- Capitalism and Alternatives -

Uruguay, for Doc & Frenchy

Posted by: Nikhil Jaikumar ( DSA, MA, USA ) on November 16, 1999 at 10:47:14:


URUGUAY 1964 to 1970

Torture -- as American as apple pie

excerpted from the book

Killing Hope

by William Blum

"The precise pain, in the precise place, in the precise amount, for the desired effect."{1}

The words of an instructor in the art of torture. The words of Dan Mitrione, the head of the

Office of Public Safety (OPS) mission in Montevideo.

Officially, OPS was a division of the Agency for International Development, but the director of

OPS in Washington, Byron Engle, was an old CIA hand. His organization maintained a close

working relationship with the CIA, and Agency officers often operated abroad under OPS cover,

although Mitrione was not one of them.{2}

OPS had been operating formally in Uruguay since 1965, supplying the police with the

equipment, the arms, and the training it was created to do. Four years later, when Mitrione

arrived, the Uruguayans had a special need for OPS services. The country was in the midst of a

long-running economic decline, its once-heralded prosperity and democracy sinking fast toward

the level of its South American neighbors. Labor strikes, student demonstrations, and militant

street violence had become normal events during the past year; and, most worrisome to the

Uruguayan authorities, there were the revolutionaries who called themselves Tupamaros.

Perhaps the cleverest, most resourceful and most sophisticated urban guerrillas the world has

ever seen, the Tupamaros had a deft touch for capturing the public's imagination with outrageous

actions, and winning sympathizers with their Robin Hood philosophy. Their members and secret

partisans held key positions in the government, banks, universities, and the professions, as well

as in the military and police.

"Unlike other Latin-American guerrilla groups," the New York Times stated in 1970, "the

Tupamaros normally avoid bloodshed when possible. They try instead to create embarrassment

for the Government and general disorder."{3} A favorite tactic was to raid the files of a private

corporation to expose corruption and deceit in high places, or kidnap a prominent figure and try

him before a "People's Court". It was heady stuff to choose a public villain whose acts went

uncensored by the legislature, the courts and the press, subject him to an informed and

uncompromising interrogation, and then publicize the results of the intriguing dialogue. Once they

ransacked an exclusive high-class nightclub and scrawled on the walls perhaps their most

memorable slogan: O Bailan Todos O No Baila Nadie ... Either everyone dances or no one

dances.

Dan Mitrione did not introduce the practice of torturing political prisoners to Uruguay. It had been

perpetrated by the police at times from at least the early 1960s. However, in a surprising

interview given to a leading Brazilian newspaper in 1970, the former Uruguayan Chief of Police

Intelligence, Alejandro Otero, declared that US advisers, and in particular Mitrione, had instituted

torture as a more routine measure; to the means of inflicting pain, they had added scientific

refinement; and to that a psychology to create despair, such as playing a tape in the next room of

women and children screaming and telling the prisoner that it was his family being tortured.{4}

"The violent methods which were beginning to be employed," said Otero, "caused an

escalation in Tupamaro activity. Before then their attitude showed that they would use violence

only as a last resort."{5}

The newspaper interview greatly upset American officials in South America and Washington.

Byron Engle later tried to explain it all away by asserting: "The three Brazilian reporters in

Montevideo all denied filing that story. We found out later that it was slipped into the paper by

someone in the composing room at the Jornal do Brasil."{6}

Otero had been a willing agent of the CIA, a student at their International Police Services

school in Washington, a recipient of their cash over the years, but he was not a torturer. What

finally drove him to speak out was perhaps the torture of a woman who, while a Tupamaro

sympathizer, was also a friend of his. When she told him that Mitrione had watched and assisted

in her torture, Otero complained to him, about this particular incident as well as his general

methods of extracting information. The only outcome of the encounter was Otero's demotion.{7}

