The Cry of The Disappeared
To disappear became a transitive verb in Latin America. Military dictatorships "disappeared" their opponents. That is to say, they kidnapped, tortured, murdered and disposed of them, leaving only an inconsolable absence in the place of a human being.
I spent some time in Argentina in the aftermath of the 1976-83 dictatorship. Enough to become familiar with countless picture frames holding images of impossibly lovely young women, taken from their homes for "brief questioning," never to be seen again. Enough to know the unquenchable parental tears these disappearances provoked.
It was not too early then, in rooms filled with the animal sobbing of the bereaved, to feel rage at the junta's crimes. But it was too early to know the full extent of them: the 30,000 disappeared, the torture at the Navy School of Mechanics in Buenos Aires, the corpse-dumping flights out to sea.
Argentines still hoped back in the 1980s. They hoped, whatever their heads told them, that the longing in their hearts might return their loved ones intact. No doubt, many still hope.
With disappearance, closure is impossible, for there is no evidence of an ending. In this infinite prolongation of suffering lay the particular contribution of the generals to the infliction of pain.
There was something else we did not know back then. Henry Kissinger, then secretary of state, told Admiral César Augusto Guzzetti, the Argentine foreign minister, in June 1976: "If there are things that have to be done, you should do them quickly. But you should get back quickly to normal procedures."
Later, Kissinger assured the admiral that the administration "won't cause you unnecessary difficulties." He also grew angry when he learned that the U.S. ambassador in Buenos Aires, Robert Hill, has given the junta a warning about violations of human rights. "In what way is it compatible with my policy?" Kissinger asked, before suggesting that Hill might have to go.
These exchanges, records of which were obtained in recent years under the federal Freedom of Information Act by the nonprofit National Security Archive, suggest how the surrogate battles of the Cold War, as fought in the American hemisphere, drew the United States into forms of complicity that remain a shadow on its conscience.
More recently, the historian Robert Dallek unearthed transcripts in the National Archives that show Kissinger, bitter at negative newspaper coverage of the 1973 coup in Chile, complaining to President Richard Nixon that, "in the Eisenhower period, we would be heroes." The coup would lead to thousands of "disappearances."
I was thrust back into this Latin American vortex, which haunted me in the 1980s, by a powerful show called "The Disappeared" at New York's El Museo del Barrio. It features works about horrors, often followed by impunity, to which the United States turned a blind eye at best.
Ana Tiscornia's blurred portraits, palimpsests in which the subjects seem to hover between life and death, capture the slow fading of the disappeared, and their flickering hold on those from whom they were seized.
A corridor full of photographs of young couples feature women who were pregnant when "disappeared." The Argentine military would wait for the child to be born before murdering the mother. The babies went to childless military couples. Laconic captions say: "The couple and their child remain disappeared."
As Laurel Reuter and Julian Zugazagoitia write in their introduction to the show, organized by the North Dakota Museum of Art, the artists "ask us, as North Americans, to question what role our own country played in supporting the Latin American governments which killed their people as a matter of course."
The artists also ask us something else. This month six human rights groups listed 39 people they believe are secretly imprisoned in unknown locations by the United States as part of the war on terror.
President George W. Bush acknowledged last year that some individuals deemed particularly dangerous had been moved "to an environment where they can be held secretly." In effect, categorized as enemy combatants, they have been "disappeared."
This practice is unconscionable. It does not matter that the purpose of the disappearance is not murder, as it was in Argentina.
Once people disappear, every basic human right is at risk because every check, every balance, has gone with them. The worst becomes almost inevitable because there is nothing to stop it.
The United States demands accountability of others when its own people go missing. It must demand the same accountability of itself, whatever the fight. The lovely, longing and lost young faces of Latin America require at least that.
E-mail: rocohen@nytimes.com
© 2007 The New York Times Company
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24 Comments so far
Show AllI just returned from living in Argentina and I have to say what Roger Cohen has written here barely scratches the surface of what was done to the Argentine people and the role we, (the US) played. The one thing I kept thinking while I was there and comparing what I was reading about the current administration was that we should read Argentine history and learn from what happened there. We are not far from the front steps of the dictatorship that took over during the "Golpe". Rather than rant and rave about what this author has proposed as a comparison between then and there and here and now, perhaps we should listen and work to keep these things from happening here. The list is long but I will be happy to share with you.
Rune, to what lengths will you and your pal, Cohen, go to deny the relevance of the Argentine disappearing citizens phenomenon to our current situation in the "war on terror"? People are kidnapped off the streets. Why? Because the rule of law has been suspended by a "national emergency". The first law to go is habeas corpus. When a citizen disappears, no writ of habeas corpus will make them appear again, obviously, but when conditions have deteriorated to this point, it is too late to insist on the rule of law.
