Jimmy
Carter’s Blood-Soaked Legacy
By Matt Peppe
January 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Five months ago, I wrote an article titled “Jimmy
Carter’s Blood-Soaked Legacy”
about how the former President’s record in office
contradicted his professed concern for human rights.
Despite campaigning on a
promise to make respect for human rights a
central tenet of the conduct of American foreign
policy, Carter’s actions consistently prioritized
economic and security interests over humanitarian
concerns.
I cited the
examples of Carter’s administration providing aid to
Zairian dictator Mobutu to crush southern African
liberation movements; financially supporting the
Guatemalan military junta, and looking the other way
as Israel gave them weapons and training; ignoring
calls from human rights activists to withdraw
support from the Suharto dictatorship in Indonesia
as they carried out genocide in East Timor; refusing
to pursue sanctions against South Africa in the
United Nations after the South African Defence
Forces bombed a refugee camp in Angola, killing 600
refugees; financing and arming mujahideen rebels to
destabilize the government of Afghanistan and draw
the Soviet Union into invading the country; and
providing aid to the military dictatorship in El
Salvador, despite a letter from Archbishop Oscar
Romero – who was assassinated by a member of a
government death squad weeks later – explicitly
calling for Carter not to do so.
This list
was not meant to be exhaustive, but merely to
highlight some of the most prominent contradictions
between Carter’s ideals and his actions. After
subsequent research and reader feedback, I realized
there were many examples I had not mentioned. Their
significance to the history of American foreign
policy, and the repercussions they produced, is
worth exploring in a subsequent analysis.
Carter
announced in early December that he is
cancer free. Sadly, that news was followed
shortly thereafter by the tragic, premature death of
his 28-year-old grandson. But Carter seems to have
maintained his positivity. He has kept up his public
schedule and says that healthwise he
still feels good.
A person’s
record and legacy should be debated while they are
still alive – rather than after they are gone, when
nostalgia or reluctance to speak ill of the dead can
easily lead to embellishment and historical
revisionism. And a person should be able to defend
himself and his actions. Otherwise, it is merely an
academic exercise instead of a demand for
accountability. In this spirit, I present six more
foreign policy positions that demonstrate Carter’s
prioritization of American political and economic
hegemony over actual support for human rights while
he held the highest office in the United States.
Vietnam
Article 21
of the
Paris Agreement in 1973 stipulated that “the
United States will contribute to healing the wounds
of war and to postwar reconstruction of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam and throughout
Indochina.”
When asked
in 1977 if the United States had a moral obligation
to help rebuild Vietnam, Carter
responded that:
The
destruction was mutual. You know, we went to
Vietnam without any desire to capture territory
or to impose American will on other people. We
went there to defend the freedom of the South
Vietnamese. And I don’t feel that we ought to
apologize or to castigate ourselves or to assume
the status of culpability.
The United
States went to Vietnam after they could not convince
the French to further continue a war to recolonize
Vietnam. The Geneva Accords reached between France
and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam in 1954
called for a temporary division of Vietnam pending
unification, which was to take place after national
elections
two years later.
In 1955,
the Eisenhower administration began granting direct
aid and providing American military advisers to the
Bao Dai monarchy. Ngo Dinh Diem assumed control
later that year through a fraudulent election.
Knowing he would be trounced by the Communist party,
he declined to participate in reunification
elections called for by the peace agreement..
The United
States government was indispensable to the survival
of the Diem regime – and after complicity in Diem’s
assassination, the Theiu regime. They funded and
organized the police, military and intelligence
services and were complicit in the reign of terror
they unleashed on the South Vietnamese. Throughout
the military dictatorship, tens of thousands of
people were imprisoned without charges or trial;
tortured and held in notorious
Tiger Cages; assassinated extrajudicially; and
displaced forcibly from their homes and transferred
to concentration camps as American forces “helped to
defend the freedom of the South Vietnamese.”
The South
Vietnamese people are still suffering from the
refusal to grant reparations for the devastation
wrought by the U.S. military. More 100,000
Vietnamese have been killed or injured (an average
of 2,500 per year) due to land mines and other
ordnance dropped on Vietnam that did not explode on
impact.
