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America’s DisappearedPosted on Jul 18, 2011
By Chris Hedges Dr. Silvia Quintela was “disappeared” by the death squads in Argentina in 1977 when she was four months pregnant with her first child. She reportedly was kept alive at a military base until she gave birth to her son and then, like other victims of the military junta, most probably was drugged, stripped naked, chained to other unconscious victims and piled onto a cargo plane that was part of the “death flights” that disposed of the estimated 20,000 disappeared. The military planes with their inert human cargo would fly over the Atlantic at night and the chained bodies would be pushed out the door into the ocean. Quintela, who had worked as a doctor in the city’s slums, was 28 when she was murdered. A military doctor, Maj. Norberto Atilio Bianco, who was extradited Friday from Paraguay to Argentina for baby trafficking, is alleged to have seized Quintela’s infant son along with dozens, perhaps hundreds, of other babies. The children were handed to military families for adoption. Bianco, who was the head of the clandestine maternity unit that functioned during the Dirty War in the military hospital of Campo de Mayo, was reported by eyewitnesses to have personally carried the babies out of the military hospital. He also kept one of the infants. Argentina on Thursday convicted retired Gen. Hector Gamen and former Col. Hugo Pascarelli of committing crimes against humanity at the “El Vesubio” prison, where 2,500 people were tortured in 1976-1978. They were sentenced to life in prison. Since revoking an amnesty law in 2005 designed to protect the military, Argentina has prosecuted 807 for crimes against humanity, although only 212 people have been sentenced. It has been, for those of us who lived in Argentina during the military dictatorship, a painfully slow march toward justice. Most of the disappeared in Argentina were not armed radicals but labor leaders, community organizers, leftist intellectuals, student activists and those who happened to be in the wrong spot at the wrong time. Few had any connection with armed campaigns of resistance. Indeed, by the time of the 1976 Argentine coup, the armed guerrilla groups, such as the Montoneros, had largely been wiped out. These radical groups, like al-Qaida in its campaign against the United States, never posed an existential threat to the regime, but the national drive against terror in both Argentina and the United States became an excuse to subvert the legal system, instill fear and passivity in the populace, and form a vast underground prison system populated with torturers and interrogators, as well as government officials and lawyers who operated beyond the rule of law. Torture, prolonged detention without trial, sexual humiliation, rape, disappearance, extortion, looting, random murder and abuse have become, as in Argentina during the Dirty War, part of our own subterranean world of detention sites and torture centers. We Americans have rewritten our laws, as the Argentines did, to make criminal behavior legal. John Rizzo, the former acting general counsel for the CIA, approved drone attacks that have killed hundreds of people, many of them civilians in Pakistan, although we are not at war with Pakistan. Rizzo has admitted that he signed off on so-called enhanced interrogation techniques. He told Newsweek that the CIA operated “a hit list.” He asked in the interview: “How many law professors have signed off on a death warrant?” Rizzo, in moral terms, is no different from the deported Argentine doctor Bianco, and this is why lawyers in Britain and Pakistan are calling for his extradition to Pakistan to face charges of murder. Let us hope they succeed. We know of at least 100 detainees who died during interrogations at our “black sites,” many of them succumbing to the blows and mistreatment of our interrogators. There are probably many, many more whose fate has never been made public. Tens of thousands of Muslim men have passed through our clandestine detention centers without due process. “We tortured people unmercifully,” admitted retired Gen. Barry McCaffrey. “We probably murdered dozens of them …, both the armed forces and the C.I.A.” Advertisement Tens of thousands of Americans are being held in super-maximum-security prisons where they are deprived of contact and psychologically destroyed. Undocumented workers are rounded up and vanish from their families for weeks or months. Militarized police units break down the doors of some 40,000 Americans a year and haul them away in the dead of night as if they were enemy combatants. Habeas corpus no longer exists. American citizens can “legally” be assassinated. Illegal abductions, known euphemistically as “extraordinary rendition,” are a staple of the war on terror. Secret evidence makes it impossible for the accused and their lawyers to see the charges against them. All this was experienced by the Argentines. Domestic violence, whether in the form of social unrest, riots or another catastrophic terrorist attack on American soil, would, I fear, see the brutal tools of empire cemented into place in the homeland. At that point we would embark on our own version of the Dirty War.
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By Michael Cavlan RN, July 18, 2011 at 7:20 am Link to this comment
Levinpsy states
Obama should be thinking higher, broader, and pursing doing the right thing, rather than the most politic. Then we would at least feel a measure of hope that our country is capable of restoring its essential character and integrity.
But because he is unable to rise to the occasion, we remain mired in depression, both economic and psychological. How sad!
My answer
Bull. This is exactly what the corporate owners want. They want us mired in depression and sad. Unable or unwilling to act.
Instead- Get OUTRAGED and then ACT
Here are a couple of ways that one can act
October2011.org
See you all there
then
New Progressive Alliance
Mourn for the dead and fight like hell for the living
Mother Jones
Report thisBy EmileZ, July 18, 2011 at 7:03 am Link to this comment
@ Billy Pilgrim
Terribly sorry, it is Concerto #5 BWV 1056.
