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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring
Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
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Memorandum to the Press 04.20 |
Tuesday, April 27, 2004 |
Word Count: 5,008
ATTENTION
Senate Foreign Relations Committee is
right now holding confirmation hearings on John Negroponte
to be
COHA is here re-releasing its memorandum issued last Thursday on
Negroponte’s controversial stint as ambassador to Honduras,
1981-85.
Negroponte: Nominee for
·
Negroponte pressed Powell to pressure
·
Negroponte has a sordid human rights record in
·
A Cruel Joke: Negroponte, the arch authoritarian,
teaching democracy to the Iraqis.
·
Life under Saddam somewhat prepares you for the
Negroponte era.
·
Senate Foreign Relations Committee unlikely to closely
scrutinize Negroponte nomination.
·
Like the earlier nominations of Otto Reich, John Bolton
and Roger Noriega, Secretary of State Colin Powell will have no trouble in
describing this villain as an “honorable” man.
President Bush confirmed
recent rumors by announcing on Monday that John D. Negroponte was being
nominated to become this country’s ambassador to
The central fact to the
Negroponte story is that he misled Congress when some of its members attempted
to question him about his complicity in helping to cover up his knowledge and
direct personal involvement in the training, equipping and distracting
attention from the heinous acts of Battalion 316, the Honduran death squad
which at the time of Negroponte’s residence in Honduras was responsible for the
murder of almost 200 Honduran dissidents opposed to their country being used as
an “unsinkable aircraft carrier” in the U.S.-backed Contra war against
Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinistas.
Negroponte
Arrives in
Negroponte replaced Jack
Binns, who had been President Carter’s ambassador to
Negroponte
Doctors Human Rights Reports
There is no question
that Negroponte and the rest of the senior embassy personnel must have known
about the disappearances and tortures of Honduran leftists since some of the
most widely-distributed newspapers in the country carried at least 318 stories
about such military abuses in 1982 alone.
Negroponte also had direct contact with General Gustavo Alvarez
Martinez, by then the chief of the Honduran armed forces and the secret head of
Battalion 316. Negroponte himself has
insisted that on occasion he requested the release of a torture victim when the
story was close to breaking in the
Negroponte
Introduces the Hard Line
The replacement of Binns
by Negroponte reflected a shifting foreign policy strategy for
Negroponte’s objective
in
Which
Man is Negroponte?
To his admirers,
Negroponte is a distinguished career senior foreign service
officer who has served his country well in a number of important posts. To his detractors, Negroponte is a blunt,
self-serving opportunist who aggressively (to a point well past overkill) took
on what he perceived as being the ideological ethos of whatever administration
he was serving at the time, even if it meant stretching credulity, ethics and
personal honesty to the breaking point.
Perhaps a more accurate assessment of his performance is that he misused
his authority and egregiously flouted decent standards of professional
behavior, while scarcely looking backwards.
Rather than a paragon of democratic virtues, Negroponte is a man who has
to be seen as the anti-Christ of democracy, repeatedly dragging its noble cause
through offal. Negroponte’s nomination,
along with the earlier appointments of Cold War stalwarts such as Otto Reich
and Elliot Abrams, as well as Senator Helms’ protégé, Roger Noriega, to key
hemispheric posts by President Bush, represents a throwback to an era when
human rights and democratic processes were routinely suffered in the name of
halting purported efforts by Moscow to expand Communism throughout the
hemisphere.
To Iraqis used to Saddam
Hussein’s inflexible rule, his cynicism and indifference to the suffering of
others, Negroponte’s arrival in Baghdad will require no prolonged adaptation to
the rule or style of America’s new pro-consul in the country. They will have exchanged one man on horseback
for another. For those who are familiar
with his professional history, it will take a clothespin on one’s nose for his
Iraqi audience to stomach any speech that he makes touting democracy.
Negroponte’s
Recent Past
After Negroponte had
been nominated for the U.N. Ambassadorship, he was scheduled for a potentially
withering cross-examination by his detractors on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee for his actions in
This scenario is sure to
be replicated when it comes to the
General Luis Alonso
Discua Elivir, a former Honduran death squad commander who claimed that he
would “spill the beans” on Negroponte unless his family was allowed to remain
in this country, had his
Complicity with Death Squad Leaders
During his ambassadorship in
Alvarez was perhaps most infamous for
his close connections to the death squad that became know as Battalion
316. This Alvarez-created unit, which
received training in torture techniques from Argentine ‘dirty war’ veterans and
the CIA (according to the Pulitzer prize-winning Baltimore Sun series which in part examined Negroponte’s
controversial role in Honduras), is widely suspected of “disappearing” over 180
suspected “subversives” in the early 1980s.
