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The '''Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation''' ('''WHISC''' or '''WHINSEC'''), formerly '''School of the Americas''' ('''SOA'''; ]: ''Escuela de las Américas''), is a ] facility at ] in ]. Its motto is ''Libertad, Paz y Fraternidad'' (Liberty, Peace and Brotherhood). <ref>{{cite web | author = Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation | title = A Welcome from the Commandant | url = https://www.benning.army.mil/whinsec/about.asp?id=33 | accessdate = May 16 | accessyear = 2006 }}</ref> |
The '''Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation''' ('''WHISC''' or '''WHINSEC'''), formerly '''School of the Americas''' ('''SOA'''; ]: ''Escuela de las Américas''), is a ] facility at ] in ]. Its motto is ''Libertad, Paz y Fraternidad'' (Liberty, Peace and Brotherhood). <ref>{{cite web | author = Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation | title = A Welcome from the Commandant | url = https://www.benning.army.mil/whinsec/about.asp?id=33 | accessdate = May 16 | accessyear = 2006 }}</ref> | ||
The institute is a training facility operated in the Spanish language, especially for ]n military personnel. As of 2006 the school now offers its Command And General Staff course to United States military for whom Spanish is their primary langauge. The course |
The institute is a training facility operated in the Spanish language, especially for ]n military personnel. As of 2006 the school now offers its Command And General Staff course to United States military for whom Spanish is their primary langauge. The course which is formally called ILE is the same which United States military officers attend only in Spanish. Somewhere around 60,000 people attended the now closed School Of The Americas. Presently roughly 1,000 students per year attend WHINSEC which was created as part of the ]. | ||
The school is frequently cited by detractors of supporting regimes in Latin America that have a history of employing ] and otherwise infringing upon ], something the school has staunchly denied. In reponse to this type of past criticism in 2004 the school created a human rights protection training course which students must take eight hours of. The school has also included in much of their course work training in the principles of democracy. Critics accuse the school of teaching these clasees to only a few students and that the minimum of eight hours of ethical instruction mandated by recent law is not high enough to be effective. | The school is frequently cited by detractors of supporting regimes in Latin America that have a history of employing ] and otherwise infringing upon ], something the school has staunchly denied. In reponse to this type of past criticism in 2004 the school created a human rights protection training course which students must take eight hours of. The school has also included in much of their course work training in the principles of democracy. Critics accuse the school of teaching these clasees to only a few students and that the minimum of eight hours of ethical instruction mandated by recent law is not high enough to be effective. |
Revision as of 06:58, 27 December 2006
The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHISC or WHINSEC), formerly School of the Americas (SOA; Spanish: Escuela de las Américas), is a United States Army facility at Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia. Its motto is Libertad, Paz y Fraternidad (Liberty, Peace and Brotherhood).
The institute is a training facility operated in the Spanish language, especially for Latin American military personnel. As of 2006 the school now offers its Command And General Staff course to United States military for whom Spanish is their primary langauge. The course which is formally called ILE is the same which United States military officers attend only in Spanish. Somewhere around 60,000 people attended the now closed School Of The Americas. Presently roughly 1,000 students per year attend WHINSEC which was created as part of the National Defense Authorization Act.
The school is frequently cited by detractors of supporting regimes in Latin America that have a history of employing death squads and otherwise infringing upon human rights, something the school has staunchly denied. In reponse to this type of past criticism in 2004 the school created a human rights protection training course which students must take eight hours of. The school has also included in much of their course work training in the principles of democracy. Critics accuse the school of teaching these clasees to only a few students and that the minimum of eight hours of ethical instruction mandated by recent law is not high enough to be effective.
History
The institute's remit is "to provide professional education and training" while "promoting democratic values, respect for human rights, and knowledge and understanding of United States customs and traditions".
WHISC's $10 million budget is funded by the US Army and by tuition fees, usually paid through the International Military Education and Training (IMET) grants, the International Narcotics Control (INC) assistance programs, or through the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program.
In 1946, the SOA was established in Panama at Fort Gulick, at what is now called the Melia Hotel as the Latin American Training Center - Ground Division. It was renamed the U.S. Army School of the Americas in 1963. It relocated to Fort Benning in 1984 following the signing of the Panama Canal Treaty.
In 2000, mounting pressure upon the United States Congress to stop funding the SOA reached a point where the Pentagon decided to rename the school the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, abbreviated as WHISC or WHINSEC.