I horribly embarassed (Ho hum, they are all good).
We do, doodely-doo doodely-doo
What we must, muddily-must muddily-must
Report thisBy levinpsy, July 18, 2011 at 5:20 am Link to this comment
Thanks to Chris for another excellent piece. Our collective national and international failure to prosecute Bush, Cheney, etc. for war crimes insures much worse for us in the future.
Sadly Obama reflexively makes decisions based on politics rather than morality. This makes him a company man, and a mediocre president at best. It seems that all he wants is for Democrats to stay in office, thinking that will be the best way to protect the country from further ruin. But it won’t work.
Obama should be thinking higher, broader, and pursing doing the right thing, rather than the most politic. Then we would at least feel a measure of hope that our country is capable of restoring its essential character and integrity.
But because he is unable to rise to the occasion, we remain mired in depression, both economic and psychological. How sad!
Report thisBy balkas, July 18, 2011 at 5:06 am Link to this comment
as i have noted and repeatedly said, ideology
[supremacistic/meritocratic/sybaritic in character] never
changes.
what changes is tactics, technology; perceived needs at the
moment [as perceived by clero-sybaritic class of life].
americans are in palestina,libya,afpak,iraq,and elsewhere
[probably approved by 99% of them] solely because they can
be there.
there is no justifiable cause for american killings of innocent
peoples,nor a casus belli for invading any of the lands u.s
had thus far invaded [save europe ‘43].
in add’n,all those who militarily resist their respective
occupations are legally and morally obligated to do just
that;whether in iraq,nicaragua,vietnam,korea,chechnya,
croatia, bosnia,kosovo,palestina, et al.
alas, there is another reality: the one of
reason/rationalization. and since 99% of americans voted for
obama/mccain,they have in fact justified all torture and
occupations solely by a rationalizing events;nevertheless,are
legally obligated to honor u/s invasions and occupations.
thus, anyone who in any way violates the said legalized
torture,occupations,invasions,etc.,is violating u.s laws and
the constitution from which u.s laws arise.
thus far the need had not arisen to disappear hedges or me.
but, change is certainty! tnx
in connection to what i just said, recall please that not a
single american had to date,as far as i know,objected to even
one u.s invasion and/or aggression on any principle.
they all just keep resonating with reasons for u.s aggressions
or why u.s shld withdraw from any land u.s occupies.
this proves that,neither mccain nor obama is in charge of u.s
affairs—ideology,holy constitution/laws,media,sybarites are;
in short, uncle sam.
and he never changes. unfortunately neither does god.
recall, please he blesses america!
and the sybaritic supremacism does not only exist in u.s. it
Report thisexist also on all continents.
so, u.s is not alone in this ideology nor is american god
solely american! tnx
By EmileZ, July 18, 2011 at 4:59 am Link to this comment
@ Billy Pilgrim
At least you can listen to the second movement of Bach’s “piano” (harpsichord?) concerto #4 BWV 1055 played by Glenn Gould (and hopefully have time for the third movement as well).
It is, after all your soundtrack.
Nevermind… forget I said anything.
Report thisBy Billy Pilgrim, July 18, 2011 at 4:38 am Link to this comment
Mr. Hedges: I hope I live to see the day when your
Report thisdream of justice comes true. Based upon the way are
country is devolving, I doubt I will. You see, unlike
Argentina, America is an empire. We will continue to
ignore the crimes of our financial and political
establishment. The people have been effectively
silenced. Most of us are just struggling to survive,
day after day. With rising health and education
costs, with job uncertainty, the middle class has
been eviscerated. We continue to live under the
pretense of democracy. Until we rid ourselves of our
delusions, I’m afraid that nothing will change.
By Sofianitz, July 18, 2011 at 4:24 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Stalin held power for 24 years, from 1929 to 1953.
Obama will never do that.
We’ll nail his behind in 2012.
Report thisBy Project Mayhem, July 18, 2011 at 3:59 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Fred,
Histrionics won’t change facts, I’m afraid. As Hedges powerfully illustrates, the parallels between the full-blown Argentinian police state and our fledgling one are worth considering. This is especially so in light of Obama’s complicity in extending state-sanctioned terror and human rights abuses. Recall when he campaigned on a platform of shutting down Guantanamo and other such illegal sites and restoring the rule of law? The situation is indeed grim, and trying to deflate a legitimate argument with juvenile deflections only serves to illuminate one’s own narrow ignorance.
Report thisBy EmileZ, July 18, 2011 at 3:56 am Link to this comment
@Fred
Obama and Stalin are completely different political animals in completely different environments.
Stalin might initiate a “purge” in order to eliminate anyone he considered a personal threat.
Obama, on the other hand just wants to play along with, and in doing so, encourage the political narrative (much like the main stream media) which has developed in this country. He wants to be a star (with a David McCullough type legacy of lies).
Report thisBy Fred LaMotte, July 18, 2011 at 3:23 am Link to this comment
Next you’ll be comparing Obama to Stalin.
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