4.5 Stars!
“Turn the land into a howling wilderness. I want no prisoners. I wish you to kill and burn, the more you kill and the more you burn the better you please me.”
So went the words of Col Smith in relation to the Americans stealing The Philippines from the Spanish at the tail end of the 1890s. After the horrors of 1898 it became the case that from now on,
“The goals were to protect US property and investment, ensure unimpeded extraction of natural resources, and protect access to Panama Canal.”
Grandin certainly doesn’t hold back in this deep and satisfying analysis of the US’s long-term involvement in and around Latin America. In terms of where to begin or who start with, you are very much spoiled for choice, the list is long, predictable and incredibly depressing. So many US corporations exploit the region for its vast sources of raw materials and agricultural products, coming to control most of the continent’s railroads, electric companies, ports, mines and oil fields.
“In Latin America, the sale of state enterprises was one of the largest transfers of wealth in world history.”
By the 1980s, especially under Pinochet’s Chile this went onto include postal services, roads, factories, telephone services, schools, hospitals, prisons, garbage collection services, broadcast frequencies, pension systems as well as electric, television and telephone companies, often not to the highest bidder, but to the best connected one. It’s interesting to note that the uniquely American brand of militant Christianity, always seems to dovetail so well with profound bigotry, murderous despotism and corporate avarice.
“These boats showed strength. They were used to collect maritime data, defend US commercial interest, avenge insults, demand apologies, and force open ports and rivers to trade and navigation, whether the country in possession of the waterways wanted free trade and free navigation or not.”
“Between 1898 and 1989, the US either orchestrated or provided key support to at least forty successful regime changes in Latin America. Legal precedents established during the early years of US military intervention in Spanish America continue to this day to be cited by presidential administrations to argue for broad, unaccountable powers to launch pre-emptive wars, to invade and bomb countries without congressional authority, to deny prisoners basic rights granted under the Geneva Convention, to subject them to torture, and to hold them indefinitely in places like Guantanamo and try them in courts in which prosecutor and judge are all members of the US military. For their part US corporations and financial houses came to dominate the economies of Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America as well as large parts of South America, apprenticing themselves before they headed elsewhere, to Asia, Africa and Europe.”
“Between 1985 and 1992, over 2000 government industries were sold off throughout Latin America. Much of this property passed into the hands of either multinational corporations of Latin America’s “super billionaires” a new class that had taken advantage of the dismantling of the state to grow spectacularly rich.”
Elsewhere we learn about the true impact of Clinton’s Plan Colombia project where – “By 2003, at least 16 private US contractors were working in Colombia, all being paid by Washington.”
Grandin goes onto add that,
“These firms operated with minimal oversight and no accountability, applying highly toxic herbicides with little precision, destroying legitimate crops and contaminating water supplies. In Sep 2001, thousands of Ecuadorians peasants filed a class action lawsuit against DynCorp for indiscriminate fumigation with untested chemicals, including glyphosate, commonly sold in the US under the brand of Roundup, which ruined their food harvests, poisoned adults, and killed children and livestock. (The suit was dismissed by a US federal judge).”
“Plan Colombia itself was a bloodbath. During its heyday, between 2002 and 2008, the military and death squads executed tens of thousands of Colombians. An especially notorious practice was the military’s killing of poor peasants-about 3000 of them-dressing their bodies in rebel olive-green and placing weapons on their corpses to make them look like guerrillas.”
“Plan Colombia did nothing to decrease narcotic production and trafficking, any more than the global war on terror decreased global terror.”
Largely thanks to the Clinton’s disaster, Colombia is now distinguished for having the largest internally displaced population in the world-just under 7 million, which is more than Iraq and Syria combined.
On a partly brighter note, we learn that FDR was one of the few US presidents trying to buck the voracious colonial trend by adopting a "Good Neighbour" policy. But that could only go so far for so long, and after he died it wasn’t too long before the CIA in cahoots with corporate America and the likes of Edward Bernays used sophisticated psyops in helping to violently overthrow Arbenz in 1954. This went much further than their activities elsewhere the year before in places such as France, Italy and of course Iran.
“The simplest local tools are often much the most efficient means of assassination and might include a hammer, axe, wrench, screw driver, fire poker, kitchen knife, lamp stand, or anything hard, heavy and handy.”
This was just a small quote from one of the torture manuals distributed by the CIA in Guatemala. It also offered some other advice such as,
“Murder is not morally justified, killing but a political leader whose burgeoning career is a clear and present danger to the cause of freedom may be held necessary.” Most important, “no assassination instructions should ever be written or recorded.”
Disaster for Guatemala led to nearly four decades of civil war and even a genocide which raged before 1981 and 83 against majority Mayans. More than 200,000 were killed and hundreds of villages razed.
“The United States came up with 638 methods to kill Castro. Many of them were attempted.”
This book reminds you that its rarely just about the immediate impact at the time on these people and countries, but also the more insidious devastation caused by the ongoing legacy, which often runs well into years, decades and even generations into the future. That’s the real toll inflicted and this is part of the reason why they are carried out in the first place.
“Intervention justified intervention. Power legitimated power.”