What is currently known as WHINSEC was first established in the Panama Canal Zone in 1946 as the Latin American Ground School (LAGS) (Bouvier 122). According to Lesley Gill, an Associate Professor of Anthropology at American University, “The establishment of the Ground School coincided with renewed U.S. expansionist ambitions in the Americas and partially filled a power vacuum created by WW II, which ruptured long-standing military ties between European imperial powers – particularly France, Italy, and Germany – and Latin America” (Gill, 62). As many European nations faced the daunting task of reconstruction following the war, the “victorious and relatively unscathed U.S. moved in to fill the void left by the Europeans and to consolidate its position as a global superpower.”
Initially, the School’s mandate was to teach nation-building skills such as bridge-building, well-digging, food preparation, and equipment maintenance and repair. However, after President Truman signed the Rio Treaty, an extension of the Monroe Doctrine, in 1947, along with the leaders of twenty Latin American countries, the U.S. Army became increasingly involved in Latin America. The Rio Treaty provided that “any attack on an American nation will be met by collective sanctions in line with Article 51 of the United Nations Charter.”
Two years later, in 1949, the Army renamed the Latin American Ground School to the U.S. Army Caribbean School – Spanish Instruction and began to instruct Latin American military personnel along with U.S. Army personnel. By 1956, the School began to focus its training efforts primarily on Latin Americans and has instructed its classes solely in Spanish ever since.
However, the School’s curriculum was not altered until after the Cuban revolution in 1959. The success of Fidel Castro and his ragtag band of guerrillas caused the American fear of “conspiring communists in Latin American peasant villages” to magnify in the already intense Cold War era (Gill, 73). The School became known as the U.S. Army School of the Americas in 1963 and its curriculum changed its focus from nation-building skills to counterinsurgency in order to prevent communism from spreading throughout the Western Hemisphere. According to one SOA official, “The importance of sound, bilateral security relationships in the Western Hemisphere became very clear as Hitler and Mussolini assiduously attempted to court the nations of Latin America.”
Although preparing Latin Americans to repel an attack by a nonhemispheric power, particularly one tainted by Communism, was the highly-publicized reason for the United States’ emphasis on equipping and training Latin Americans, others assert that the United States’ main objective was to protect its economic interests in the region. Some of these economic interests included coffee in Central America (1), the Panama Canal agreements formalized in 1901, and the United Fruit Company and its subsidiary, the International Railways of Central America (IRCA).
Changes
After the legal authorization for the former School of the Americas was repealed in 2001 and the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation was established, all students are now required to receive at least eight hours of instruction in "human rights, the rule of law, due process, civilian control of the military, and the role of the military in a democratic society." In addition, courses now focus on leadership development, counter-drug operations, peace support operations, disaster relief, or "any other matter the Secretary deems appropriate" as well as requiring a Board of Visitors to review "curriculum, instruction, physical equipment, fiscal affairs, and academic methods" and evaluate whether or not it is "consistent with U.S. policy goals toward Latin America and the Caribbean." Several pages on its website describe its human rights initiatives. But, though they account for almost the entire training programme, combat and commando techniques, counter-insurgency and interrogation aren't mentioned. At the School of the Americas Watch vigil in November 2006, invitations were given to the members of the public to visit the school.
According to the website for the Center for International Policy , the Board of Visitors "must include the chairmen and ranking minority members of both houses' Armed Services Committees (or surrogates), the senior Army officer responsible for training (or a surrogate), one person chosen by the Secretary of State, the head of the United States Southern Command (or a surrogate), and six people chosen by the Secretary of Defense ('including, to the extent practicable, persons from academia and the religious and human rights communities')."
Controversy
The school has been the center of numerous allegations of state terrorism by United States of America. Repeated efforts led by Representative Jim McGovern in Congress to curtail training at WHISC have failed. In 1999, after the mysterious disappearance of Victor Escobar (a graduate from the school) and disclosures about torture manuals being used in the training, the U.S. House of Representatives adopted a bill to abolish the school, but its passage was stymied in a House-Senate conference committee. As a cosmetic gesture, in 2001 the Pentagon changed the name of the school. A bill to abolish the school with 123 co-sponsors was introduced to the House Armed Services Committee in 2005.
