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Bill Buzenberg interviews former Representative Lee H. Hamilton

The Center in the News . . .

A recent Council on Foreign Relations backgrounder titled U.S-Pakistan Military Cooperation cited the Center's Collateral Damage project, which found among its major findings that Pakistan was the largest recipient of U.S. military aid, receiving almost $5 billion since 9/11, with little in the form of federal oversight and accountability.

The House of Representatives recently amended the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). Among the newly expanded public provisions, White House task forces will be prohibited from operating in secrecy, transcripts or recordings of committee meetings will be electronically available, and advisory committee appointments must be made without regard to political affiliation or activity. The Center's Shadow Government project investigated FACA loopholes and several conflict of interest cases more than a year ago.

The Wall Street Journal featured the Center's latest analysis of the lobby spending by the pharmaceutical industry, health product manufacturers, and their trade groups. The Center found that the pharmaceutical manufacturers and their trade groups spent a record $168 million on federal lobbying last year, a 32 percent increase from 2006.

A new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), requested by the House Foreign Affairs Committee, tasked the Defense Department with providing greater oversight in the way it handles Pakistan reimbursement claims for coalition support funds (CSF), a program created after 9/11 to reimburse key U.S. allies in the global war on terror. In May 2007, the Center's Collateral Damage project found that post-9/11 U.S. military aid to Pakistan, totaling more than $5 billion, was subject to virtually no congressional oversight.

Washington Post national politics reporter Shailagh Murray in the paper's daily campaign 2008 blog, 'The Trail,' cited a Center interview with James A. Johnson, who recently resigned from Senator Obama's vice presidential search committee. In the interview, Johnson had "kind words" to say about veteran senator, and potential VP contender, Christopher Dodd.

On Thursday, the Senate Intelligence Committee released its Phase II report on prewar Iraq intelligence. Committee Chairman John D. (Jay) Rockefeller said: "It is my belief that the Bush administration was fixated on Iraq, and used the 9/11 attacks by Al Qaeda as justification for overthrowing Saddam Hussein. To accomplish this, top administration officials made repeated statements that falsely linked Iraq and Al Qaeda as a single threat and insinuated that Iraq played a role in 9/11. Sadly, the Bush administration led the nation into war under false pretenses." To read more about the Bush administration's false statements about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq, check out the Center's War Card project.

A Morning Call.com editorial cited a 2003 Center survey that ranked all 50 states' lobby disclosure laws. Until 2006, Pennsylvania had no lobbying law at all and was ranked 50th in the nation by the Center's survey. Currently, the legislature will consider a measure that would forbid gifts and entertainment from lobbyists to public officials.

Harry Shearer, actor, entertainer, musician, artist, and creator of the song 935 Lies - featured in his upcoming CD, Songs of the Bushmen - said in The Huffington Post, "Just in case Scott McClellan wasn't keeping count, the Center was: at least 935 falsehoods told by the president and his aides in the run-up to the [Iraq] war."

The Sunlight Foundation's SunSpots blog featured the "eye-popping reports" from the Center's Shadow Government project. The Center's Shadow Government project investigated a few federal advisory committees, part of a vast maze of committees, tasked with influencing federal government agencies on a variety of safety and policy issues, often done under secretive conditions with little public accountability.

Douglas Feith, President Bush's undersecretary of defense for policy from July 2001 to August 2005, was on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart May 12 and talked about the Iraq War. He said, "I think a lot of what the administration said was correct." The Center's Iraq War Card project, which documented 935 false statements made by Bush and six top administration officials in the two years following September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq, would prove otherwise.

Watch the world premier video of Harry Shearer's video "935 Lies." Shearer, best known for his work on The Simpsons, This is Spinal Tap, Le Show, Saturday Night Live, For Your Consideration and A Mighty Wind, unveiled a video satire based on the Center's Iraq War Card project, which documented the 935 false statements orchestrated by top Bush Administration officials in the two years following September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

The Sarasota Herald-Tribune's Kirsten Mitchell reported that Sen. Pete Domenici and 16 other Republican senators, who support the easing of offshore drilling restrictions on the Outer Continental Shelf for oil and gas, have received more than $3 million in campaign contributions from individuals and PACS affiliated with the oil and gas industry since Jan. 1, 2007.

The Washington Post's Matthew Mosk reported that Steven A. Betts, a top presidential campaign fundraiser for Sen. John McCain, was one of several Arizona developers who benefited from McCain-engineered land swaps.

TheStreet.com's John Stout cited the Center's Buying of the President 2008 chapter on Stealth Campaigns in "How Much Does It Cost to Buy a Presidency?" Political non-profit groups, such as MoveOn.org and the American Leadership Project, "will probably play an important role in this presidential election," he said.