At the time, any Honduran opposed to that country’s use as a staging
ground for President Reagan’s anti-Sandinista campaign was generally considered
a “subversive.”
Promoting Human Rights to Save Face
In response to recurrent journalist inquiries, as well as
in formal proceedings, Negroponte repeatedly has denied or minimized any
knowledge of charges that the Honduran military was behind the death squads and
that such a force as Battalion 316 even existed. Negroponte’s attempts to dismiss the role of
death squads have been undermined by his later boasts that, quite to the
contrary, he personally intervened in a number of instances to secure the
release of politically sensitive detainees being held by Honduran
authorities. Even if one grants this
claim, such behavior on Negroponte’s part was the exception rather than the
rule, and perhaps is an indication of how he could have saved many more lives,
if he had used his plenary position in
One such apparently rare occasion in which he professedly
intervened involved journalist Oscar Reyes, who was abducted after writing
numerous articles critical of the Honduran military. Former
Prompted
by protests from university students and a rash of newspaper publicity on Reyes
at the time, it is unlikely that Negroponte’s request for the journalist’s
release was principally motivated by abiding human rights concerns. Rather, the impetus for such singular concern
in this case almost certainly was the fear that widespread coverage of the
Reyes kidnapping could eventually make headlines in U.S. newspapers and bring
unwanted publicity to his ambassadorship and the skullduggery in which it was
involved.
Recently
released declassified documents that had been requested by the Senate for the
Negroponte hearing were always on Negroponte’s mind
because they repeatedly articulated a concern over any bad publicity that could
becloud his reputation. An undesirable
outcome of this kind would have hardened opposition to President Reagan’s
extremely controversial policy of trying to suck Honduras into the Contra war
in exchange for secret bribes to a number of that country’s political and
military officers, as well as hundreds of millions in U.S. funds being
allocated for economic and military assistance programs to the Honduran regime.
Another
high-profile case in which Negroponte claims to have intervened was the
disappearance of a suspected leftist, Inés
Murillo. A number of reports at the time
stated that a U.S. Embassy (or perhaps a CIA) official had visited the Honduran
torture facility known as INDUMIL, where Murillo was being held and tortured. The daughter of a prominent local family,
Murillo’s parents were relentless in trying to locate their daughter, even
taking out a full-page advertisement in the Honduran newspaper, El Tiempo. Negroponte professedly vocalized concern over
Murillo’s status, again fearing bad press coverage, and brought up the matter
when meeting with Honduran officials.
Four days later, Murillo was, in effect, narrowly saved from a certain
death when she was publicly sentenced to two years in prison.
Contra Connections
Starting in the early 1980s, Hondurans had become the
primary
During
his stint in
Negroponte
also played a primary role in organizing such pro-Contra projects as a regional
In
exchange for General Alvarez’s total collusion in support of Contra operations
in
By Whatever Means Necessary
John
Negroponte was sent to
Recent
reports have further established that Negroponte was very well aware of human
rights abuses in Honduras, and any doubts he had about individual cases were
politically motivated rather than the product of genuine caution or any high
evidential standard. In Search of
Hidden Truths, co-authored by the Honduran Human Rights Commissioner,
documents recently-declassified reports which provide solid evidence that the
U.S. was minutely aware of human rights abuses committed by the Honduran
military in the 1980s, in spite of Negroponte’s persistent claims to the
contrary. In addition, declassified
State Department documents also establish that in October of 1984, after
General Alvarez had been deposed by the Honduran armed forces, Negroponte’s
embassy was finally willing to acknowledge that, “responsibility for a number
of the alleged disappearances between 1981 and March 1984 can be assigned
either directly or indirectly to Alvarez himself.”
Recently
declassified cable traffic indicates a persistent inclination on Negroponte’s
behalf to wholeheartedly believe rather pitiable excuses offered by General Alvarez
to explain any human rights abuses. For
example, in a 1983 letter, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Inter-America Affairs
Craig Johnstone conveyed to Negroponte that a number of guerrillas had been
captured and executed by elements of the Honduran armed forces. Negroponte’s response was to accept General
Alvarez’s lame excuse that the six detainees were shot dead while trying to
escape. However, when dealing with
protests coming from human rights activists and political dissidents, the exact
opposite was true when it came to assessing the quality of the information
concerning allegations by Honduran human rights groups, such as CODEH, on
violations by the armed forces. These
were routinely met with skepticism if not total denial by Negroponte’s embassy,
and often, by the ambassador himself.