US Training Manual
See also: Torture manualsOn September 20, 1996, the Pentagon released seven training manuals prepared by the U.S. military and used between 1987 and 1991 for intelligence training courses in Latin America and at the U.S. Army School of the Americas (SOA). According to the Third World Traveler, these manuals show how U.S. agents taught repressive techniques and promoted the violation of human rights throughout Latin America and around the globe. Amnesty International describes the contents of the document to contain instructions in modivation by fear, bounties for enemy dead, false imprisonment, torture, execution, and kidnapping a target's family members.
Human rights abuses
The SOA has been accused of training members of governments guilty of serious human rights abuses and have been found to advocate techniques that violate accepted international standards, particularly the Geneva Conventions. Graduates of the SOA include men such as Hugo Banzer Suárez, Leopoldo Galtieri, Manuel Noriega, Efraín Ríos Montt, Vladimiro Montesinos, Guillermo Rodríguez, Omar Torrijos, Roberto Viola, Roberto D'Aubuisson, Victor Escobar and Juan Velasco Alvarado. Because many of its students have been associated with death squads, and coups in Latin American countries, the school's acronym is reparsed by its detractors as the "School of the Assassins".
WHINSEC in recent years has put into place a very strict multi level "vetting system" aimed as preventing potential human rights abusers from gaining a seat at the school. This system not only rejects any student who has human rights abuse accusations against them it goes much further. If a prespective student is even a part of a unit which has human rights abuse accusations against them they are prevented from having a seat at the school. There was even an attempt made in 2006 by the Board Of Visitors to work cooperatively with the SOA Watch, which is probably WHINSEs most vocal critic, as a resource to prevent human rights abusers from getting seats at the school. The attempt was unsuccessful as of the end of 2006.
Demonstrations
There is usually a demonstration at the main entrance to Ft. Benning in late November each year. In 2005, the demonstration drew 19,000 people. The date for the annual demonstration commemorates a Latin American massacre linked to the SOA, which was on November 16, 1989. Six Salvadoran Jesuit priests, their housekeeper, and her teenage daughter were murdered at the University of Central America (UCA). Of the 27 soldiers cited for that massacre by a 1993 United Nations Truth Commission, 19 were SOA graduates. The School itself officially denies that its curriculum teaches tactics contrary to human rights standards.
South Americans refuse to send soldiers
In 2004, Venezuela ceased all training of Venezuelan soldiers at the School of the Americas. On March 28, 2006, the government of Argentina decided to stop sending soldiers to train at the School of the Americas, and the government of Uruguay affirmed that it will continue its current policy of not sending soldiers to the SOA/WHINSEC.
SOA Watch
Main article: School of the Americas WatchCiting the call of slain Archbishop Óscar Romero, that "we who have a voice must speak for the voiceless", Maryknoll Fr. Roy Bourgeois and a small group of supporters formed School of the Americas Watch in 1990. They began to research the SOA, educate the public, lobby Congress, and practice nonviolent resistance at Ft. Benning. Each year a number of protestors are arrested and prosecuted for acts of civil disobediance including trespassing onto federal property in an attempt to create more awareness for the School of the Americas Watch.
The November anniversary of the UCA massacre continues to be an important focus for the growing grassroots movement to close the SOA/WHISC. Indeed, the original band of ten resisters who gathered at the main gate of Ft. Benning in 1990, to commemorate the first anniversary of the UCA massacre, has grown in recent Novembers to a resistance community of thousands. People come from all over the country and even the world to honor victims of SOA graduates – as well as their survivors – with music, words, educational workshops, puppets and theatre. Estimates for the 2004 vigil attendance was 16,000 and for the 2005 vigil, nearly 20,000.
Traditionally, the legal vigil and memorial service concludes with a mock funeral procession, using the Presente litany, onto Ft. Benning, with all who choose to march onto the post technically at risk for arrest. Subsequent to the September 11, 2001 attacks and the erecting of a security fence at the main gate of Ft. Benning in 2001, protesters who wish to take their mourning onto the post need to go over, under, or around that fence, as opposed to the simple marching of the past. Over the years, hundreds and even thousands have chosen to risk arrest for criminal trespassing.
At the 2002 protest, the city of Columbus began requiring all attending the event to submit to a metal detector search at the designated entrance. After a lengthy legal battle, however, in October, 2004, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously that the forced search was unconstitutional.
Notable graduates
Trivia
- Uno para todos y todos para uno (the motto "one for all, and all for one!) derives from Dumas' The Three Musketeers'motto or Switzerland's.
