- When George W. Bush announced that the U.S. bombing campaign
against Afghanistan had begun, he declared, "We are a peaceful nation."
-
- Not exactly. A look at its history shows that the U.S.
is the most violent and interventionist nation ever known. For more than
a century, the U.S. government has used military force or covert operations
- or backed local thugs and dictators - to enforce its interests around
the globe. A full list of U.S. interventions would fill whole books.
-
- Here, ANTHONY ARNOVE and ALAN MAASS compile a partial
time line of America's imperialist adventures - and the tragic toll they've
taken.
-
- 1846-48 "WE HAVE not one particle of right to be
here," Col. Ethan Allen Hitchcock wrote of the U.S. expansion into
territories that were then part of Mexicoñ - but were coveted by
President James Polk and the slaveholders he served. The U.S. incited Mexico,
hoping to draw it into a war over disputed territory. The conflict caused
massive casualties. When it was over, the U.S. controlled all of New Mexico
and California, and more of the territory of Texas. 1850-57 WHEN AN anti-U.S.
protest stormed the American foreign ministry building in San Juan del
Norte in Nicaragua, the USS Cayne sailed into the port and bombarded the
city. This was one of four U.S. interventions in the 1850s. In 1855, a
U.S. mercenary named William Walker came to Nicaragua with a band of supporters
and declared himself president of the country - with crackpot plans to
make Nicaragua a U.S. state where slavery was legal. Robber baron Cornelius
Vanderbilt organized a private army to force Walker to surrender. 1898
ON FEBRUARY 15, 1898, the USS Maine exploded while in the harbor off Havana,
Cuba - and that became the pretext for the U.S. war against Spain. The
Spanish-American War was justified by U.S. leaders with talk about democracy
and human rights. But the U.S.'s real goal was to make off with Spain's
remaining colonial possessions. With its victory, the U.S. took charge
in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Guam and the Philippines. 1899-1901 IMMEDIATELY
AFTER the war with Spain, the U.S. military went into the Philippines to
smash a movement for independence. The war claimed hundreds of thousands
of Filipino lives, with U.S. troops committing numerous mass slaughters.
"I wish you to kill and burn; the more you kill and burn the better
you please me," Gen. "Howling" Jake Smith told his soldiers.
1903-14 THE COUNTRY of Panama owes its existence to the U.S. government.
In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt sent two warships to support a revoltñsponsored
by U.S. big business - for Panama to secede from Colombia.
-
- Five days after Panama gained independence, the U.S.
got its rewardña treaty for the building of a canal to link the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, something of immense commercial and military
value. The U.S. maintained military control over a strip of land called
the Panama Canal Zone until the end of the 20th century. 1912-33 U.S. MARINES
hit the shores of Nicaragua to back a Conservative Party revolt against
President Jose Santos Zelaya, whose nationalism threatened U.S. interests.
Washingtonís occupation army left in 1925ñand returned a
year later, again to prop up Conservative Party rule. U.S. troops failed
to defeat the liberation army of Augusto Cesar Sandino. But before withdrawing
in 1933, Washington established the National Guard under the leadership
of Anastasio Somoza. Somoza ordered the murder of Sandino in 1934, and
a few years later took power in a coup against the president. The Somoza
family ruled Nicaragua with an iron fist for nearly half a century. 1914-34
-
- THE U.S. sent warships into the waters off Haiti 24 times
between 1849 and 1913 - and finally invaded in 1914. During the 20-year
occupation, American troops "murdered and destroyed, reinstituted
virtual slavery [and] dismantled the constitutional system," wrote
Noam Chomsky. At least 15,000 people died as a result.
-
-
- When the U.S. finally withdrew, it left the country in
the hands of the brutal National Guard.
-
- 1918-20 THE U.S. sent troops as part of an intervention
of more than a dozen countries to oppose the spread of the successful workersí
revolution in Russia in October 1917. U.S. and allied forces worked with
savage reactionaries who hoped to restore the rule of the tsar. 1941-45
THE U.S. entered the Second World War in December 1941 after Japan's attack
on Pearl Harbor, something that U.S. leaders had advance warning about.