Residents
also still suffer the horrific after effects of
chemical weapons. The U.S. military sprayed millions
of gallons of chemical defoliants, including Agent
Orange, throughout South Vietnam. The
President’s Cancer Panel in 2010 determined that
“(a)pproximately 4.8 million Vietnamese people were
exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths
and disabilities and a half million children born
with birth defects.”
Had Carter
not so flippantly dismissed the U.S.’s role in the
destruction of Vietnam and recognized its
responsibility to uphold their obligation to pay
reparations, likely tens of thousands of lives may
have been saved with funds that could have been used
for demining, and the cleanup and treatment of
chemical agents that have gone on spreading the
horrors of war for decades after the fighting ended.
Nicaragua
“Carter
Must End Aid To Somoza,” proclaimed an editorial in
The Harvard Crimson in September 1978. The
paper demanded that the U.S. government cut off all
forms of aid to the dictatorship of Nicaraguan
President Anastasio Somoza, who was using
indiscriminate force to try to crush a popular
revolutionary movement to oust him, so the
Nicaraguan people could choose their own manner of
governance.
William
Blum writes in
Killing Hope that with the Somoza regime on
the verge of collapse, “Carter authorized covert CIA
support for the press and labor unions in Nicaragua
in an attempt to create a ‘moderate’ alternative to
the Sandinistas.” The Carter administration’s plan,
according to Blum, was to allow the Somoza regime to
take part in a new government, while leaving the
state’s military and security institutions largely
intact.
The
Sandinistas were victorious in July 1981, as Somoza
was forced to flee the country in disgrace. They
were able to dismantle the dictatorship and create a
new revolutionary government.
The
meddling and funding for opposition organizations by
the Carter administration, however, would pale in
comparison to the full-scale terrorism and
aggression that would follow under Ronald Reagan,
who had by then taken over as President.
Cambodia
Starting in
March 1969, President Richard Nixon and his
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger waged a massive,
secret bombing campaign (Operation Menu) on Cambodia
in which the U.S. military was instructed “anything
that flies on anything that moves.”
The
American aggression likely caused
higher than official estimates of 150,000
Cambodian civilian deaths. When the operation was
discovered by a Congressional Committee, it was not
even included in the impeachment articles against
Nixon, much less used as a basis to refer Nixon and
Kissinger for prosecution for war crimes.
Radicalized, destitute and shell-shocked by the
destruction wrought by the American bombing, Pol Pot
and his previously marginal Khmer Rouge were able to
rally enough recruits to seize control of the
government in 1975.
It is
generally accepted that the Khmer Rouge’s massacres
in the Killing Fields and drastic measures to create
a primitive agrarian society amounted to genocide.
On the high end, two million deaths is a common
number – though that number has likely been highly
inflated for anti-Communist propaganda purposes. The
American establishment and media were loudly
outspoken against Khmer Rouge atrocities, especially
considering the near unanimous silence regarding the
nearly simultaneous genocide by the Indonesian
military taking place in East Timor.
But,
strangely, after a Vietnamese invasion in 1978
ousted them, the Khmer Rouge lost their status as
evil Communists, as the official American foreign
policy narrative recast them as victims of
Vietnamese aggression.
The Carter
administration began supporting the Khmer Rouge, who
had been relegated to remote rural sections of the
country, by financial and diplomatic means. Carter’s
national security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski reportedly told an American
journalist he “encouraged the Chinese to support Pol
Pot… Pol Pot was an abomination. We could never
support him, but China could.”
According
to columnist
William Pfaff, financial support started by the
Carter administration and continued by the Reagan
administration to the Khmer Rouge totaled more than
$15 million annually.
Despite the
fact they had been driven from power, with
American support the Khmer Rouge managed to
maintain their UN seat – as the Carter
administration had refused to recognize the
government installed after the Vietnamese invasion.
The
remnants of the Khmer Rouge fought a guerilla war
until Pot’s death in 1998. There is no precise count
of the dead and injured that resulted from the
fighting so long after the regime was ousted, but it
is known that hundreds of thousands of people were
displaced from their homes and became refugees.