Hey, Rune, do you think it's "whining" to insist that a journalist call attention to any attack on the rule of law?
Cohen's article is "human interest", stripped of any substantial content ( political ), designed to stimulate liberal tear ducts. He goes out of his way to avoid establishing relevance with our current political situation. He weasels out of his journalistic responsibility.
And your lame rhetorical defense is to try to label my reaction as "extreme" or "cranky".
Doesn't work, friend. Maybe things look rosy from inside your bubble.
John Freeman. What is a "nice sharp Calvary sword by the bed." You some sort of Christian fundamentalist? Is a device to conduct crusifixion? Do you have a Golgotha mace to match it?
I will stick with a Glock and an assault rife in my home - less Christian.
Coffee? Usually when I expound upon the higher metaphysics of things (throwing in some Woody Allen style humor to make people SEE complex analogies in more everyday simplistic terms) I am accused of having done a lot of ACID in college. On the caffeine note, I was helping a friend see if he could manage living on a houseboat in the Florida Keys and we came across a yard sale that just happened to have an espresso machine for like $9! I happened to have stopped at (commondreamers, it's worth the stop!) the best coffee place in the Keys. Baby's. He brews it himself. So I had some espresso with me... and I asked the yard sale people if I could try out the machine. It worked. That $9 saves me $700 a year (what I'd pay to have my SINGLE, albeit double, espresso, every morning out.) So... as much as I love the stuff, I get the way Kramer did on that Seinfeld episode when he tried to sue the place for hot coffee falling on him, and his winnings were to be expressed in unlimited coffee consumption. I GET that way if I go past ONE cup. Just to save any innocent bystanders from MY richochet of words as bullets in that state, I practice restraint and self-discipline.) Nice guess...
Wow Siouxrose, you must drink a lot of coffee!
Chuck: Sometimes it's too intense to stare into the light of the sun. Many on this site (both posters and authored articles) have cited the strange coincidence between the 911 and the Nazi burning of the Reichstag to facilitate great enough public fear to begin eviscerating common liberties. Goebbel's recipe that the lie told often enough is now done with ease thanks to a mostly for-profit corporate-driven MSM. Religion strikes up the band with deluded notions of faith and patriotism, and the formula for controlling populations moves along further. Ease the Constitution by appointing lawyers who bend the LAW to suit some insidious "letter thereof" approach; precisely what JESUS warned against. And then ingenious checks and balances to ensure that NEVER would we have a king, i.e. unitary executive, are erased. Rumor of secret prison building in our nation; evidence of secret prisons off shore, added to the elimination of Habeas Corpus. Surely this is all sci-fi, the educated mind and clear spirit asks? What can I do. We vote. We protest. We write letters. We call congress people. We pray. Too much has been laid on the US chessboard to LOOK like totalitarianism, which in this new 21st century aided and abetted by sophisticated surveillance technology and the most heinous of weapons (even those that can be targeted to genetic markers)... well, it is a DARK tragedy in slow motion. I am still hoping for Divine intervention, a massive spiritual awakening that somehow energetically shifts the current dynamics; or even a person of conscience from within the ranks of power to DO something (before they are safely on retirement). There are always unknown factors in any equation, and the human one is inordinately complex. LOVE eventually wins over the dark side; but the battle IS before us. With 6 billion on the planet, I suppose many souls have opted to come in for this turning point phase in mankind's evolution. IF only ideals were taught in film and mass media, the citizens of this world would NOT be angry sheep, insatiable consumers of mostly meaningless items (which are fast destroying our beloved Earth); the potentials of mankind have not been developed because those at the helm have preferred battles and ignorance over enlightenment. We are the stuff of stardust, and we've been taught to think of ourselves encased in mud, earthbound without imagination. I do what I can to light a candle to darkness... for this IS a dark age in America. Eventually LIGHT will return, and some of us carry it now... that gives HOPE the power to reshape the collective consciousness. Much hangs in the balance.
@ Siouxrose, jp June and anybody else:
What you are referring to are the horrible end consequences of right-wing eliminationist rhetoric aimed at liberals and progressives, gays and others.
Dave and Sara over at Orcinus have extensively documented this ugliness more than anyone I know of -- just follow the lilnk and search on either "eliminationist" or "eliminationism", "fascist" or some other variation.
Siouxrose wrote: "The way things are going, current neocons are not too far from deploying this same practice HERE."