Further
discrediting Negroponte’s bona fides on the country’s human rights situation
are statements by Jack Binns, his immediate predecessor as ambassador to
Blatant Contradictions in Human Rights Reports
Instances of disappearances,
harassment and abductions of political dissidents all escalated under Negroponte,
yet the annual Human Rights Reports prepared by the ambassadorial staff for the
State Department’s Bureau of Humanitarian Affairs were masterpieces of cunning
redaction or invention, consistently downplaying human rights abuses and
denying that any evidence existed of systematic violations by manipulating
language and statistics. For example,
the 1982 report prepared for the State Department by Negroponte’s staff
asserted, “Legal guarantees exist against arbitrary arrest or imprisonment, and
against torture or degrading treatment.
Habeas Corpus is guaranteed by the Constitution, Honduran law provides
for arraignment within 24 hours of arrest.
This appears to be the standard practice.” All of this is absolute rubbish, and is not
even true today, let alone in the early 1980s.
In fact, Honduran judicial procedures are routinely given the worst
ratings by Transparency International.
In reality, extra-legal abductions by the military were rampant at the
time and widely reported as well. In
addition, as was acknowledged in declassified State Department documents at the
time, the judicial system was (and still is) almost entirely corrupt. Relatives’ requests for information or
visitation rights for imprisoned family members were met with stonewalling, as
court and military officials asserted that there was no record of the
individual being detained, and thus no assistance was given in locating
them. The U.S. embassy was often asked
to help find relatives or use its influence to gain the individual’s
release. Negroponte’s awareness of at
least a substantial number of these abductions is beyond dispute.
Curiously
enough, the aforementioned Reyes case did not even deserve any mention in
Negroponte’s 1982 Human Rights Report, despite widespread media coverage and
his self-professed personal involvement.
However, the following was included in the report: “No incidence of
official interference with the media has been recorded for several years.” It was difficult even for embassy staff in
Promoting Democracy Only When Necessary
Before
being sent to Washington, the embassy’s human rights reports were being carefully
edited to clearly correspond to Negroponte’s own ideological sentiments and
mission rather than to objective facts.
One must realize that Negroponte did not look upon the report as being
routine, but rather as a potentially explosive document whose revelations must
be contained. What is certain is that
Negroponte hypocritically set an incredibly high standard of proof for the
inclusion of evidence of any wrongdoing by Honduran authorities, but repeatedly
questioned the legitimacy of various human rights leaders in the country, which
was certainly not in conformance with existing State Department practices. Someone with such a ‘distinguished’ Foreign
Service career as is routinely claimed for Negroponte by those whose capacity
for righteous indignation – such as former Assistant Secretary of State Bernard
Aronson and U.N. ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick – is quite low, if it existed at
all. They would surely have known that
in spite of their fulsome praise for Negroponte, such embassy reports are not
intended to be exclusively based on facts and be admissible in court, but
rather are also meant to include anecdotal information from ordinary citizens
and the media concerning human rights abuses, which were myriad in Honduras at
the time, and of which Aronson and Kirkpatrick have been aware. Negroponte broke with this practice by
requiring that all testimonies be in the form of public affidavits. This criterion could only be met at great
risk to the personal safety of those who wanted to come forward and reveal the
truth behind the human rights violations occurring at the time, but were
fearful of doing so.
The
juxtaposition of the Human Rights Reports for
The Worst Man
for the Job
Negroponte’s
mental and moral flaws in the area of human rights should be prompting serious
concerns over the disservice that his appointment would do to the diminished
standing of this country’s already tattered reputation over its troubled Iraq
policy. As a would-be harbinger of
democracy to Iraq, it would be little more than a cruel joke to pretend that
this man had a bone of democratic rectitude to him. Given Negroponte’s tawdry record in Honduras,
some observers contend that the original Negroponte nomination to the UN
offered one more example of Secretary Powell’s lack of standards when it comes
to State Department policy, and that his testimonials of the honorable nature
of such nominees, as was equally true of his nomination of Otto Reich, John
Bolton and Roger Noriega, whom Colin Powell defended as “honorable men,” are
totally at variance with reality. The
nomination of such a tainted figure as Negroponte to one of the most prominent
posts available today to a U.S. diplomat should represent an insult to the
international community, as well as a hollow affront to the memory of the
victims of the Central American wars of the 1980s, and can only result in a
further diminution of the reputation of this country for civic rectitude at a
very difficult moment in its history.
This analysis was prepared by Larry
Birns and Jenna Wright, with archival contributions by Jeremy Gans and Matthew Tschetter
Mr.
Birns is the director of the Washington based Council on Hemispheric Affairs,
where the other authors are research fellows.
Issued
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