The Carter
administration’s decision to fan the flames of
violence for frivolous reasons – mainly to punish
Vietnam for their defeat of American forces five
years earlier – was a scandalous example of
vindictiveness.
South Korea
In December
1979, the South Korean military led by General Chun
Doo Hwan led a coup d’ état in which Chun
imprisoned potential military rivals and cleared the
way to his succession as dictator. On May 17, 1980,
Chun declared martial law across the country. The
next day, popular protests emerged in the city of
Kwangju in opposition.
Chun’s
support from the United States would be crucial to
maintain legitimacy as he brought in the military to
crush the uprising.
“The White
House had tacitly shelved President Carter’s human
rights campaign in its anxiety that nothing should
‘unravel and cause chaos in a key American ally’,”
writes
The Guardian. “It agreed to continue
supporting thuggish General Chun Doo Hwan, a major
figure behind the coup who was by now imposing
stringent military rule.”
Journalist
Tim Shorrock studied more than 3,500 documents
obtained by FOIA request and determined that more
than mere complicity, the Carter administration
played a “significant background advisory role in
the violent 1980 military crackdown that triggered
the
May 18 citizens’
uprising.”
William
Gleysteen, who Carter had personally appointed
ambassador to South Korea, told Chun the U.S. would
not object if he were to use the military to quell
large-scale student protests.
Shorrock
notes that declassified documents show that:
U.S.
officials in Seoul and Washington knew Mr.
Chun’s contingency plans included deployment of
Korean Special Warfare Command troops, trained
to fight behind the lines in a war against North
Korea. The ‘Black Beret’ Special Forces, who
were not under U.S. command, were modeled after
the U.S. Green Berets and had a history dating
back to their participation alongside American
troops in the Vietnam War.
On
May 22, Shorrock
writes, “the Carter administration approved further
use of force to retake the city and agreed to
provide short-term support to Mr. Chun if he agreed
to long-term political change.”
The Special
Warfare troops carried out a massacre in which
officially 200 people were killed, but estimates
place the likely number of victims 10 times higher.
Chun continued ruling as a dictator until 1988.
The George
H. W. Bush administration would whitewash American
involvement during the 1980 uprising by claiming the
U.S. government had no knowledge of the use of the
Korean special forces and did not approve of any
such actions. Chun’s dictatorship in South Korea
would continue until popular protests were able to
force democratic elections in 1988.
Philippines
In
September 1972, Philippine President Ferdinand
Marcos declared martial law in Proclamation No.
1081. It would not be lifted until three days before
the end of Jimmy Carter’s tenure as President in
1981.
This would
not prevent the Carter administration from
continuing the billions of dollars provided by the
U.S. government to the Marcos dictatorship in
military aid. As he had with Indonesian Major
General and President Suharto, Carter kept the
spigot flowing to a dictator who demonstrated not
just lack of respect, but outright hostility to the
human rights of his subjects.
The
quid pro quo in the Philippines was a Military
Bases Agreement agreed to in December 1978. The
Filipino-American socialist newspaper the
Katipunan said that after signing the
agreement, the Carter administration ignored
Marcos’s many human rights violations.
“Especially
now, in light of renewed threats to its imperialist
hegemony of the world, the Carter administration has
made it very clear that such considerations as human
rights, democracy, etc., take a back seat, to the
protection of American global interests, insofar as
U.S.-R.P. relations are concerned,” the paper wrote
in April 1980.
The
Katipunan said that political considerations
led Carter’s State Department to reverse their
previous condemnation to claim the Marcos regime was
improving its record. “The State Department might as
well have congratulated Marcos for torture,
salvaging, mass arrests, indefinite detention,
etc.,” they wrote.
The
Middle East
No one is
more responsible for the vast proliferation of
foreign U.S. military bases – now about 800,
compared to about 30 for the rest of the world
combined – than Jimmy Carter.
Any
rational geopolitical analysis of the post-war
period until Carter’s presidency would have
concluded the Soviet Union had absolutely no
intention of military expansion beyond their
immediate satellite states. But Carter – like each
of his predecessors since World War II – was
delusional in his imagination of a Soviet threat
behind every corner. His anti-communist, Cold-War
strategy called for a military presence everywhere
American economic interests existed. Using the
phantom “Soviet threat,” Carter laid out what became
known as the Carter Doctrine.
