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Protest
challenges “glorification of war” at home of world’s
largest military base
By Beth Trigg and Brendan Conley
Fayetteville, NC, August 16—
Early Wednesday morning, veterans, soldiers,
citizens, and peace activists gathered to mark the
opening of the new Airborne and Special Operations
Museum in downtown Fayetteville. The $22 million
dollar museum is a joint Army-private sector
venture, and celebrates the US Army’s airborne and
special operations forces, including “psychological
operations,” counterinsurgency training of foreign
troops, infiltration, counterrevolution, and other
types of “unconventional warfare.” Fayetteville is
home to Fort Bragg, the largest military base in the
world, and a center for training foreign soldiers,
many of whom have committed war crimes and human
rights abuses in their own countries.
“Swords into plowshares”
While the crowd of about 2,500
participated in an opening ceremony complete with a
military brass band, trick parachutists, and a
speech from Ross Perot, a small group of protesters
stood along the sidewalk leafleting, talking to
passersby, and holding up signs noting the numbers
of civilians killed in US military operations
including Vietnam, Panama, and the Gulf War. As the
military ceremony unfolded, protesters disrupted the
proceedings by reading a statement in unison
mourning soldiers and civilians killed in US
military endeavors and calling for “the turning of
swords into plowshares.”
“We’re here to tell a different
story,” said Francisco Risso of the Morganton
Catholic Worker. “This museum is a glorification of
war. We’re here to tell about the horrors of war.”
Steve Woolford, of the Silk Hope Catholic Worker
added, “If most people, soldiers and civilians, knew
what happens in war, and the reasons why the US has
gone to war, they wouldn’t want to be a part of it.”
The protesters represented three Catholic Worker
houses in North Carolina; the Catholic Worker is a
faith-based pacifist social justice organization
that seeks both to feed the hungry and to
simultaneously work for systemic social change.
Another activist, Bernadette Rider O’Neill, who is
12 years old, summarized the reason for the protest:
“They’re here today celebrating war. Why would we
want to celebrate something that kills millions of
people all around the world? I don’t see how killing
is right in any way — or how killing can be for God
or for peace.”
The new museum, according to
protesters, is an essential part of the military
system, helping perpetuate unrealistic images of the
military and of war. “In order to engage in a
practice where the result of what you do is to kill,
you’ve got to have people believe in it. You’ve got
to have these big edifices,” said Patrick O’Neill.
The new museum serves as a booster for the US Army,
and particularly for special operations forces. But,
according to protesters, it doesn’t tell the whole
story. “Any museum about war that doesn’t leave you
feeling sick to your stomach isn’t doing its job,”
said Woolford.
“Special warfare” at Fort Bragg
Specifically, protesters sought to
highlight the role of Special Forces in US
interventions: according to Risso, “Special Forces
have been the primary US interventionist force. And
our interventions have not been for democracy.”
Special forces units based at Fort Bragg have been
at the forefront of US military interventions
including those in Vietnam, Panama, Grenada, Haiti,
Iraq, and Guatemala, and El Salvador. Fort Bragg is
the home of Delta Force, an elite “combat
applications group,” the birthplace of the Green
Berets, site of the JFK Special Warfare School and
the headquarters for a host of other special
operation troops referred to by the Army as “the
point of the spear” in so-called unconventional
warfare. These forces have led covert operations,
often in partnership with the CIA, in Southeast
Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Delta Force troops
from Fort Bragg have even been used against here at
home in operations against US civilians: in the
assault on the branch Davidian community in Waco.
One of the functions of these
special forces is the training of soldiers and
officers from other nations with the goal of
exerting US influence in these nations. In recent
years, the issue of US training of foreign military
personnel has been exposed by the movement to close
the School of the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia,
which has trained some of the most egregious human
rights violators, torturers, and assassins in Latin
American history. Opponents of the US Army School of
the Americas have documented numerous direct links
between training received in the US and the tactics
of Latin American military regimes, including death
squads, civilian massacres, torture, and other
massive human rights violations. Training of
soldiers from Latin America by the US military is
not limited to the School of the Americas, however,
and Latin America is not alone in having experienced
the lethal application of US military training.
The special forces at Fort Bragg
train foreign military personnel, both in North
Carolina and abroad. In Africa, this training is
conducted through the Joint Combined Exchange
Program (JCET), through which US troops, primarily
Green Berets from the 3rd Special Forces Group based
at Fort Bragg, have taught military tactics to
troops in Benin, Botswana, Cameroon, Congo,
Equatorial Guinea, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory
Coast, Kenya, Malawi, Mail, Mauritania, Mozambique,
Namibia, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo,
Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In 1998, despite
UN-documented crimes against humanity by the Rwandan
military, the Pentagon embarked upon further
training programs in Rwanda.