Special Report
U.S. Military Aid to Latin America Linked to Human Rights Abuses

By The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists*

WASHINGTON, July 12, 2001 — Few Americans know it, but the United States is currently embroiled in the biggest guerrilla war since Vietnam. Hundreds of American troops, spies and civilian contract employees are on the ground in Colombia and neighboring lands, helping to coordinate a $1.3 billion counterdrug program that will probably continue for many years. It is a bigger U.S. commitment—in personnel, cash and risk—than the previous leading post-Vietnam counterinsurgency campaign, the 1980s war in El Salvador.

In light of the growing U.S. military involvement in Latin America—building even as a 1999 truth commission report concluded that the United States had given money and training to a Guatemalan military that committed "acts of genocide" during that country's 36-year civil war—the Center for Public Integrity set out to examine U.S. military aid to Latin America in the 1990s. The yearlong investigation by the Centers International Consortium of Investigative Journalists found, among other things, that in three of the four Latin American countries examined, U.S. military and intelligence aid was implicated in human rights abuses.

In Colombia, as in El Salvador, the United States has found its moral flanks exposed by alliances with corrupt and brutal military institutions. In El Salvador, the purpose of that questionable alliance was at least well-defined: to contain a Marxist rebel army. In Colombia, a nominally Marxist rebel army is again the main target of U.S. aid, but Washington's motivations are multiple and, at times, murky. In Peru, the CIA paid millions of dollars to a shadowy government official, Vladimiro Montesinos, who allegedly used his influence to arrange an arms deal with the left-wing Colombian guerrillas, in an affront to his patrons reminiscent of Panama's Manuel Noriega.

In This Report
Related Documents

The U.S.-backed assistance program called Plan Colombia, which is one year old on July 13, 2001, ostensibly is a "drug war" aimed at eradicating Colombian drug lords ability to continue supplying three-quarters of the cocaine and 65 percent of the heroin entering the United States. But, as the ICIJ's two-continent investigation shows, U.S. funding for Plan Colombia isn't aimed solely at limiting the supply and raising the price of cocaine and heroin on the streets of Baltimore and Seattle or at eliminating "narcoterrorism—the drug-trafficking operations that left-wing guerrillas employ to fund their war in Colombia.

The protection of U.S. oil and trade interests is also a key factor in the plan, and historic links to drug-trafficking right-wing guerrillas by U.S. allies belie an exclusive commitment to extirpating drug traffic. The United States imports more oil from Latin America than from the Persian Gulf. And while oil has long been significant to U.S. policymakers (and especially to the current Bush administration, with its emphasis on increasing energy production in the United States and other zones of influence), until recently hemispheric oil supplies have been viewed as much more secure than the petroleum lying under the Middle East.

But the nationalistic talk coming from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a former army colonel who has dallied with Colombian guerrillas, has alarmed some U.S. officials. Major U.S. oil companies have lobbied Congress intensely to promote additional military aid to Colombia, in order to secure their investments in that country and create a better climate for future exploration of Colombia's vast potential reserves. Additionally, Latin America is the fastest-growing market for U.S. exports. In fact, large U.S. corporations with Latin American interests spent more than $92 million lobbying Congress in the latter half of the 1990s, in part to affect U.S. policy in the region. These companies and their employees contributed an additional $18.9 million to federal election campaigns during the same period. Business leaders with interests in the region are worried about economic instability and lawlessness engendered by guerrilla violence—not, particularly, by drug smuggling.

The constellation of violence in Colombia, where both leftist rebels and rightist paramilitaries build their armies with drug money, will make it extremely difficult for the United States to focus simultaneously on cutting drug supplies while strengthening stability and rule of law in the region. Although the bulk of U.S. aid to Colombia has been directed at territory controlled by leftist guerrillas, the U.S. government has been aware for years of links between drug smugglers and the right-wing militia movement, the investigation found.

Reporting on the ground in southern Colombia, where the U.S.-funded eradication of coca plantations has wiped out thousands of acres of coca as well as legitimate plantings in the past year, showed a continuing hand-in-glove relationship between drug-trafficking paramilitaries and the Colombian army that U.S. officials could hardly be unaware of. In the early 1990s, the United States helped Colombia set up intelligence networks that employed right-wing hit squads against unionists and human rights workers. Recently, under U.S. pressure, the Colombian government has begun a military campaign against some of these same paramilitaries. But it is difficult to know how far the army will go to open a new front against the now-formidable rightists. In much of the country, the government and paramilitaries—and the United States—share the same targets.

The perils of picking the wrong bedfellow in such a fight are nowhere more apparent than in Peru, where a government that worked closely with U.S. intelligence for a decade collapsed in scandal in 2000. The ICIJ investigation found evidence that the CIA, after years of working closely with Montesinos, the lead figure in the scandal, might have intentionally undermined him after discovering in 2000 that he was the middleman in an arms deal that sent 10,000 East German-made assault rifles from Jordan to the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish acronym FARC. When news of this deal was publicized, Perus Congress ousted President Alberto Fujimori, who then fled to Japan. Montesinos, after eight months in hiding, has recently been returned to Peru to face an array of charges, including murder and drug and arms trafficking. But the implications for U.S. policy were remarkable. The United States main Peruvian asset in the drug war was revealed to be arming the FARC—its main enemy in Colombia.