“In his
January 1980 State of the Union address, President
Jimmy Carter announced a policy change that rivaled
Roosevelt’s destroyers for bases deal in its
significance for the nation and the world,” writes
anthropologist David Vine in
Base Nation: How U.S. Military Bases Abroad Harm
America and the World. “Carter soon
launched what became one of the greatest base
construction efforts in history. The Middle East
buildup soon approached the size and scope of the
Cold War garrisoning of Western Europe and the
profusion of bases built to wage wars in Korea and
Vietnam. U.S. bases sprang up in Egypt, Oman, Saudi
Arabia, and elsewhere in the region to host a ‘Rapid
Deployment Force,’ which was to stand permanent
guard over Middle Eastern petroleum supplies.”
Post-Presidency
In my first
article on Carter’s legacy, I wrote that he has – by
far – the most impressive record of any American
President after leaving office. I cited the examples
of his condemnations of Israel’s policies in the
occupied Palestinian territories and his Carter
Center’s work independently verifying voting systems
and electoral processes – specifically their
endorsement of Venezuela’s 2013 election – as
invaluable accomplishments for social justice.
Since then,
Carter has bolstered his already impressive
post-Presidency record even more. First, Carter told
Oprah Winfrey in a September interview that
“We’ve become now an oligarchy instead of a
democracy. And I think that’s been the worst damage
to the basic moral and ethical standards of the
American political system that I’ve ever seen in my
life.”
His
summation of the state of the American
sociopolitical system is both precise and brutally
honest. While
academic studies have already reached the same
conclusion, Carter putting the issue in simple terms
for a mainstream audience demonstrates his
willingness to take on matters that would be
considered taboo for the rest of the elite class. We
can hope that the impact of his statement will be
similar to his calling Israeli rule over
Palestinians apartheid, something also taboo among
elites at the time but increasingly gaining currency
in mainstream discourse.
In October,
Carter wrote an Op-Ed in the
New York Times calling for “A Five-Nation
Plan to End the Syrian Crisis.” Carter writes that
since the beginning of the Syrian conflict, the
Carter Center had explained to Washington that the
Obama administration’s demand for Bashar al-Assad’s
removal would preclude the achievement of a
political solution.
Meetings
with Russian President Vladimir Putin led Carter to
believe that a peace proposal endorsed by the United
States, Russia, Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia would
gain enough support among the Syrian parties to end
the fighting.
“The
involvement of Russia and Iran is essential. Mr.
Assad’s only concession
in four years of war
was giving up chemical weapons, and he did so only
under pressure from Russia and Iran. Similarly, he
will not end the war by accepting concessions
imposed by the West, but is likely to do so if urged
by his allies,” Carter writes.
The peace
plan that Secretary of State John Kerry essentially
copied from Russia – and has now endorsed as his own
at the
United Nations – looks very much like that laid
out by Carter. There is good reason to think that if
the Obama administration had not stubbornly ignored
Carter’s advice four years ago – when they still
believed, before Russia’s military intervention on
Assad’s behalf, that they could overthrow the regime
by force through proxy groups like the
CIA-backed Free Syrian Army – the unimaginable
violence and devastation could have been largely
been avoided.
While in
power, Carter and the officials he hand-picked to
serve in his administration acted with the same Cold
War zeal as their predecessors to relentlessly
combat – with overwhelming force and the power of
the U.S. government’s diplomatic muscle- threats to
global corporate capitalist dominance, both real and
imagined.
What
accounts for the discrepancy between Carter’s
actions in and out of office is a matter of
speculation. Was it merely a change of heart? A
reflection of the nature of authority? Or of the
limits of the office of President and its
subordination to the power of unelected, entrenched
bureaucracy?
The bottom
line is that, unfortunately, when Carter was
afforded the opportunity to change the direction of
U.S. foreign policy after receiving a mandate from
the American voters, he was unable or unwilling to
do so. We can only hope this missed opportunity will
not be the last.
Matt Peppe writes
about politics, U.S. foreign policy and Latin
America on his blog.
You can follow him on twitter. |