired Israeli non-commissioned officers to train their private security details, many of which worked with off-duty military officers to form the "death squads."
The Israelis may have had a hand in the 1982 military coup, as Rios Montt publicly attributed its success to Israeli training of "many of our soldiers." The following year, when he was ousted, an Israeli adviser spirited him away to Miami. In between, according to Hunter, Israeli military advisors helped develop and carry out the scorched earth policy of Plan Victoria, in which the army used Israeli and American planes to bomb, strafe, and burn hundreds of villages and drive those who survived into the model villages administered by so many good Christians.
Reagan, the Israelis, and the God Squads - where are the war crime indictments?
A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he is researching a new book, "Big Money: How Global Banks, Corporations, and Speculators Rule and How To Break Their Hold."
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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