- The band Bobot Adrenaline released a song titled "School of the Americas"
- The hardcore band Kaospilot, from Norway, released a song titled "School of Assassins" on their 2003 self-titled album on Level Plane records.
- The band Anti-Flag released a song titled "The School of Assassins" on the 2004 Rock Against Bush album.
Sources
- Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. "A Welcome from the Commandant". Retrieved May 16.
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- Center for Media and Democracy. "School of the Americas changes its name". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - Center for International Policy. "Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - The Library of Congress. "H.R.1217". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - Third World Traveller. "US Training Manuals Declassified". Retrieved May 6.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - "Unmatched Power, Unmet Principles: The Human Rights Dimensions of US Training of Foreign Military and Police Forces 2002 Report of Amnesty International USA (Amnesty International USA)" (PDF). Amnesty International. 2002. Retrieved April 14.
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*"Pentagon Investigation Concludes that Techniques in SOA manuals were 'mistakes.'". SOA Watch. February 21, 1997. Retrieved April 14.{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: year (link) - School of the Americas Watch. "Notorious Graduates". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - Independent World Television. "19,000 people rise up against the School of the Americas". Retrieved May 6.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - School of the Americas Watch. "National Venezuela Solidarity Conference". Retrieved May 6.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - School of the Americas Watch. "Argentina & Uruguay abandon SOA!". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - School of the Americas Watch. "¡No Más! No More!". Retrieved May 6.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - School of the Americas Watch. "About SOA Watch". Retrieved May 6.
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suggested) (help) - Paul Mulshine. "The War in Central America Continues". Retrieved 6 November.
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Further reading
- Danner, Mark (2004). Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror. New York Review Books. ISBN 1-59017-152-7.
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(help) - Harbury, Jennifer K. (2005). Truth, Torture, and the American Way. Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-0307-7.
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(help) Review, "Highlights parallels in the practices of U.S. government operatives and their local “assets” in the current conflict and in the civil wars that wracked Central America in the 1980s and early 1990s." - Ireland, Doug (2004). "Teaching Torture: Despite a lot of talk about torture being "un-American," Congress is quietly keeping alive the School of the Americas, our country's infamous torture-training school". LA Weekly.
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ignored (help) - Monbiot, George (2001). "Backyard terrorism: The US has been training terrorists at a camp in Georgia for years - and it's still at it". The Guardian.
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ignored (help) - O'Neill, Patrick (February 18). "SOA protesters headed for prison: Sister, students among 14 charged with trespass at Army school". National Catholic Reporter.
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ignored (help)CS1 maint: year (link) - Priest, Dana (1996). "U.S. Instructed Latins On Executions, Torture; Manuals Used 1982-91, Pentagon Reveals". The Washington Post: Section: A Pg. A01.
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ignored (help) - Quigley, Bill. "The Case for Closing the School of the Americas" (PDF). BYU Journal of Public Law (20 BYU J. Pub. L. 1). 20 (1).
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(help) - Inside the School of the Assassins (VHS). 1996.
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- Hidden in Plain Sight. 2003.
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- Leah Wells (2003). "Hidden in Plain Sight Review". Common Dreams NewsCenter. Retrieved April 14.
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- Leah Wells (2003). "Hidden in Plain Sight Review". Common Dreams NewsCenter. Retrieved April 14.
- Unknown, Author (2005). "More than an image problem: During the familiar annual processing ritual for School of the Americas protesters this year, new information surfaced about a comprehensive plan devised by the U.S. Army to deflect criticism of the school". National Catholic Reporter.
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External links
Official government websites
- Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. "Official website". Retrieved April 14.
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suggested) (help) - US Army War College. "School of the Americas (defunct website)". Retrieved April 14.
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Other websites
- Center for International Policy. "Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation". Retrieved April 14.
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suggested) (help) - World History Archives. "History of the School of the Americas". Retrieved April 14.
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suggested) (help) - Info Anarchy Wiki. "School of the Americas". Retrieved July 10.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - School of the Americas Watch. "Updates & Actions". Retrieved April 14.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Axis of Logic. "20,000 demonstrate against US military torture training center". Retrieved April 14.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Latin America Working Group. "Military Training Manuals". Retrieved April 14.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Council on Hemispheric Affairs. "Torture is Un-American: The SOA and its Devastating Legacy".
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