Whenever I read about US support for the brutal dictatorships in Latin America I always think that many of our "leaders" would be supportive of these same practices here if given the opportunity. It's not just the neocons who would disappear people here in this country, but all the hatemongering right wingers who buy into the lies about our domestic "enemies" such as the "illegals," "liberals," environmental activists, animal rights activists, the ACLU, etc. We are only just beginning to witness the underlying viciousness of the American consciousness.
Cruxpuppy, perhaps you have never actually dealt with someone being disappeared, or ever really thought about it. There are NO rights that mean ANYTHING for ANYONE when people have been disappeared. No one in the government will acknowledge that they have them or even know who does, if they are still alive. You can knock yourself out with lawyers and protests and all, but ultimately, the only real habeas corpus that means anything at all is when you have the actual body, dead or alive, by which time the legal notion of habeas corpus doesn't mean much. Governments who disappear people don't have much of a record of suddenly changing their minds and deciding to treat the captured humanely and respect their legal rights. They kill them or they release them in the middle of nowhere if they discover some reason why they should be concerned about killing them. Those governments, like our government, are completely beyond the pale of law or decency, which Roger has helped to illustrate, however indirectly, by sharing some of the imagery he knows of the subject.
Knock yourself out whining about some reporter not writing what you want to jump up and down about, but I think we're in a little deeper than that if you care to have a look at what he is talking about.
Joe is right and you're apologizing for sophistry, Rune. Roger Cohn is lying by omission by failing to mention "habeas corpus" in this tear jerker. He had to consciously avoid the term. As a journalist he has a responsibility to inform the public, which means to connect dots where dots cry out to be connected. He doesn't have to soil his lilly-white hands in any domestic political controversy about a "military commissions act", but journalistic integrity demands that he point out that when habeas corpus disappears, so do people.
There's no hope that a weasel journalist will one day cease to be a weasel. It is his fault, Rune. He's a fucking weasel! Media consolidation has little to do with it.
Kissinger has been making big money with cash for any opinion punditry based on his war criminal and unconstitutional government service experience. This is the kind of scum that has media credibility.
All people improve the world by their arrival or (like Kissinger, Bu$h the inferior, Chaney, etc.) by their departure.
Fair enough. Point taken.
Uh...Roger Roger, he our man, if he can't...er, sorry.
Oh, ease up, Joe. This is the New York Times we're talking about. They hardly ever get to write about actual, important news any more. This is a big moment for Roger. Let's cheer him on and hope he can hint at another real news story in a month or so. I wouldn't bother reading a paper that hires embedded reporters to act as self-contained PR firms for the administration, but if they want to drop a note here on the rare occasions that they have something worth saying, even in the very soft and general terms they feel the must say such things, I think we can simply have a look and make the most of it. And besides, it's not Roger's fault that media consolidation is out of control. We all have a hand in what allowed that to happen, and we need as many alert minds and hands at the keyboard as possible to counteract that rising tide.
"It does not matter that the purpose of the disappearance is not murder..."
How does Mr. Cohen know the purpose, or outcome?
Those disappeared dead would probably disagree, but the disappeared dead don't tell stories.
Even Mr. Cohen, who does a laudable job in this column, still operates under the myth (or lie) that we're somehow different, more moral, that it doesn't happen here.
At the end of the day, Mr. Cohen is an establishment man -- and those types don't really rock the boat.
Just like his newspaper, which covered the recent Republican debate where 9 of 10 canidates said they would be willing to nuke Iran, and the NTY didn't find that noteworthy enough to print ONE word on the subject. Maybe in 25 years Mr. Cohen can write about that too.
Rune, excellent, Garth! This one should be put to a musical background, and I wonder if Willie Nelson would sing it???? GOOD JOB!
Losin' It
Well the airlines lost my luggage
And the postman lost my mail
And according to evolutionists
My old kin lost my tail.
I must have lost a thousand card games
Lost my woman and lost my lunch
But I've never seen any bigger losers
Than George Bush and his bunch.
He lost the national vote
Yet he's still right there.
Several million emails?
Can't find 'em anywhere!
Who fired the attorneys?
Seems no one can recall
Weapons in Iraqi depots?
They lost them all!
Four hijacked airliners?
Couldn't even find one.
Lost half a billion cash dollars
Yeah, that must have been fun!
I heard they found Osama
But they lost him, too
Lost the goodwill of the world
And that's a lot to lose!
I ain't no good at losing weight
But I always lose the lottery.
And I'm sure I'd have lost my ass by now
If it wasn't part of me.
Now, if there's any news at Fox
It's all been lost on me.