William Cantrell was a CIA operations officer stationed in Montevideo, ostensibly as a member of

the OPS team. In the mid- 1960s he was instrumental in setting up a Department of Information

and Intelligence (DII), and providing it with funds and equipment.{8} Some of the equipment,

innovated by the CIA's Technical Services Division, was for the purpose of torture, for this was

one of the functions carried out by the DII.{9} "

One of the pieces of equipment that was found useful," former New York Times correspondent

A. J. Langguth learned, "was a wire so very thin that it could be fitted into the mouth between the

teeth and by pressing against the gum increase the electrical charge. And it was through the

diplomatic pouch that Mitrione got some of the equipment he needed for interrogations, including

these fine wires."{10}

Things got so bad in Mitrione's time that the Uruguayan Senate was compelled to undertake

an investigation. After a five-month study, the commission concluded unanimously that torture in

Uruguay had become a "normal, frequent and habitual occurrence", inflicted upon Tupamaros as

well as others. Among the types of torture the commission's report made reference to were

electric shocks to the genitals, electric needles under the fingernails, burning with cigarettes, the

slow compression of the testicles, daily use of psychological torture ... "pregnant women were

subjected to various brutalities and inhuman treatment" ... "certain women were imprisoned with

their very young infants and subjected to the same treatment" ...{11}

Eventually the DII came to serve as a cover for the Escuadrón de la Muerte (Death Squad),

composed, as elsewhere in Latin America, primarily of police officers, who bombed and strafed

the homes of suspected Tupamaro sympathizers and engaged in assassination and kidnapping.

The Death Squad received some of its special explosive material from the Technical Services

Division and, in all likelihood, some of the skills employed by its members were acquired from

instruction in the United States.{12} Between 1969 and 1973, at least 16 Uruguayan police

officers went through an eight-week course at CIA/OPS schools in Washington and Los Fresnos,

Texas in the design, manufacture and employment of bombs and incendiary devices.{13} The

official OPS explanation for these courses was that policemen needed such training in order to

deal with bombs placed by terrorists. There was, however, no instruction in destroying bombs,

only in making them; moreover, on at least one reported occasion, the students were not

policemen, but members of a private right-wing organization in Chile (see chapter on Chile).

Another part of the curriculum which might also have proven to be of value to the Death Squad

was the class on Assassination Weapons -- "A discussion of various weapons which may be used

by the assassin" is how OPS put it.{14}

Equipment and training of this kind was in addition to that normally provided by OPS: riot

helmets, transparent shields, tear gas, gas masks, communication gear, vehicles, police batons,

and other devices for restraining crowds. The supply of these tools of the trade was increased in

1968 when public disturbances reached the spark-point, and by 1970 American training in

riot-control techniques had been given to about a thousand Uruguayan policemen.{15}

Dan Mitrione had built a soundproofed room in the cellar of his house in Montevideo. In this room

he assembled selected Uruguayan police officers to observe a demonstration of torture

techniques. Another observer was Manuel Hevia Cosculluela, a Cuban who was with the CIA and

worked with Mitrione. Hevia later wrote that the course began with a description of the human

anatomy and nervous system ...

Soon things turned unpleasant. As subjects for the first testing they took beggars,

known in Uruguay as bichicomes, from the outskirts of Montevideo, as well as a

woman apparently from the frontier area with Brazil. There was no interrogation, only

a demonstration of the effects of different voltages on the different parts of the human

body, as well as demonstrating the use of a drug which induces vomiting -- I don't

know why or what for -- and another chemical substance. The four of them died.{16}

In his book Hevia does not say specifically what Mitrione's direct part in all this was, but he

later publicly stated that the OPS chief "personally tortured four beggars to death with electric

shocks".{17}

On another occasion, Hevia sat with Mitrione in the latter's house, and over a few drinks the

American explained to the Cuban his philosophy of interrogation. Mitrione considered it to be an

art. First there should be a softening-up period, with the usual beatings and insults. The object is

to humiliate the prisoner, to make him realize his helplessness, to cut him off from reality. No

questions, only blows and insults. Then, only blows in silence.