The U.S. delayed its invasion of Northern Europe until 1944 - after the
USSR, at enormous cost, had beaten back Germany on the eastern front. The
U.S. used saturation bombing against Germany. More than 100,000 people
(many reports peg the figure at 400,000-500,000) were killed when warplanes
bombed Dresden, a city with no military targets. But the U.S. never bombed
the rail lines leading to the Nazi death camps. The war against Japan ended
with President Harry Trumanís barbaric decision to drop atomic bombs
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. The U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey
concluded that "Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs
had not been dropped." 1948-2001 WASHINGTON HAS provided military
and economic assistance to Israel from its foundation in 1948 and increasingly
after the 1967 war. Israel has long been the largest recipient of U.S.
aidñtoday getting more than $3 billion annually, despite its ongoing
illegal occupation of Palestinian land, widespread human rights abuses
and its brutal invasions of Lebanon. 1950-53 NEVER OFFICIALLY declaring
a war, as many as 2 million people died in the "police action"
in Korea between the U.S.- backed South and the North backed by the USSR.
The fighting "reduce[d] Korea, North and South, to a shambles, in
three years of bombing and shelling," Howard Zinn wrote. The Korean
War ended in a stalemate, and to this day, the U.S. maintains a huge military
presence there.
-
- 1953
-
- THE CIA organized a coup in Iran to overthrow President
Mohammed Mossadegh. Mossadegh's crime was to nationalize the Anglo-Iranian
Oil Company and carry out land reform, threatening the profits of the Western
oil giants.
-
- The U.S. backed the brutal dictatorship of the Shah of
Iran, until the Shah was overthrown in the 1979 Iranian Revolution. 1954
-
- PRESIDENT JACOBO Arbenz of Guatemala was overthrown in
a 1954 coup organized by the CIA. Arbenz had undertaken land reform measures
that threatened the United Fruit Co. - now known as Chiquita Brands - which
ran Guatemala like its private plantation. United Fruit lobbied its friends
in the Eisenhower administration for the coup-and helped to carry it out
at every level. The coup ushered in decades of military regimes that led
to the murder of tens of thousands. 1954-75 U.S. MILITARY involvement in
Vietnam - at first covert, later an open war - led to more than 2 million
deaths.
-
- The U.S. used carpet bombing, napalm, chemical weapons
and psychological warfare to terrorize the civilian population. And Richard
Nixon's savage "secret war" in neighboring Laos and Cambodia
took as many as 2 million more lives and created the conditions for the
rise of Pol Pot in Cambodia.
-
- The U.S. brought all of its military might to bear on
Southeast Asia. But the Vietnamese resistance and growing opposition to
the war inside the U.S. army and at home led to the U.S. governmentís
first major military defeat. 1959-2001
-
- FROM THE moment that dictator Fulgencio Batista was overthrown
by a rebel army led by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, the U.S. government
declared war on Cuba. In 1961, the CIA helped to coordinate an invasion
of the island by right-wing exiles at the Bay of Pigs, which was defeated.
In 1962, President John F. Kennedy brought the world closer than it has
ever been to nuclear war in a showdown with the USSR over missiles in Cuba.
Despite numerous plots, the U.S. never toppled Castro. But the U.S. economic
embargo - which continues to this day - strangled the country's economy.
-
- 1960-64 AFTER THE Democratic Republic of the Congo achieved
independence in 1960, the U.S. helped to engineer the assassination of
Patrice Lumumba, the country's first prime minister. The U.S. backed Joseph
Mobutu (who later renamed himself Mobutu Sese Seko). Mobutu took power
as a military dictator in 1965 and became one of the world's most notorious
tyrants, bleeding the poverty-stricken country dry as he amassed a billion-
dollar fortune. 1963-65 IN 1963, the U.S. helped to remove democratically
elected Dominican Republic President Juan Bosch in an army coup. Two years
later, an invasion force of 22,000 U.S. Marines landed after falling sugar
prices led to a popular uprising against the U.S.- backed military dictatorship.
More than 4,000 Dominicans were killed. Even the New York Times admitted
at the time that Dominicans were "fighting and dying for social justice
and constitutionalism." 1965-98 WITH U.S. approval and support, President
Sukarno of Indonesia was overthrown in a coup led by Gen. Suharto. The
coup was followed by massacres of peasant organizers, labor leaders and
others identified as "communists" on lists supplied in part by
the CIA. As many as 1 million Indonesians were killed.
-
- The U.S. approved Suharto's invasion and annexation of
East Timor in the mid-1970s. One-third of East Timor's population was killed
during Indonesia's occupation.
-
- Washington backed Suharto to the hilt until just before
he was toppled in 1998. "He's our kind of guy," a top Clinton
administration official said in 1996.
