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Crimes against Humanity: Why Is Henry Kissinger
Walking Around Free?
By Andy Piascik: January 29, 2015
Two months ago, hundreds of thousands of Chileans somberly marked the 40th anniversary of their
nation's September 11th terrorist event. It was on that date in 1973 that the Chilean military, armed with
a generous supply of funds and weapons from the United States, and assisted by the CIA and other
operatives, overthrew the democratically-elected government of the moderate socialist Salvador Allende.
Sixteen years of repression, torture and death followed under the fascist Augusto Pinochet, while the flow
of hefty profits to US multinationals — IT&T, Anaconda Copper and the like — resumed. Profits, along with
concern that people in other nations might get ideas about independence, were the very reason for the
coup and even the partial moves toward nationalization instituted by Allende could not be tolerated by
the US business class.
Henry Kissinger was national security advisor and one of the principle architects — perhaps the
principle architect — of the coup in Chile. US-instigated coups were nothing new in 1973, certainly not in
Latin America, and Kissinger and his boss Richard Nixon were carrying on a violent tradition that spanned
the breadth of the 20th century and continues in the 21st — see, for example, Venezuela in 2002 (failed)
and Honduras in 2009 (successful). Where possible, such as in Guatemala in 1954 and Brazil in 1964, coups
were the preferred method for dealing with popular insurgencies. In other instances, direct invasion by
US forces such as happened on numerous occasions in Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic and many other
places, was the fallback option.
The coup in Santiago occurred as US aggression in Indochina was finally winding down after more
than a decade. From 1969 through 1973, it was Kissinger again, along with Nixon, who oversaw the
slaughter in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. It is impossible to know with precision how many were killed
during those four years; all the victims were considered enemies, including the vast majority who were
non-combatants, and the US has never been much interested in calculating the deaths of enemies.
Estimates of Indochinese killed by the US for the war as a whole start at four million and are likely more,
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perhaps far more. It can thus be reasonably extrapolated that probably more than a million, and certainly
hundreds of thousands, were killed while Kissinger and Nixon were in power.
In addition, countless thousands of Indochinese have died in the years since from the affects of
the massive doses of Agent Orange and other Chemical Weapons of Mass Destruction unleashed by the
US. Many of us here know (or, sadly, knew) soldiers who suffered from exposure to such chemicals;
multiply their numbers by 1,000 or 10,000 or 50,000 — again, it's impossible to know with accuracy — and
we can begin to understand the impact on those who live in and on the land that was so thoroughly
poisoned as a matter of US policy.
Studies by a variety of organizations including the United Nations also indicate that at least 25,000
people have died in Indochina since war's end from unexploded US bombs that pocket the countryside,
with an equivalent number maimed. As with Agent Orange, deaths and ruined lives from such explosions
continue to this day. So 40 years on, the war quite literally goes on for the people of Indochina, and it is
likely it will go on for decades more.
Near the end of his time in office, Kissinger and his new boss Gerald Ford pre-approved the
Indonesian dictator Suharto's invasion of East Timor in 1975, an illegal act of aggression again carried out
with weapons made in and furnished by the US. Suharto had a long history as a bagman for US business
interests; he ascended to power in a 1965 coup, also with decisive support and weapons from
Washington, and undertook a year-long reign of terror in which security forces and the army killed more
than a million people (Amnesty International, which rarely has much to say about the crimes of US
imperialism, put the number at 1.5 million).
In addition to providing the essential on-the-ground support, Kissinger and Ford blocked efforts by
the global community to stop the bloodshed when the terrible scale of Indonesian violence became
known, something UN ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan openly bragged about. Again, the guiding
principle of empire, one that Kissinger and his kind accept as naturally as breathing, is that independence
cannot be allowed. That's true even in a country as small as East Timor where investment opportunities
are slight, for independence is contagious and can spread to places where far more is at stake, like
resource-rich Indonesia. By the time the Indonesian occupation finally ended in 1999, 200,000 Timorese
— 30 percent of the population — had been wiped out. Such is Kissinger's legacy and it is a legacy well
understood by residents of the global South no matter the denial, ignorance or obfuscation of the
intelligentsia here.
If the United States is ever to become a democratic society, and if we are ever to enter the international
community as a responsible party willing to wage peace instead of war, to foster cooperation and mutual
aid rather than domination, we will have to account for the crimes of those who claim to act in our names
like Kissinger. Our outrage at the crimes of murderous thugs who are official enemies like Pol Pot is not
enough. A cabal of American mis-leaders from Kennedy on caused for far more Indochinese deaths than
the Khmer Rouge, after all, and those responsible should be judged and treated accordingly.
The urgency of the task is underscored as US aggression proliferates at an alarming rate. Millions
of people around the world, most notably in an invigorated Latin America, are working to end the "might
makes right" ethos the US has lived by since its inception. The 99 percent of us here who have no vested
interest in empire would do well to join them.
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There are recent encouraging signs along those lines, with the successful prevention of a US attack
on Syria particularly noteworthy. In addition, individuals from various levels of empire have had their lives
disrupted to varying degrees. David Petraeus, for example, has been hounded by demonstrators since
being hired by CUNY earlier this year to teach an honors course; in 2010, Dick Cheney had to cancel a
planned trip to Canada because the clamor for his arrest had grown quite loud; long after his reign ended,
Pinochet was arrested by order of a Spanish magistrate for human right violations and held in England for
18 months before being released because of health problems; and earlier this year, Efrain Rios Montt, one
of Washington's past henchmen in Guatemala, was convicted of genocide, though accomplices of his still
in power have since intervened on his behalf to obstruct justice.
More pressure is needed, and allies of the US engaged in war crimes like Paul Kagame should be dealt
with as Pinochet was. More important perhaps for those of in the US is that we hound Rumsfeld, both
Clintons, Rice, Albright and Powell, to name a few, for their crimes against humanity every time they show
themselves in public just as Petraeus has been. That holds especially for our two most recent War-
Criminals-in-Chief, Barack Bush and George W. Obama.
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