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United Fruit and the CIA
by Manu Saxena
Our ever so-timely corporate press has at last seen fit to give us some of
the facts about what happened in Guatemala--this time after only a short
30-40 year time lag. Both the New York Times and NPR ran stories in the
last couple of weeks describing the truth commission report which found the
Guatemalan military guilty of "acts of genocide" against the indigenous
Mayan people. Out of 200,000 people killed, the report found the military
responsible for 93 percent of the killings. The NYT report included the
interesting tidbits that the CIA aided the Guatemalan military forces, and
that American "counterinsurgency" training was a key factor in causing the
human rights violations that occurred. These human rights violations
included the use of, among other things, forced disappearances, the
systematic rape and murder of women, and the extermination of the civilian
populations of entire villages as weapons of war.
NYT deserves some credit for reporting on this subject (and on the front
page, no less!), as does NPR. Even the Clinton administration deserves some
praise (shocking, but true) for declassifying and making available several
documents to the Guatemalan Historical Clarification Commission (the U. S.
was, in fact, the only country to do so). Unfortunately, none of these
reports reveal the full picture of U.S. involvement in Guatemala, a picture
that's been available for the past 30 years. Contrary to the whitewashing
by Donald Planty, the U.S. ambassador, who said, "...these were abuses
committed by Guatemalans against other Guatemalans--the result of an
internal conflict" (NYT), the U.S. national security state supported,
equipped, and actually created the post-war Guatemalan military state.
Corporate involvement and encouragement was there from the start.
A democratically elected President, Jacobo Arbenz, took office in 1951 with
a program of land reform. Before his program was put into effect, 2.2% of
the Guatemalan landowners owned 70% of the arable land, and the average
annual per capita income of farm workers was about $87. Under the Arbenz
program, uncultivated land was given away to around 100,000 landless
peasants; in addition, he instituted a program of support for union rights
and other social reforms. So of course he had to go.
One of the principal architects of his downfall was the United Fruit
Company. Both the Truman and Eisenhower administrations were lobbied
aggressively by executives of the United Fruit Company, which had friendly
ties with many Congressmen and State Department officials. In addition,
Eisenhower's personal secretary was the wife of United Fruit's public
relations director, and Under Secretary of State Walter Smith was looking
for a job with United Fruit while he was still in the administration.
United Fruit monopolized Guatemala's banana exports and owned much of the
country's communications system; its control over the economy was
threatened by Arbenz's programs. But what must have especially raised
United Fruit's ire was the land reform program: United Fruit wanted $16
million for the portion of its land the government was expropriating--land
which United Fruit itself valued at only $525,000--exactly what the
Guatemalan government was offering for it.
The first CIA plan to overthrow Arbenz was formulated in 1952, but wasn't
implemented until after Eisenhower became president in 1953. The CIA
approached right-wing malcontents in the military and supplied them with
weapons, with a generous $64,000 donation by United Fruit. The resulting
uprising was defeated, and the role of United Fruit came out in the trial
of the rebels.
The role of the CIA was revealed in 1954, when plans of yet another coup
were discovered and published in Guatemala's newspapers. The State
Department and U.S. newspapers such as the NYT pooh-poohed the charges,
naming them communist propaganda. There were, of course, some communists in
the Arbenz government, but not very many. Out of the 51 seats that made up
the Arbenz coalition, a total of 4 were held by communists, and Arbenz
himself wasn't a communist--not that that would have excused the attempt by
the U.S. to overthrow a popularly elected government.
The CIA, of course, implemented its plans and proceeded to launch a massive
propaganda campaign against the Guatemalan people. One example: United
Fruit company representatives circulated pictures of mutilated bodies
claiming they were victims of atrocities committed by the Arbenz regime,
all the while knowing this was untrue. On June 18 the CIA dropped leaflets
demanding Arbenz resign, and then proceeded to attack that afternoon, its
planes strafing the National Palace and dropping bombs. An insidious
propaganda campaign led the people and armed forces to believe they were
being invaded by an overwhelming force, and finally Arbenz was forced to
resign in favor of the military.
The results of the military takeover were to be expected. Thousands of
people were arrested on suspicion of being communist, many of whom were
tortured and killed. Labor organizers for United Fruit were murdered, the
banana unions and other labor organizations were banned, and the land
reform program was reversed. Political parties and peasant organizations
were also banned, newspapers were closed, and politically unacceptable
books were burned.
This was the beginning of the CIA's role as protector of the rich against
the poor in Guatemala. Those who in later years rebelled against the
military rule were the poorest of the poor, typically the indigenous Mayan
people. Indeed, because of their poverty, the Mayans were profiled as being
natural supporters of the guerrilla movement, which is why the military
(aided and abetted by the CIA) conducted their campaign of genocide to wipe
them out, in 36 years of the most brutal war in Central American history.
(One of the most fascinating accounts of the civil war can be found in
Jennifer Harbury's book, "Bridge of Courage.") It's an amazing tribute to
the power of the human spirit that the military didn't succeed, and that,
as of 1996, the guerrillas now have their own political parties.
Nevertheless, human rights violations in Guatemala continue despite the
current cease-fire; Bishop Gerardi was murdered just last year for bringing
some of these violations to light. To see how you can help or for more
information, contact the Jennifer Harbury support group: Nic Beehler at
789-3466 (nbeehler@u.washington.edu), Amy Joynt at 934-4802
(ajoynt@u.washington.edu) or Michelle Thielges (mathielges@juno.com).
Sources: Amnesty International, World Reports; "Killing Hope: U.S. Military
and CIA Interventions since WWII" by William Blum; Fresh Air, on National
Public Radio, 3/4/99; "Bridge of Courage" by Jennifer Harbury; Human Rights
Watch, World Reports; "Guatemalan Army Waged 'Genocide,' New Report Finds,"
by Mireya Navarro, New York Times, 2/26/99.
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