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Jimmy Carter's crimes against peace and humanity?

From: Richard Sanders <ad207_-at-_freenet.carleton.ca>
To: ad207_-at-_freenet.carleton.ca
Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2002 06:52:28 -0400

Counterpunch, October 18, 2002

American Journal: Starring Jimmy Carter, in War and Peace
by ALEXANDER COCKBURN

Now they've given Jimmy Carter the Nobel Peace Prize. Looking at the 
present, wretched incumbent, Democrats feel smug about their paladin of peace.

But there's continuity in Empire. Presidents come and Presidents go. There 
are differences, but over much vital terrain the line of march adopted by 
the Commander in Chief doesn't deviate down the years. Is George Bush 
"worse" than, say, Jack Kennedy, who multiplied America's military arsenal, 
nuclear and nonnuclear, and dragged the world to the edge of obliteration 
forty years ago? Sure, Carter wasn't as bad as Reagan. By the low standards 
of his office, he did his best in the Middle East. But how bad is bad? 
Carter's projected military budgets for the early 1980s were higher than 
the ones Reagan presided over. Remember his plan to run MX missiles by rail 
around the American West?

Recall when Carter said America would not stand idly by while Nicaragua 
tried to set forth on a different path after the Sandinistas threw out 
Anastasio Somoza? Carter told them they had to retain the National Guard, 
which had been Somoza's elite band of US-trained psychopathic killers. The 
Sandinistas said no. So Carter ordered the CIA to bring up the officers and 
torturers running the Argentine death squads to train a force of Nicaraguan 
exiles in Honduras scheduled for terror missions across the border. They 
called them the contras.

El Salvador? In October 1979, a coup by reformist officers overthrew the 
repressive Romero dictatorship and pledged reforms, including land reform. 
But within weeks, it became clear that the reformers among the new rulers 
had been outmaneuvered, so they resigned en masse as the real leaders 
stepped up frightful repression in the countryside, killing close to 1,000 
people a month. Some 10,000 were killed in 1980, most of them peasants and 
workers.

The Carter Administration sent millions in aid and riot equipment to the 
Salvadoran military, dispatched US trainers and trained Salvadoran officers 
in Panama. The Administration cast the conflict as one between the 
"extremes" of left and right, with the junta trying to steer a "moderate" 
course. In fact, 90 percent of the killings were carried out by the army or 
paramilitary death squads acting under army or government supervision. The 
Carter Administration continued to push this line throughout 1980, not 
suspending aid until the killing of four Maryknoll nuns in December. It's 
all coming back to you? Yes, it was the Carter Administration that restored 
the Khmer Rouge to military health after the Vietnamese kicked them out of 
power in Cambodia.

And he harked to the pain of South Korea, where students and workers were 
demonstrating against the military dictatorship of Chun Doo Hwan, notably 
in Kwangju. Carter's envoy advised the South Korean military to hit back 
hard, and it did on May 17, 1980, killing at least 1,000, the most horrible 
massacre since the Korean War. The White House instructed the local US 
military commander to release a South Korean force from border duty to 
attack the demonstrators, which they did with terrible brutality.

In his introduction to Lee Jai-eui's Kwangju Diary, Bruce Cumings reviews 
the documents unearthed by Tim Shorrock and says the record "makes it clear 
that leading liberals-such as Jimmy Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski; and 
especially Richard Holbrooke (then Under Secretary of State for East Asia), 
have blood on their hands from 1980: the blood of hundreds of murdered or 
tortured students in Kwangju."

Carter presided over the dispatch of arms to Indonesia, fresh from its 
invasion of East Timor, which makes him, oh, just one more American to get 
the Nobel Peace Prize after sponsoring genocide in Asia. And he started the 
covert CIA operation in Afghanistan, rallying the mujahedeen to fight the 
Soviets. Soon the CIA would bring the Saudis, and Saudi cash, to 
Afghanistan, not least among them Osama bin Laden.

As Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz, who's just finished a history of the first years 
of the Nicaraguan revolution, put it to me after the news of Carter's 
Nobel, "'Benign' Carter was the source of so many bad things, including the 
rise of the Christian right (his endless public pronouncements of his faith 
and his sister's leadership in the actual Christian right gave the movement 
a new legitimacy), the erosion of the UN, the destruction of the New 
International Economic (and Information) Order, etc. And no one seems to 
recall that he led a campaign to free Lieutenant Calley [of My Lai infamy] 
when Carter was governor of Georgia."

Remember that the late 1970s were years of great optimism at the UN, with 
reforming agendas such as the report of the Brandt Commission, which called 
for radical transformation of the world economic order, with transfer of 
technology and development financing from North to South. The Carter 
Administration decided to undercut one 1980 UN Special Session, echoing its 
behavior at the UN Conference on Racism in 1978. The United States sent a 
very low-level delegation to announce its noncooperation with the terms of 
the discussion and generally disrupt the proceedings.

That whole initiative for readjustment of the economic relationship of 
North and South came to nought. We headed into the Reagan 1980s, when the 
deregulatory philosophy embraced by Carter came to full flower, both at 
home and abroad, with the destruction of public infrastructure and social 
services across the world, the collapse of healthcare in Africa, the onset 
of the plague years. At home, too, the post-Nixon/Ford years were times of 
hope. Carter presided over their demolition. Neoliberalism won the day on 
his watch.

Now he's a peace prize winner. He's been campaigning for it for years. In 
the end, how could he have missed, unless the peace prize committee had 
decided to compress the whole process and give it to George Bush? Maybe 
Bush will get it next year, in partnership with Ariel Sharon.



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