Death of missionary and her infant

The fall of Montesinos led to investigations and jailings of many intelligence and military officials with whom the United States worked closely during Fujimoris 10 years in power. Yet the U.S.-Fujimori era truly crystallized on April 20, when a missionary and her infant died over the Amazon at the hands of a Peruvian air crew, flying an old U.S. fighter plane directed by U.S. radar. The United States had provided the tools and the information that enabled this tragedy—then looked on with horror, like a latter-day Dr. Frankenstein, when its creation got out of control.

The same could be said of Washington's relationship with Fujimori and Montesinos. U.S. officials such as former drug czar Barry McCaffrey were quick to praise Fujimoris government for cutting coca leaf production and shooting down drug-laden planes in the late 1990s even though they knew of Montesinos previous work as a lawyer for drug traffickers. Even before Montesinos left in disgrace, his relationship with the United States had cooled over concerns about human rights abuses and persecution of democratic opposition figures. As the Fujimori years ended, it was not clear how much long-term good was achieved. As of 2000, new coca crops were planted in eastern Peru in response to the pressure on Colombian coca fields. And the anti-air campaign bore tragic, though predictable fruit.

Even before the April incident, the United States had wavered on the wisdom of shooting down suspected drug planes in the coca-growing area. At one time the U.S. government was pressing Brazil to shoot down suspected drug-running craft; it reversed course under former secretary of state Madeleine Albright. But the United States is helping to finance a $1.7 billion project to build an enormous radar network in Brazil. The ostensible purpose is to detect drug smuggling, but the 200 or more stations that will be built throughout the Amazon hinterland also will have sensors capable of collecting data on environmental destruction and settler activity, ICIJ has learned. Brazilian officers, meanwhile, are concerned that the data gleaned from the network—whose lead contractor is the U.S. engineering firm Raytheon—will be secretly borrowed by U.S. intelligence. In any case, what passes for a technological fix to drug smuggling doubles as a massive national security project with long-term strategic interest for both Brazil and the United States.

The same could be said for the massive training program that Mexico's armed forces have been receiving in the United States. Mexico, whose traditionally nationalistic military has generally shied from contact with the United States, has quietly reversed course in the past decade. With U.S. urging, Mexico has increasingly thrown its army into the counternarcotics effort. Partly because of this, Mexican soldiers have been among the top trainees of the School of the Americas (renamed in January 2001 the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation) and of other U.S. training programs. ICIJ's investigation tracked this increase in training of Mexican troops and discovered that, just as in South America, U.S. assistance to the military ends up as dual use - to counter drugs and to deal with internal security matters. Elite GAFE troops, members of an airmobile special forces unit trained in part by the United States, have been seen occupying villages in Chiapas. The ICIJ investigation also chronicles human rights abuses by U.S.-trained members of the GAFE. The national security team of President Vicente Fox, who in 2000 ended the dominant Mexican party's 71 years in power, has been reviewing the use of soldiers in the anti-drug war, a troubling trend to many Mexicans, who view the subservience of the military to civilian forces as a milestone of Mexican history.

Because it is receiving the largest chunk of U.S. security aid and holds the most potential for future conflagration, Colombia has been the focus of the ICIJ investigation. Levels of violence and desperation in Colombia present all involved there—U.S. policymakers, Colombia's neighbors, and Colombians themselves—with anguished choices. In El Salvador, the most comparable conflict of recent decades, fighting stopped when both sides saw that they couldn't win and found goals that they could achieve through peaceful means. Colombia is less hopeful. Both right- and left-wing guerillas thrive on drug money and lawlessness and seem little better than indifferent about popular support. Arguably, if U.S. assistance to Colombia ends up strengthening the central government and the rule of law, it will have done a good thing. However, U.S. policymakers have been less than forthcoming about U.S. objectives in the region. And the history of U.S. activity in Latin America shows that violent means employed in pursuit of peaceful goals tend to lead to more violence.


*The project team:

Reporters
Ignacio Gmez, Angel Paez, Leonarda Reyes, Fernando Rodrigues, Frank Smyth, Laura Peterson, André Verlöy

Researchers / Fact-Checkers
Aparna Basnyat, Tamy Guberek, Vanessa Haigh, Julie Leimbach, Rupa Patel, Daniel Politi, Lisa Rab, Erik Schelzig, Peter Smith

Editors
Arthur Allen, Bill Allison, Maud S. Beelman

This report was supported by a grant from the Ford Foundation.

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