In Pakistan, the day before the
nation’s first nuclear tests, the US Army was
putting the finishing touches on an exercise
bringing together US and Pakistani special forces
for small unit training and mock scuba attacks. In
Jakarta, Indonesia in 1997, the US Army special
forces staged a training operation for 60 Indonesian
special forces troops involving the invasion of an
empty housing project. The objectives of the
operation were to teach close-quarters combat and
urban warfare, lessons which proved useful to the
military in the brutal repression of students and
other dissenters in Indonesia. In the Persian Gulf,
a continuous JCET trained Kuwaiti soldiers that
participated in military action against Iraq.
US special forces in Latin
America
Closer to home, Central and South
America have long been a major focus of US special
forces activity, including on-site training of
military personnel. The US military is currently
conducting specialized training exercises, via the
Green Berets and other special forces, with every
army in Latin America. Almost 3000 US special
operations troops are deployed every year to all 19
countries in Latin America, and there are at least
250 military trainers operating daily in 15 of these
countries. These special forces operations are part
of a quiet policy of re-engagement with Latin
American military establishments.
Currently Mexican officers are being
sent for training at Fort Bragg, and returning to
Mexico as part of special air forces (GAFE)
stationed all over Mexico. These units have been
responsible for human rights violations in Mexico,
including a notorious incident in Zapopan, Jalisco
in 1997 in which eighteen young people were
kidnapped and one young man, Salvador Lopez Jimenez
was killed. According to Eric Olson, of the
Washington Office on Latin America, “one of the GAFE
units, created with US training, was apparently
responsible for the events in Zapopan.” 11 officers
and 15 soldiers from that GAFE unit were sentenced
to prison for the incident. In addition, General
Mario Renan Castillo, a commander of the military
region that includes Chiapas, is a graduate of the
Fort Bragg Special Operations and Special Forces
program. Castillo learned from this program how to
organize paramilitary groups to work with the army
in suppressing insurgency in Chiapas.
In Colombia, Delta Force and other
special forces have been conducting training
missions on-site throughout the past decade. In
1991, Colombia’s high command issued a secret order,
number 200-05/91, implementing recommendations from
a US military intelligence team. The order created a
covert intelligence network that was later accused
by human rights organizations of organizing the
killing of civilians. Delta Force accompanied
Colombian troops on military operations aimed at
drug traffickers and Marxist guerillas. Despite
international agreements limiting US military
assistance in Colombia to anti-narcotics efforts,
the training and assistance has overtly supported
counterinsurgency and efforts to quash nonviolent
dissent in Colombia. In 1997, there were 29 JCET
missions to Colombia, mostly conducted by Fort
Bragg’s 7th Special Forces Group. Missions trained
Colombian troops in hand-to-hand combat, urban
warfare techniques, surveillance, and
“counterterrorism.” The Colombian military, in turn,
organized joint trainings with Colombian
counterinsurgency troops and paramilitary forces,
including groups connected with narcotrafficking.
US special forces have a long
history of activity in Latin America. In 1967, a
special forces mission to Bolivia trained and
equipped a new battalion. Several days after the
“training” exercise ended, the new Bolivian unit,
with the help of the CIA, captured and executed
Argentine revolutionary Che Guevara, “putting an end
to the insurgency and completing a classic example
of a foreign internal defense mission,” according to
a US special operations publication. Throughout the
1980s, US Special Forces participated both publicly
and covertly in military action in Central America.
Still today, special operations forces conduct
nearly continuous training for the Salvadoran
military. Though the government’s official reasoning
for intervention in Latin America has switched from
fighting communism to fighting drug trafficking, the
reality is the same: violent suppression of internal
dissent and rebellion.
These “foreign internal defense
missions,” or “fids” have become a crucial tool of
US intervention. The purpose of “fids,” according to
an army field manual, is “to organize, train,
advise, and assist” a foreign military so that it
can “free and protect its society from subversion,
lawlessness, and insurgency.” Special forces,
through “fids” and training operations, “are a
direct instrument of US foreign policy. They may be
the most direct and most involved, tangible physical
part of US foreign policy in certain countries,”
according to Wayne Downing, former commander of US
Special Operations Command. Under a 1991 law,
special forces training missions on-site with
foreign military personnel are exempted from
congressional oversight.
Just as citizens across the country
are organizing to close the School of the Americas,
people in North Carolina have maintained resistance
to the military industry in the state, at Fort Bragg
and elsewhere, through protests and citizen
education. Activists like the Catholic Workers who
protested in Fayetteville Wednesday will not let the
rest of the war machine go unchallenged.
For more information:
http://www.soaw.org/;
http://www.csn.org/;
http://www.wola.org/
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