But I've never seen any bigger losers
Than the Bush Crime Family!
When the levies broke
They lost their way
And when people came to help out
They told them go away!
Weapons of mass destruction
Oh, where did they go?
New Orleans reconstruction
It's worse than slow
They had their Mission Accomplished
Now they're losing both wars
Wonder how much of what we had
Was lost behind closed doors.
Well, they lost Scooter Libby
Lost Rummy, too
Finally lost Paul Wolfowitz
They're a loser's whose who!
About spying on Americans
They lost their memories
Now the only thing they ain't losin'
Are their enemies
Now, losing is something we do
We're only human, after all.
Who hasn't lost a sock or two
Or keys for at least a while?
But lately, I'm losing patience
Well, isn't everyone?
Cuz we've never seen any bigger losers
Than the Dubya administration!
He lost our budget surplus
Ran up trillions in debt
Lost some top secret laptops
But they ain't done losin' yet!
Texas Air Guard records
How did those get erased?
Soldiers coming home in boxes
Can never be replaced.
They've lost all accountability
And our civil rights, too
I bet if they had the ability
They'd lose any state that's blue
But for all of this losin'
It's even worse than we feared
Cuz folks they once tortured
Are being disappeared.
They've found their own Dirty War
With people disappeared.
Thirty nine people so far
Have been disappeared.
There are some things I'll never lose
Haunting memories
Questions left unanswered
Are they alive? Where might they be?
Yet, I've lived a life of losin'
Janis says that makes me free
But, George, it must be hard work indeed
To lose your humanity.
Impeachment is the constitutional remedy, but unfortunately that remedy requires political will on the part of Congress. With a few exceptions who are discounted by the media as eccentric idealists (for naively clinging to the peculiar notion that their sworn oath "to uphold and defend the Constitution" has some existential reality), our present Congress apparently would not impeach President Bush if he "disappeared" the Congresspersons' own spouses and children. I am beginning to believe that the only significant question to ask any candidate for federal office is whether he/she values the Bill of Rights over partisan loyalty (or his/her own reelection).
I owned guns for a long time...and was finally persuaded by the statitics as to the danger of gun ownersip. These days, I have a nice sharp Calvary sword by the bed. It is unlikely to go off by accident, nor is anyone likely to take it away from me while I am making the shoot/don't shoot decision that is the greatest risk to gun owners. Most get shot with their own weapons because 'normal' people are not on a hair trigger when it comes to killing others.
Badminton, perhaps you haven't noticed, but the U.S. government, which accounts for half of the military spending of the whole world, is kidnapping people from amongst a well armed populace, if they don't just kill them in the street, and sending them off to secret prisons before some of them end up "disappeared." There is no evidence at all that people having lots of guns in their homes leads to anything more than neighbors shooting neighbors, often by mistake, or some people using guns as their means of suicide. We have a high level of gun ownership in the U.S. It isn't doing a damn thing to stop the government from rapidly transforming the country into a thuggish police state. In fact, you will note, the person leading the transformation is a darling of the NRA, as was his daddy, who rushed to the defense of his poor old friend, Pinochet, after he was finally arrested for his horrible crimes.
The best defense against thuggish rulers is to be well informed and speak out against them instead of praising them because they happen to support a pet issue, whether it be guns, tax breaks, or whatever personal interest catches your attention. Only a fool would accept a few special privileges or enrichments in exchange for living in an oppressive nation that has turned against the people within and outside its borders, and only a damned fool would think a bunch of unorganized individuals with weapons in their closets that they rarely or never use are going to transform themselves into "a well regulated militia" that so threatens to the will of the commander in chief as to change his mind.
The real trick is to change the commander in chief and we have a weapon for doing that: impeachment--before it is too late.
The way things are going, current neocons are not too far from deploying this same practice HERE.
Lift the cover off any honest American history book and you will hear the cries of not only the disappeared but also the natural resources of the earth. What American imperialism has done to America and the earth has been incredibly cruel. Without a compliant media to spin the story the government can't sell its "services". Disappearing is one more service that governments can now use to their political advantage. Another service that it can offer to its true constituency - corporate America.
Hoa binh
The Second Article of the Bill of Rights was created to prevent a torturing and murdering dictatorship from taking power. An armed populace is the best prevention aganist a Chile 1973 or an Argentina 1976 from taking place here. My advice: exercise your rights.
dont forget the 100 or so that died in secret US gulags
US media has ignored the relationship between Iranian-Americans being arrested in Iran lately and the 5 Iranians that were 'disappeared' from northern Iraq earlier this year by US forces.