Only after this, said Mitrione, is the interrogation. Here no pain should be produced other than

that caused by the instrument which is being used. "The precise pain, in the precise place, in the

precise amount, for the desired effect," was his motto.

During the session you have to keep the subject from losing all hope of life, because this can

lead to stubborn resistance. "You must always leave him some hope ... a distant light."

"When you get what you want, and I always get it," Mitrione continued, "it may be good to

prolong the session a little to apply another softening-up. Not to extract information now, but only

as a political measure, to create a healthy fear of meddling in subversive activities."

The American pointed out that upon receiving a subject the first thing is to determine his

physical state, his degree of resistance, by means of a medical examination. "A premature death

means a failure by the technician ... It's important to know in advance if we can permit ourselves

the luxury of the subject's death."{18}

Not long after this conversation, Manual Hevia disappeared from Montevideo and turned up in

Havana. He had been a Cuban agent -- a double agent -- all along.

About half a year later, 31 July 1970 to be exact, Dan Mitrione was kidnapped by the

Tupamaros. They did not torture him. They demanded the release of some 150 prisoners in

exchange for him. With the determined backing of the Nixon administration, the Uruguayan

government refused. On 10 August, Mitrione's dead body was found on the back seat of a stolen

car. He had turned 50 on his fifth day as a prisoner.

Back in Mitrione's home town of Richmond, Indiana, Secretary of State William Rogers and

President Nixon's son-in-law David Eisenhower attended the funeral for Mitrione, the city's former

police chief. Frank Sinatra and Jerry Lewis came to town to stage a benefit show for Mitrione's

family.

And White House spokesman, Ron Ziegler, solemnly stated that "Mr. Mitrione's devoted service

to the cause of peaceful progress in an orderly world will remain as an example for free men

everywhere."{19}

"A perfect man," his widow said.

"A great humanitarian," said his daughter Linda.{20} go to notes

The military's entry into the escalating conflict signaled the beginning of the end for the

Tupamaros. By the end of 1972, the curtain was descending on their guerrilla theatre. Six months

later, the military was in charge, Congress was dissolved, and everything not prohibited was

compulsory. For the next 11 years, Uruguay competed strongly for the honor of being South

America's most repressive dictatorship. It had, at one point, the largest number of political

prisoners per capita in the world. And, as every human rights organization and former prisoner

could testify, each one of them was tortured. "Torture," said an activist priest, "was routine and

automatic."{21}

No one was dancing in Uruguay.

In 1981, at the Fourteenth Conference of American Armies, the Uruguayan Army offered a paper

in which it defined subversion as "actions, violent or not, with ultimate purposes of a political

nature, in all fields of human activity within the internal sphere of a state and whose aims are

perceived as not convenient for the overall political system."{22}

The dissident Uruguayan writer, Eduardo Galeano, summed up his country's era of

dictatorship thusly: "People were in prison so that prices could be free."{23}

The film "State of Siege" appeared in 1972. It centered around Mitrione and the Tupamaros

and depicted a Uruguayan police officer receiving training at a secret bomb school in the United

States, though the film strove more to provide a composite picture of the role played by the US in

repression throughout Latin America. A scheduled premier showing of the film at the

federally-funded John F. Kennedy Arts Center in Washington was canceled. There was already

growing public and congressional criticism of this dark side of American foreign policy without

adding to it. During the mid-1970s, however, Congress enacted several pieces of legislation

which abolished the entire Public Safety Program. In its time, OPS had provided training for more

than one million policemen in the Third World. Ten thousand of them had received advance

training in the United States. An estimated $150 million worth of equipment had been shipped to

police forces abroad.{24} Now, the "export of repression" was to cease.

That was on paper. The reality appears to be somewhat different.

To a large extent, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) simply picked up where OPS

had left off. The drug agency was ideally suited for the task, for its agents were already deployed

all over Latin America and elsewhere overseas in routine liaison with foreign police forces. The<