-
- 1973
-
- THE CIA helped to engineer the overthrow of socialist
Salvador Allende, the democratically-elected president of Chile. "I
don't see why we should let a country go Marxist because its people are
irresponsible," then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger explained.
-
- The coup against Allende brought to power the dictator
Augusto Pinochet, who ruled Chile with an iron fist until 1990. Thousands
of Chilean dissidents were murdered and "disappeared" under Pinochet.
-
- 1979-90 THE U.S. backed a proxy army in Nicaragua against
the Sandinista government that came to power after toppling the Somoza
dynasty. The contras were instructed by the CIA to "kill, kidnap,
rob and torture," admitted former contra leader Edgar Chamorro. "Many
civilians were killed in cold blood. Many others were tortured, mutilated,
raped, robbed and otherwise abused." When the U.S. Senate forbade
funding for the contra army, the Reagan administration organized an illegal
scheme to sell arms to Iran and use the proceeds for its dirty war in Central
America. The U.S. governmentís war reduced Nicaragua to one of the
poorest countries in the world. 1983
-
- CLAIMING THAT it was a threat to the U.S., U.S. Marines
invaded the tiny island nation of Grenada in Operation Urgent Fury. The
invasion overturned Grenada's government and helped to make the country
a "haven for offshore banks," as the Wall Street Journal put
it.
-
- 1989
-
- WHEN THE U.S. decided that its long-term friend Gen.
Manuel Noriega had outlived his usefulness, George Bush Sr. sent 26,000
troops into Panama in December 1989. Thousands of Panamanians were killed
before Noriega was seized and brought to Florida to stand trial on drug
charges.
-
- The U.S. claimed that it brought democracy to Panama.
"[B]ut they left all the little Noriegas in place," said Miguel
Bernal, a professor of international law at the University of Panama.
-
- 1991-2001
-
- IN JANUARY 1991, the U.S. launched the most intensive
bombing campaign in world history against Iraq. The countryís dictator
Saddam Hussein had been a U.S. ally - until he stepped out of line with
the invasion of Kuwait.
-
- U.S. warplanes deliberately targeted Iraq's civilian
infrastructure, reducing the country to "a pre-industrial state,"
according to the UN.
-
- Strict economic sanctions continued after the Gulf Warñand
are responsible for the deaths of more than 500,000 children under the
age of five over the past decade, according to UNICEF.
-
- 1992-93
-
- CLAIMING THAT it was intervening to provide humanitarian
assistance during a famine, Bush Sr. sent troops to Somalia. U.S. and UN
soldiers were responsible for 10,000 Somalians killed or wounded. The intervention
complicated relief efforts and encouraged infighting among Somalian factions
seeking U.S. favor.
-
- 1999
-
- THE U.S. fell out with another former friend, Slobodan
Milosevic, in its war against Yugoslavia.
-
- Bill Clinton claimed that the U.S. was intervening to
prevent the "ethnic cleansing" of Albanians in Kosovo. But U.S.
intervention only escalated the crisis, and during the postwar occupation,
NATO "peacekeepers" stood by as Albanians forced ethnic Serbs
to flee from Kosovo.
-
- U.S. saturation bombing wreaked environmental havoc.
Today, the countryside remains littered with the remains of shells made
of depleted uranium.
-
- Find out the facts about the worldís cop:
-
- AMONG THE resources used to compile this time line are:
-
- Tom Barry and Deb Preusch, The Central America Fact Book
(Grove Press)
-
- William Blum, Killing Hope (Common Courage Press)
-
- Noam Chomsky, Rogue States: The Rule of Force in World
Affairs (South End Press)
-
- Noam Chomsky, Year 501: The Conquest Continues (South
End Press)
-
- Ellen Collier, "Instances of Use of United States
Forces Abroad, 1798-1993," Congressional Research Service, Library
of Congress, October 7, 1993
-
- Zoltan Grossman, "A Century of U.S. Military Interventions,"
Znet (www.zmag.org)
-
- Sidney Lens, The Forging of American Empire (Thomas Y.
Crowell Co.)
-
- Lance Selfa, "U.S. Imperialism: A Century of Slaughter,"
International Socialist Review, Spring 1999
-
- Howard Zinn, A Peopleís History of the United
States (HarperCollins)
-
- http://www.bulatlat.com/news/2-5/2-5-reader-arnove.html
|
No comments:
Post a Comment